Manchester City Announces Record Profits for 2021-22

05 November 2022, United Kingdom, Manchester: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola (R) and Kevin De Bruyne celebrate victory after the final whistle of the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Fulham at the Etihad Stadium. (dpa)
05 November 2022, United Kingdom, Manchester: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola (R) and Kevin De Bruyne celebrate victory after the final whistle of the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Fulham at the Etihad Stadium. (dpa)
TT
20

Manchester City Announces Record Profits for 2021-22

05 November 2022, United Kingdom, Manchester: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola (R) and Kevin De Bruyne celebrate victory after the final whistle of the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Fulham at the Etihad Stadium. (dpa)
05 November 2022, United Kingdom, Manchester: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola (R) and Kevin De Bruyne celebrate victory after the final whistle of the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Fulham at the Etihad Stadium. (dpa)

Manchester City reported record revenues and profits for the club in its latest financial statement released on Monday, saying “beautiful football” was the main reason for its success.

Revenues of 613 million pounds ($693 million) for the 2021-22 fiscal year surpassed the figure of almost 570 million pounds ($646 million) the year before for the defending Premier League champion.

Profits of 41.7 million pounds ($47 million) more than doubled the club's previous record.

City chief executive Ferran Soriano credited manager Pep Guardiola for the club’s financial success.

“Our strong revenue performance was due to multiple factors, but ultimately driven by the ‘beautiful football’ we play and the continuous fan growth that it generates; more fans, more audiences, more people in the stadium, and more partners that want to be commercially associated with Manchester City,” Soriano said.

Since being bought by the Abu Dhabi royal family in 2008, City has become one of the most financially powerful clubs in world soccer, winning 14 major trophies and signing some of the biggest names in the sport.

The latest figures show its growth as a commercial business as well.

“In 2008, we gave ourselves the target of exceeding the benchmarks that had been set by others within football; and in doing so, to also exceed the new standards that we believed leading clubs would achieve in the time it would take us to catch up,” chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak said. “Our aim was clear — to one day be the club that set the benchmark for others.

“The statistics and results show that in many ways we are beginning to achieve our long-term ambition.”

City's financial power has led to rivals raising the issue of the difficulty of being able to compete in the transfer market, with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp most recently airing his views.

“Nobody can compete with City in that,” Klopp said last month. “You have the best team in the world and you put in the best striker (Erling Haaland) on the market. No matter what it costs, you just do it ... What does Liverpool do? We cannot act like them. It’s not possible.”



Manchester United’s Amorim: 'I Will Not Have Time, I Have to Get it Right, Fast'

Soccer Football - Premier League - Nottingham Forest v Manchester United - The City Ground, Nottingham, Britain - April 1, 2025 Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim REUTERS/Chris Radburn
Soccer Football - Premier League - Nottingham Forest v Manchester United - The City Ground, Nottingham, Britain - April 1, 2025 Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim REUTERS/Chris Radburn
TT
20

Manchester United’s Amorim: 'I Will Not Have Time, I Have to Get it Right, Fast'

Soccer Football - Premier League - Nottingham Forest v Manchester United - The City Ground, Nottingham, Britain - April 1, 2025 Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim REUTERS/Chris Radburn
Soccer Football - Premier League - Nottingham Forest v Manchester United - The City Ground, Nottingham, Britain - April 1, 2025 Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim REUTERS/Chris Radburn

Ruben Amorim insisted he will not be given much time to turn things around as Manchester United manager, as his team slumped to another defeat at Nottingham Forest on Tuesday.
Former United forward Anthony Elanga's fine early goal earned Forest a comfortable win at the City Ground, with the visitors slipping to their 13th defeat of the season in the Premier League.
Tuesday's loss takes United to within one of their record of 14 Premier League defeats in the 2023-24 season, leaving them languishing down in 13th in the table as Amorim struggles to instigate any real change.
"In Manchester United, you don't have the time," Amorim said. "I will not have the time. We have to get it right fast.
"In here, the pressure is too big sometimes. We start the game suffering a goal and put Nottingham in the place they want to be - defending with lots of men - then they have really fast players to make transitions.
"Even with that, we controlled the game quite well, especially in the second half. We push forward but again, in the final third, we were not good enough."
Alejandro Garnacho was especially wasteful in attack for United, finishing the match having had six of United's 24 shots at goal, without really testing Forest goalkeeper Matz Sels.
Amorim has defended the young Argentine in the past, and again insisted Garnacho's overall efforts are of the standard required.
"He is making everything," Amorim added, according to Reuters. "He's trying. Sometimes you have one day that you are doing the right things, but in the final third, you are not that good, that can happen.
"The most important thing for me is that when he needs to run back, he is running back. Of course we want a player that has one against one. Sometimes he is trying too much.
"I think he wants to help the team to do his best, sometimes he doesn't make the best choice, but you cannot point to any player today."