Arsenal Impasse Leaves Fans with Few Ways to Vent their Frustrations

Stan Kroenke, largest shareholder of the Arsenal English football club. (AFP)
Stan Kroenke, largest shareholder of the Arsenal English football club. (AFP)
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Arsenal Impasse Leaves Fans with Few Ways to Vent their Frustrations

Stan Kroenke, largest shareholder of the Arsenal English football club. (AFP)
Stan Kroenke, largest shareholder of the Arsenal English football club. (AFP)

In the mid-1980s Arsenal supporters gathered outside the boardroom to shout “sack the board”. But how do today’s fans reach Kroenke and Usmanov?

Len Shackleton, a footballing maverick who was earning the maximum wage of £17 per week by the end of his luminous career in 1957, chose a particularly striking way to outline his disdain for the men who ran football clubs. In his autobiography he dedicated a chapter to the occupiers of the boardroom titled “The Average Director’s Knowledge of Football” – it consisted of a single blank page.

Having fallen out with various directors, Shackleton curtly referred to them as “those people upstairs”. It just goes to show that a disconnect between the proletariat and the businessmen who get to make decisions about club affairs is a thread that goes way back in the history of the game.

Ian Wright evoked that Shackleton spirit this week when he reacted to the icy power-struggle involving Arsenal’s two most powerful billionaire shareholders. He punched out some impassioned tweets in response to the stock-market duelling as Stan Kroenke and Alisher Usmanov vie for each other’s stake. Reading between the lines, you can imagine Wright thinking to himself: “What on earth do these two men really know or care about football?”

As Arsenal’s Old Etonian former chairman Peter Hill-Wood famously said when Kroenke first appeared on the scene: “We don’t want his sort.” The natural suspicion of an overseas investor’s motives was crystal clear. The old Arsenal board was made up of families who had been associated with the club for decades but they had to do some soul-searching 10 years ago when two super-rich interested parties turned up – one from the US and one from Russia – to acquire an interest in the wealth swilling around Premier League football with its ever-growing television deals and commercial potential. Did it matter what either of them knew or cared about Arsenal? Was one sort preferable to the other?

In the brave new world of oligarch- and entrepreneur-driven football clubs, they took the plunge with Kroenke, whose stewardship style is to take a back seat and let the business coast. His hands‑off approach was one of the factors that appealed. But as Arsenal’s Kroenke era drifts on, the kind of comfortable and complacent atmosphere to rile the likes of Wright brings us back to that question of whether it matters how much the American knows or cares about football.

The history of the game has thrown up some exceptional custodians, revered for looking after a club as if it were a family treasure and giving every ounce of business acumen and in some cases philanthropic wealth to protect and promote it, always with the club at heart. Jack Walker at Blackburn, the Cobbold family at Ipswich, Matthew Harding at Chelsea, Dick Knight at Brighton & Hove Albion all spring to mind.

In James Montague’s book The Billionaire’s Club, which examines the new wave of investor-owners from Eastern Europe, the US, Asia and the Middle East, he asks a critical question. “Does it matter who owns a football club? Does it matter why someone has chosen to buy and bankroll your team? The simplest answer I heard, whether it was Colin at Portsmouth or Jacco from ADO Den Haag, was that most fans I meet didn’t care; as long as their team won silverware, they would accept almost any owner. But not everyone wins, and that is when the questions begin to be asked. About the owners and what they are in it for.”

What are they in it for? The bluntest answer takes the form of balance sheets. In terms of the cold war at Arsenal, it is instructive to take a look at what has happened to the share price since Kroenke and Usmanov began investing in the club. The cost of a share in the summer of 2007, when both men started to build their stakes more seriously, escalated quite quickly from £7,500 to £10,000. In 2011 Kroenke made his big move to become majority shareholder with the share price valued at just over £11,000.

Now, after the two have sat on their stakes for a decade and not invested one penny in the club during that time, Arsenal are in a position where Kroenke felt able to turn down £32,000 per share from an external consortium before testing the water to buy out Usmanov. Without having to do much at all the investment has more than tripled in value. Perhaps he and Usmanov see it as too much of a good thing to sell, with even greater appreciation anticipated. That seems to be the state of play as each rebuffs the other’s inquiries about selling.

It leaves Arsenal at a stifling impasse, with two men who cannot seem to cooperate in an uneasy non-alliance. Frustrated supporters do not have the easiest task to air their discontent about the ownership in a way that gets to the men themselves. Kroenke seldom attends games. In days gone by owners would have to run the gauntlet of vocal abuse on their way back to the car park after a match.

In the average old days of the mid-1980s Arsenal fans gathered in their thousands outside the marble halls, just below the windows of the oak-panelled boardroom, shouting “sack the board” and the rest. It was seen and heard all right. But the disaffected of today have few obvious ways to vent their disappointment directly to the ruling factions. Social media protestations or occasional chants at the stadium, such as at the final home match of last season against Everton and a bad-tempered AGM when Kroenke comes to town, have not yet had any major impact.

Ordinary fans will not have it easy trying to take it to the billionaires, who might not know considerably more than Shackleton’s friends upstairs, but have the money, and the distance, to ignore it.

The Guardian Sport



Hospital: Vonn Had Surgery on Broken Leg from Olympics Crash

This handout video grab from IOC/OBS shows US Lindsey Vonn crashing during the women's downhill event at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 8, 2026. (Photo by Handout / various sources / AFP)
This handout video grab from IOC/OBS shows US Lindsey Vonn crashing during the women's downhill event at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 8, 2026. (Photo by Handout / various sources / AFP)
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Hospital: Vonn Had Surgery on Broken Leg from Olympics Crash

This handout video grab from IOC/OBS shows US Lindsey Vonn crashing during the women's downhill event at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 8, 2026. (Photo by Handout / various sources / AFP)
This handout video grab from IOC/OBS shows US Lindsey Vonn crashing during the women's downhill event at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 8, 2026. (Photo by Handout / various sources / AFP)

Lindsey Vonn had surgery on a fracture of her left leg following the American's heavy fall in the Winter Olympics downhill, the hospital said in a statement given to Italian media on Sunday.

"In the afternoon, (Vonn) underwent orthopedic surgery to stabilize a fracture of the left leg," the Ca' Foncello hospital in Treviso said.

Vonn, 41, was flown to Treviso after she was strapped into a medical stretcher and winched off the sunlit Olimpia delle Tofane piste in Cortina d'Ampezzo.

Vonn, whose battle to reach the start line despite the serious injury to her left knee dominated the opening days of the Milano Cortina Olympics, saw her unlikely quest halted in screaming agony on the snow.

Wearing bib number 13 and with a brace on the left knee she ⁠injured in a crash at Crans Montana on January 30, Vonn looked pumped up at the start gate.

She tapped her ski poles before setting off in typically aggressive fashion down one of her favorite pistes on a mountain that has rewarded her in the past.

The 2010 gold medalist, the second most successful female World Cup skier of all time with 84 wins, appeared to clip the fourth gate with her shoulder, losing control and being launched into the air.

She then barreled off the course at high speed before coming to rest in a crumpled heap.

Vonn could be heard screaming on television coverage as fans and teammates gasped in horror before a shocked hush fell on the packed finish area.

She was quickly surrounded by several medics and officials before a yellow Falco 2 ⁠Alpine rescue helicopter arrived and winched her away on an orange stretcher.


Meloni Condemns 'Enemies of Italy' after Clashes in Olympics Host City Milan

Demonstrators hold smoke flares during a protest against the environmental, economic and social impact of the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, February 7, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs
Demonstrators hold smoke flares during a protest against the environmental, economic and social impact of the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, February 7, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs
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Meloni Condemns 'Enemies of Italy' after Clashes in Olympics Host City Milan

Demonstrators hold smoke flares during a protest against the environmental, economic and social impact of the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, February 7, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs
Demonstrators hold smoke flares during a protest against the environmental, economic and social impact of the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy, February 7, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has condemned anti-Olympics protesters as "enemies of Italy" after violence on the fringes of a demonstration in Milan on Saturday night and sabotage attacks on the national rail network.

The incidents happened on the first full day of competition in the Winter Games that Milan, Italy's financial capital, is hosting with the Alpine town of Cortina d'Ampezzo.

Meloni praised the thousands of Italians who she said were working to make the Games run smoothly and present a positive face of Italy.

"Then ⁠there are those who are enemies of Italy and Italians, demonstrating 'against the Olympics' and ensuring that these images are broadcast on television screens around the world. After others cut the railway cables to prevent trains from departing," she wrote on Instagram on Sunday.

A group of around 100 protesters ⁠threw firecrackers, smoke bombs and bottles at police after breaking away from the main body of a demonstration in Milan.

An estimated 10,000 people had taken to the city's streets in a protest over housing costs and environmental concerns linked to the Games.

Police used water cannon to restore order and detained six people.

Also on Saturday, authorities said saboteurs had damaged rail infrastructure near the northern Italian city of Bologna, disrupting train journeys.

Police reported three separate ⁠incidents at different locations, which caused delays of up to 2-1/2 hours for high-speed, Intercity and regional services.

No one has claimed responsibility for the damage.

"Once again, solidarity with the police, the city of Milan, and all those who will see their work undermined by these gangs of criminals," added Meloni, who heads a right-wing coalition.

The Italian police have been given new arrest powers after violence last weekend at a protest by the hard-left in the city of Turin, in which more than 100 police officers were injured.


Liverpool New Signing Jacquet Suffers 'Serious' Injury

Soccer Football - Ligue 1 - RC Lens v Stade Rennes - Stade Bollaert-Delelis, Lens, France - February 7, 2026  Stade Rennes' Jeremy Jacquet in action REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
Soccer Football - Ligue 1 - RC Lens v Stade Rennes - Stade Bollaert-Delelis, Lens, France - February 7, 2026 Stade Rennes' Jeremy Jacquet in action REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
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Liverpool New Signing Jacquet Suffers 'Serious' Injury

Soccer Football - Ligue 1 - RC Lens v Stade Rennes - Stade Bollaert-Delelis, Lens, France - February 7, 2026  Stade Rennes' Jeremy Jacquet in action REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
Soccer Football - Ligue 1 - RC Lens v Stade Rennes - Stade Bollaert-Delelis, Lens, France - February 7, 2026 Stade Rennes' Jeremy Jacquet in action REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

Liverpool's new signing Jeremy Jacquet suffered a "serious" shoulder injury while playing for Rennes in their 3-1 Ligue 1 defeat at RC Lens on Saturday, casting doubt over the defender’s availability ahead of his summer move to Anfield.

Jacquet fell awkwardly in the second half of the ⁠French league match and appeared in agony as he left the pitch.

"For Jeremy, it's his shoulder, and for Abdelhamid (Ait Boudlal, another Rennes player injured in the ⁠same match) it's muscular," Rennes head coach Habib Beye told reporters after the match.

"We'll have time to see, but it's definitely quite serious for both of them."
Liverpool agreed a 60-million-pound ($80-million) deal for Jacquet on Monday, but the 20-year-old defender will stay with ⁠the French club until the end of the season.

Liverpool, provisionally sixth in the Premier League table, will face Manchester City on Sunday with four defenders - Giovanni Leoni, Joe Gomez, Jeremie Frimpong and Conor Bradley - sidelined due to injuries.