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From Everton to the Hundred: How to put a price on a sports team or franchise
Image showing Everton's new stadium in blue with a £ price tag super-imposed
Everton have been bought by American billionaire Dan Friedkin for £500 million

How do you put a price on a sports team? It is the question that the Hundred is now asking prospective investors by circulating a document to potential buyers to entice them into offers. In football, the Friedkin Group has just found an answer, buying Everton for £500 million.

Until this century, evaluating British sports teams did not particularly matter. They tended to not be worth much, and were best viewed as a way to lose money. As chairman of Tottenham Hotspur in 1997, Sir Alan Sugar likened money earned by football clubs to prune juice: “It comes in and goes out straight away.”

American sports teams had always had a different approach. In 1958, after 68 seasons in New York, Brooklyn Dodgers moved to Los Angeles. “My heart was broken,” musician Neil Diamond said. Millions more fans would feel the same way when other US sports teams moved. It is a function of the cold logic of US sport: any team can be moved, if the price is right. Where British sports teams evolved as community clubs, US sports teams were always unashamedly run for profit.

British sport moved decisively towards the American model in 2005, when Malcolm Glazer bought Manchester United. The Glazers had no prior emotional attachment to the club. Instead, they bought it because it was good for business – the same rationale that had earlier led them to buy the NFL team Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The bet paid off. As majority owners, the family took more than £1.1 billion from United, across interest payments on the money they borrowed to fund the purchase, debt repayments and in excess of £170 million in either management and consultancy fees or annual dividends. After selling a 27.7 per cent stake to Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the Glazers locked in a further £439 million profit even while retaining 49 per cent shares, calculates Andy Green from the Manchester United Supporters Trust.

Manchester United Co-Chairmen Joel Glazer (R) and Avram Glazer at Old Trafford in 2011
The Glazers led the Americanisation of the Premier League - Matthew Childs/Getty Images

The Glazers were the first US owners of any Premier League club. With the Friedkin Group’s purchase of Everton, half of all sides in the top flight are now owned by Americans.

The Americanisation of the Premier League is almost complete. These owners did not grow up as devout childhood fans of the clubs they call their own. Instead it was economics, not emotion, that led them to make their purchases.

‘It’s more art than science’

No valuation of any business can ever be entirely precise. Putting a price on a sports team is “as much an art as it is a science”, says Rob Wilson, a professor at the University Campus of Football Business.

Prospective owners tend to begin by looking at other comparable clubs who have sold recently as a gauge. Together with their annual revenue, garnered from fans in stadiums and media rights, clubs have two main forms of tangible assets: their physical infrastructure – their stadium and training ground – and the value of the playing squad.