Manchester United named richest club in world ahead of Real Madrid and Barcelona
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Manchester United named richest club in world ahead of Real Madrid and Barcelona
Manchester United have been named the richest club in the world, despite failing to finish in the top four over the past two season.
The Old Trafford outfit finished ahead of Liga giants Barcelona and Real Madrid and the news comes even though the club has around half billion pounds of debt under the Glazer owners
The Premier League's growing financial muscle is highlighted in
the latest study of leading European clubs by KPMG, with five other
English sides - Manchester City, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and Tottenham, in the top 10.
Now in its second year, the report looked at the finances of 39
clubs based on their popularity on social media channels, revenues for
the 2014/15 and 2015/16 seasons, and success in European competitions.
The clubs were then ranked by enterprise value, an accounting
measure used to assess how much it would cost to buy any given club or
company as it includes a business's total debt, with KPMG using its own
formula to reach these valuations
Despite two relatively disappointing seasons on the pitch
between 2014 and 2016, United's value surged to become the first club to
break the 3billion euros (£2.7billion) mark for enterprise value.
Bayern Munich remain in fourth place, while Manchester City edge
past Arsenal to take fifth spot, both with enterprise values of just
under £1.7billion. Alisher Usmanov's recently rebuffed bid for the
latter valued the North London club at £1.54billion.
Chelsea, Liverpool, Juventus and Spurs fill the next four positions, which means six of the 10 are from the Premier League
In a statement, KPMG's global head of sports Andrea Sartori
said: "The aggregate value of Europe's leading football clubs suggests
that the overall value of football, as an industry, has grown.
"While this is partially explained by football's broadcasting
boom, the internationalisation of the clubs' commercial operations,
their investment into privately owned and modern facilities, and overall
more sustainable management practices are also key reasons for this
growth."
" In terms of media rights value, the English Premier League sits comfortably at the top of European leagues, although other major leagues have outlined well-defined strategies to compete for the attention of global fans."
Last year's Premier League winners Leicester City (16th) and Everton (17th) are the two other English clubs to make KPMG's top 32, with Scottish champions Celtic being among seven non-ranked "runners up"
With eight teams in the top 32, English clubs lead the way, a
trend that should only continue next year as the Premier League's
improved 2016-19 domestic TV deal is reflected in the accounts, as well
as the increased overseas broadcast deals and commercial revenues
For example, English clubs hold five of the top 10 positions for
shirt-sponsorship revenue, too, with United in first place, ahead of
Barca, Bayern, Chelsea and Real
In fact, the Premier League would be even more dominant in an
enterprise value table that did not take into account UEFA's five-year
coefficient, as KPMG does to establish sporting success
Source: http://www.eurosport.com/
Source: http://www.eurosport.com/
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