Lise Sports > Football > Manchester United s second offer exceeded 60 million to buy Mbemo, threatening Brentford not to accept it and not buy it! The reason why there is still money without the Champions League is reveal

Manchester United s second offer exceeded 60 million to buy Mbemo, threatening Brentford not to accept it and not buy it! The reason why there is still money without the Champions League is reveal

Manchester United is expected to reach a compromise agreement with Brentford to sign Mbemo for around £63 million, including some floating amounts with payment conditions. Mbemo, 25, will also make a fortune, and his weekly salary will exceed 200,000 pounds.

Brentford valued Mbemo £70 million, with Manchester United's first offer of £55 million, and transfer expert Pete O'Rourke said the two clubs could agree on the middle of the two prices.

"I believe the two sides will reach a compromise to reach the deal. Brentford is reluctant to let Mbemo go," O'Rourke told Football Insider. "Obviously, no agreement has been reached yet, but Manchester United has made the first offer, slightly lower than Brentford's valuation of the player, £45 million plus £10 million surcharge. I think Brentford will ask for a higher price, which may be between £60 and £65 million. However, Manchester United is indeed willing to complete the deal, and Mbemo I also want to transfer to Manchester United, so I still fully believe that the transfer can be completed smoothly. "

Italian transfer expert Fabricio Romano confirmed this view: "Brentford made it clear that they want a transfer fee similar to Cunha, ranging from £62 million to £65 million, a 10% discount to its own £70 million price."

The Daily Mirror of the UK said that Manchester United's second offer exceeded £60 million and threatened Brentford: this may be the final offer, and if it is not accepted, it will give up the introduction.

If Mbemo is introduced at this price, the total expenses for Manchester United to buy people in the summer window will reach 130 million pounds, which can be said to be extremely high for a team that does not have a Champions League seat. British media once claimed that Amorin only had a transfer budget of 100 million pounds in the summer.

Manchester United boss Sir Jim Ratcliffe declared in March that without his investment, the club would run out of cash and be on the verge of bankruptcy in December. However, "Competition Network" said that La Jue's statement is an exaggeration. From the perspective of the rules of PSR profitability and sustainable development of the Premier League, the club's fiscal health ranks fifth in the Premier League.

The benchmark calculated by the Premier League PSR is the club's pre-tax profit or loss, which can lose up to £105 million in three years after deducting expenses for women's football, colleges, community work and other public welfare undertakings. The problem Manchester United faces is that in the 2023/24 season alone, the pre-tax loss at the Manchester United plc level on the New York Stock Exchange was as high as £130.7 million.

However, the loss of Manchester United clubs calculated by the Premier League is only 36.2 million pounds, a difference of 94.5 million pounds from that figure. This is because the scope of statistics is not Manchester United Corporation. A company called Red Football Ltd. was registered in the UK Company Registration in February 2005. It is a subsidiary of Manchester United and Manchester United, and under the Premier League regulations, the club can only submit accounts of companies registered in the UK for PSR testing.

Historically, there is little difference between the accounts of Manchester United and Red Football, but this situation has changed dramatically last year. One of the biggest differences is the cost of "special projects", which, according to economic data, is as high as £47.8 million, but only £4.5 million is calculated on the red football account, mainly including £3.6 million paid to the club's senior management and staff fired.

It is generally believed that the related costs of La Jue's share purchase must be included in the PSR calculations of Manchester United clubs, but in fact, that money is not actually found in the accounts of Red Football. Not only that, Red Football even earned £10.5 million from the "centralised services recharged to other group undertakings" in the 2023/24 season.

Manchester United is not the only club in the Premier League that benefited from this method. Chelsea also avoided PSR problems through its subsidiary "Blueco 22 Limited", making some fees not included in the PSR consideration, so they can buy people crazy.

Missing the Champions League is naturally not beneficial to fiscal revenue, but it is not without any positive factors, because clubs do not need to abide by UEFA's FFP fiscal fair competition rules, and at least this year can only focus on the Premier League. The PSR test for the 2024/25 Premier League season will be based on financial reports from June 30, 2023 to June 30, 2025. In accounts ended in June 2024, Red Football's pre-tax loss totaled £55.1 million, well below the £105 million limit. However, Manchester United may lose about £141 million in the 2024/25 season alone, so it still needs to be cautious.

Manchester United can completely eliminate the risk of PSR violation by selling youth training players such as Garnacho and Rashford. Not only that, the youth training players sold in the past can also bring unexpected gains, such as Benfica's Alvaro Carreras Fernandez, who left Manchester United for a transfer fee of 9 million euros last summer.

22-year-old A Fee is expected to join the parent team Real Madrid before the Club World Cup, while Manchester United will earn nearly 10 million yuan through the second transfer share clause. The Spanish left-back contract has a 42 million pound termination clause. He has agreed to return to Real Madrid now only depends on the final transfer fee. Real Madrid hopes not to pay the full liquidated damages.

Manchester United also has a buyback clause before the summer of 2026, but Italian transfer expert Fabricio Romano said: "Real Madrid and Benfica are negotiating on Carreras' transfer matters and hope to reach a comprehensive agreement. He only wants to join Real Madrid."

There are some statements that Manchester United can get 40% to 50% of the A-fee transfer fee, but "Athletics Network" says it is actually only 20%. If Real Madrid pays £42 million, Manchester United will get £8.4 million (10 million euros).