Buying Players with Loan, UK Football Will Be Investigated
UK Parliament will investigate the country’s football excitement with high debt Premier League clubs and the problem of ownership of the club Manchester United and Liverpool. Commission on Culture, Media and Sport will examine the structure of the Lower House four British football associations to review whether the clubs have to face government intervention. A key issue is the commission will consider whether there is a lot of debt in the sport. Manchester United, which is free of debt before taken over by the Glazers from America in 2005, now has debts of more than 788 million dollars.
Liverpool must go through a bitter struggle in court last October to force the former owner handed champion 18 times that, after the club was heavily in debt by buying with a loan. Premier League welcomed the investigation to be conducted early in 2011 and plans to use that evidence to help the league “to recognize the challenges faced by the country’s football.”
Another case happens with defender Ryan Shotton, who is on standby to go out on loan in January unless he forces his way into the first-team action over the festive period. And manager Tony Pulis hasn’t ruled out a Premier League debut in the near future for the one-time Academy graduate Shotton, a right-back or centre-half, has already cut his teeth at various levels of the game on loan elsewhere.