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Saudi-US brothers’ £150m offer may be critical as Daniel Levy seeks Tottenham investment bidding war

Daniel Levy, who is seeking fresh investment in Tottenham, has remarkably thick skin. But even he will have been strained by the criticism aimed at him by a swelling bloc of fans in recent weeks.

The chairman and co-owner, who is the longest-serving and best-paid executive in the Premier League, has absorbed most of the fans’ frustraꩲtions in r♏ecent weeks throughout Spurs’ desolate run of form.

Ange Postecoglou’s side – whose tactical philosophy is undeniably bonkers but also perhaps Tottenham’s ‘to dare is to do’ mantra in macrocosm – have woꩲn ꧅just one in eight and are 12th in the table.

In previous eras, this kind of negative momentum h♑as been too much for the head coach of the time. Antonio Conte was 4th in the league when was sacked, Nuno Espirito Santo 8th and Jose Mourinho 7th.

Granted, there are certainly factions of Spurs’ fanbase that want to see Postecoglou gone, but the pressure has certainly not reached critical m𒅌ass.

Why? Maybe because there appears to be more awareness among fans of the common denominator throughout the club’s near 17-year silverware drought – Daniel Levy and ENIC.

Diagram showing the ownership structure of Tottenham, including Daniel Levy, the discretionary trust benefitting the family of Joe Lewis, ENIC, and 30,000 other Spurs investors

In one sense, Spurs’ League Cup semi-final against Liverpool tomorrow night is the most important match for the Levy-ENIC regime in some time, such would be the healing power ﷽of a trophy in Nꦑ17.

Speaking exclusively to TBR Football earlier this year, Liverpool University football finance lecturer and industry insider Kieran Maguire said Levy is unlikely to leave♔ Tottenham until they win something.

A League Cup, the most junior of English football’s major troph✨ies, is unlikely to tip the scales in terms of the 62-year-old’s future at the club – but it would be a start.

Chart showing how much Daniel Levy has taken from his salary as Tottenham chairman since 2001-03

It could also smoke out more potential buyers for a minority equity stak꧋e in Spurs, which Levy revealed he is trying to flog in April last year.

TBR unders🔯tands that there is tentat🍨ive interest in the North London club as a business prospect from private individuals in the US and Middle East, as well as from the private equity sphere.

However, the mood music is that any deal is a long, long way for com𒉰pletion.

Via her PCP Capital Partners vehicle, former Newcastle United supremo Amanda Staveley remains the only potenti✨al Spurs investꦉor whose interest is serious at this stage.

Photo by Serena Taylor/Newcastle United via Getty Images
Photo by Serena Taylor/Newcastle United via Getty Images

But the major players in tꦯhe world of sportꦐs finance are whisper-quiet when it comes to conducting mergers and acquisitions talks, especially exploratory ones.

In the coming months or perhaps even years, more will mak๊e themselves known when it suits them.

In recent weeks, one new name has emer🤪ged as a possible new equity partner for Levy and co.

And an investment bid for a Premier League rival could – in theory, at least – start a domino effect that tempts this titan of sports finance into a formal offer fo💜r an equity stake in Spurs.

Crystal Palace investment talks could be key as David Blitzer linked with Spurs bid

The Premier League invꦕestment marketᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ is a little saturated at present.

While The Friedkin Group’s takeover of Everton is now done and dusted, Spurs, West Ham, Brentford, Wolves and Crystal Palace are all looking to sell minority stakes too.

Of those clubs, Palace ꧑are at the most advanced stage.

Photo by Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images
Photo by Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images

John Textor, the eccentric American b🧜illionaire who owns Copa Libertadores c🌠hampions Botafogo and Ligue 1 side Lyon, is exploring selling the 45 per cent stake in Palace owned by his Eagle Football group.

Today, The reported that a consortium led by US-American invest♈ors and brothers Mansoor and Haider Syed have entered exclusive talks with Eagle after having an offer in principle accepted.

The impact one Spurs? Bear with us.

Infographic explaining the concept of multi-club networks and ownership in football

Another potential investor in the multi-club Eagle group itself as💧 opposed to Palace as a standalone club is Sportsbank, a consortium led by former Everton board member Keith Harris.

In The Athletic piece, it is said that investment in Eagle from Sportsbank is still the preferred ওoption for Textor, who would then use t𒀰he funds to attempt to buy a controlling stake in Palace.

Enter, David Blitzer.

Blitzer, another American sports investor who hol🙈ds equity in NFL side Washington Comma🤪nders and NBA franchise Philadelphia 76ers, owns 38 per cent of Palace alongside business partner Josh Harris.

With chairman Steve Parish overwhelmingly unlikely to relinquish his minority stake, the only route for a Sportsbank-backed full takeover of Palace for Eagle Footb𒆙all would be to buy out Harris and Blitzer.

Neither Textor norꦗ Blitzer would be allowed to invest in another Premier League club until a deal is done, but neither see Selhurst Park as their ultimate destination in English football.

In mid-December, The Sun’𒀰s Alan Nixon (via ) reported that Blitzer wants to take over another Premier League and could be temp👍ted into a deal to buy into Spurs.

Photo by Rich Graessle/NHLI via Getty Images
Photo by Rich Graessle/NHLI via Getty Images

If the Mansoor brothers fail in their bid to buy Textor’s stake and he then pivots back to Sportsban♛k who then buy out Blitzer, the runway would be🗹 clear for him to land at Tottenham.

Until then, the Premier 🔯League’s conflict of interest rules would stand in Blitzer’s way.

Tottenham’s enterprise value: Will Daniel Levy get his £3.75bn asking price?

With all that said, any investment would need to measure up to Levy’s £3.75bn valuation of Spurs.

With the chairman’s infamous negotiation style (Sir Alex Ferguson said bartering with Levy was ‘more painful than [his] hip replacement’), investors may even be called to pay a premium on top of 𒁏that rate.

The £500m that Amanda Staveley has reportedly raised for a new football investment project would, at a £3.75bn enter🌠prise value, get her and her consortium partners a 12.5 per cent stake.

Photo by OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images
Photo by OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images

Whether the level of boardroom influence that kind of stake would entitle her to would be eno✤ugh to tempt Staveley into investing is unclear.

The 51-year-old financier wants another hands-on role following her exit from Newcastle. Minority investment, meanwhile, isꦗ sometimes called the most expensive season tick🌳et in football.

However, Levy’s asking price is, according to most experts consulted by TBR, a realistic starting point for negotiations.

While fans are justifiably sick of gimmicky sponsor tie-ins an꧋d the general commercial orientation of the club, Spurs arguably have the best fundamental business metrics in the Premier League.

Chart showing breakdown of Tottenham's revenue in 2022-23, split between commercial, matchday and media income

They have the lowest squad cost🌺 to revenue ratio in the division and their income stre💮ams are more diversified than anyone else too.

♚Spurs don’t yet have the global brand appeal of Manchester United or ⭕Liverpool, but they are working on it. Their marketing operation is one of the slickest in European football.

To bedrock fan🎃s, these are just buzzwords of course.

However, if the club is ever to change hands entirely – and Staveley has♈ said that she wants any minority investment to be a platform to one day buy a controlling stake – these factors will be c🌄ritical.