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City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 7:36 am
by Biamp
http://www.goal.com/en-gb/news/2896/pre ... ng-rights-

Manchester City close to finalising record stadium naming rights deal with Abu Dhabi-owned sponsor

A deal worth over £10m a year is set to be announced within a fortnight following confirmation of the club’s qualification for next season’s Champions League

13 May 2011 08:00:00

EXCLUSIVE
By Wayne Veysey | Chief Correspondent

Manchester City are close to finalising a stadium naming rights deal and an agreement could be announced within a fortnight, Goal.com can reveal.
Two of the club’s current sponsors - Aabar, an Abu Dhabi-based investment company, and Ferrostaal, a German engineering firm taken over by the Abu Dhabi government - are the favourites to be the stadium sponsor.

Insiders acquainted with the negotiations believe the deal will be worth between £10 million and £12m a year. There is no firm agreement yet about the length of the term although it is expected to be between 10 and 15 years.

“Talks are still going on but should be sorted out quite quickly now,” a source told Goal.com. “They were partly dependent on whether City qualified for the Champions League. Now that has been confirmed, it could be finalised within the next few weeks.

“It will be a similar deal to what Arsenal have with Emirates. The City of Manchester Stadium will be named after the new sponsor.”

At the starting point in negotiations, as revealed by Goal.com, City picked the brains of Emirates, who signed a £100m agreement with the Londoners that began when the 60,000-capacity venue opened in 2006 and runs until 2021.

City officials, led by chief executive Garry Cook, believe stadium naming rights can help boost the club’s revenue and enable it to meet Uefa’s Financial Fair Play rules that require clubs in European competition to be close to breaking even within three years. City posted a loss of £121m, the second biggest in Premier League history, in their last set of financial results.


Record-breaker | Sheikh Mansour is striving to help City meet Financial Fair Play rules
One potential hurdle - the stadium's ownership by Manchester Council - is believed to have been cleared after town hall bosses gave their permission to sell the naming rights to Eastlands.

Although a lucrative stadium naming rights deal is a bona fide means of increasing income, Uefa has placed restriction on what ‘related companies’ may offer in sponsorship compared to market rates.

According to City’s official website, the largest stakeholder in Aabar is the International Petroleum Investment Company (IPIC), which in turn is wholly owned by the Abu Dhabi government. Furthermore, Ferrostaal, who signed a three-year sponsorship deal with City in November 2009, is also majority share owned by IPIC.

However, Uefa has stressed in its new Financial Fair Play legislation that all commercial deals involving Europe’s top division clubs will be market-tested for fair value.

“Nobody should try to be clever about the possibility of circumnavigating the rules,” warned Uefa general secretary Gianni Infantino, in an interview with Goal.com. “If the panel have the feeling that the rules are circumnavigated, then this corresponds to a violation.”

The Emirates Stadium is the only real point of comparison, as the market in English football for stadium naming rights is fairly immature. According to data from experts SPORT+MARKT, Germany leads the way in Europe with 23 stadium naming rights deals, followed by the Netherlands with 18. England currently has nine.

City's deal should comfortably become the record stadium naming rights deal in world football, although it will still lag behind those of American sports. The highest amount paid for naming rights in any sport is the £245m, 20-year deal agreed between Citigroup and Major League Baseball’s New York Mets, who have played at Citifield since 2009.

Arsenal's is the biggest ever tie-up in British football, although its £6.7m-a-year deal with Emirates was front-loaded to allow the club to get more cash up front and pay for the cost of building the Emirates Stadium.

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 7:58 am
by kinkylola
get in

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 8:56 am
by Moonchesteri
just £10m a year? sort it out sheikh, should be at least £20m a year. ;o)

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 8:59 am
by Niall Quinns Discopants
I've actually done some work for Ferrostaal in the past as designing subcontractor. Makes me proud.

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 9:00 am
by Dameerto
I'd love to see them try and punish a team over a 'feeling' and see how far they got.

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 9:09 am
by Ted Hughes
Dameerto wrote:I'd love to see them try and punish a team over a 'feeling' and see how far they got.



Absolutely. Who are they to decide & how do they do it?

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 9:12 am
by Manx Blue
Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:I've actually done some work for Ferrostaal in the past as designing subcontractor. Makes me proud.


Good Skills

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 11:13 am
by john@staustell
Ted Hughes wrote:
Dameerto wrote:I'd love to see them try and punish a team over a 'feeling' and see how far they got.



Absolutely. Who are they to decide & how do they do it?


I think we'll find, in the words of Sir Humphrey Appleby, in the fullness of time, when it comes to pass etc, that this is all aimed at people trying to look like they have money but are piling up the debts.

Just stopping new money coming into the game will just cut off the lifeline for clubs all over Europe of transfer fees - and the 2 examples close to home are Everton and Aston Villa. Everton are in such dire strights they would've gone under without the cash from Jolene, and Villa - at the time - needed the Milner deal (and the Barry £10M.)

Rumour is Everton HAVE to sell again this summer.

No money, then it's bye bye to (many) clubs like that. The Dzeko cash filtered down to 7 clubs in all, with knock-on deals.

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 1:47 pm
by Tokyo Blue
john@staustell wrote:Just stopping new money coming into the game will just cut off the lifeline for clubs all over Europe of transfer fees - and the 2 examples close to home are Everton and Aston Villa. Everton are in such dire strights they would've gone under without the cash from Jolene, and Villa - at the time - needed the Milner deal (and the Barry £10M.)

Rumour is Everton HAVE to sell again this summer.


Yes, I've been told by a mate who follows them that they needed to sell Pienaar in January as well. Which makes me wonder - where is all Everton's money going?

Back on topic, it seems like a decent deal - 12M a year for CoMS. What were Ferrostaal like to work for/with, NQDP?

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 2:47 pm
by mr_nool
One of my life ambitions is to start a website called lookatmewheni.com, make loads of money on it, and then buy the naming rights for White Hart Lane.

Re: City close to finalising record stadium naming rights

PostPosted: Fri May 13, 2011 3:19 pm
by s1ty m
Dameerto wrote:I'd love to see them try and punish a team over a 'feeling' and see how far they got.


My first thought too.