Dubai International Capital will push through plans for a new stadium as soon as their £170 million takeover of Liverpool is complete.
DIC is an arm of Dubai Holdings owned by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai, whose personal wealth is £7 billion and family fortune £14 billion. Only four men on earth are richer; only 11, like he, could buy and sell Roman Abramovich.
It would cost the sheikh £170m to acquire Liverpool, in which Moores, whose family have been owners for 50 years, has a 51.7% holding. Debts of £80m and the club's commitment to a new stadium could lift the price as high as £500m. DIC can pay cash.
"We'll build the stadium pronto and invest in players, though there'll be no blank cheques," a source at DIC told the Sunday Times. "We're serious investors looking for returns. Liverpool won't turn into Chelsea, but it will become closer to Manchester United."
A leading football analyst was less cautious: "This will catapult Liverpool into the Abramovich league."
A senior figure inside Anfield also said: "This is not a shotgun wedding.
"They've looked hard at us, but we've also looked hard at them. DIC understand the values and traditions of the club, that's what they're buying into. Remember, the most important value in Liverpool's heritage has always been winning. The old Shankly adage, first is first and second is nowhere, fits perfectly with the philosophy of the sheikhs.
"An Abramovich would be wrong for us. It wouldn't be our style or fit with our fans. Liverpool are about winning - but getting there through hard work.
"We know for DIC this is not about having a trophy asset which wins a couple of titles."
DIC is an arm of Dubai Holdings owned by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai, whose personal wealth is £7 billion and family fortune £14 billion. Only four men on earth are richer; only 11, like he, could buy and sell Roman Abramovich.
It would cost the sheikh £170m to acquire Liverpool, in which Moores, whose family have been owners for 50 years, has a 51.7% holding. Debts of £80m and the club's commitment to a new stadium could lift the price as high as £500m. DIC can pay cash.
"We'll build the stadium pronto and invest in players, though there'll be no blank cheques," a source at DIC told the Sunday Times. "We're serious investors looking for returns. Liverpool won't turn into Chelsea, but it will become closer to Manchester United."
A leading football analyst was less cautious: "This will catapult Liverpool into the Abramovich league."
A senior figure inside Anfield also said: "This is not a shotgun wedding.
"They've looked hard at us, but we've also looked hard at them. DIC understand the values and traditions of the club, that's what they're buying into. Remember, the most important value in Liverpool's heritage has always been winning. The old Shankly adage, first is first and second is nowhere, fits perfectly with the philosophy of the sheikhs.
"An Abramovich would be wrong for us. It wouldn't be our style or fit with our fans. Liverpool are about winning - but getting there through hard work.
"We know for DIC this is not about having a trophy asset which wins a couple of titles."



Comment