Malcolm Glazer was yesterday labelled a "parasite" as the campaign to block the American billionaire from taking complete control of Manchester United gathered support.
Nick Towle, the chairman of Shareholders United, who reported a one-day growth in membership of a thousand people on Saturday to add to the existing 28,000, said: "We regard Glazer as a parasite attached to the body of Manchester United.
"One of the ways to get rid of a parasite is to starve it of food, and Glazer's food is money. Fans provide 80 per cent of the club's revenues, so we will use customer power. If you have no customers there will be no profit - and no Glazer."
Towle, a corporate lawyer, Old Trafford season-ticket holder and lifelong fan of United, vowed: "We are going to carry the fight to Glazer until such time as we win it."
Shareholders United acknowledges that by today the owner of the American football team Tampa Bay Buccaneers will have acquired the 75 per cent of shares needed to take de facto control of United, which means that he can begin to prepare to delist the club from the London Stock Exchange and call a general meeting to pass resolutions to turn it from a registered into a private company.
The 265 million ($690 million) of debt Glazer is planning to transfer into Manchester United as part of his 790 million takeover can only be switched once the club is a private company.
"Although our 25 per cent barricade is gone, we are looking at other barricades," Towle said. "Glazer's next intention will be to buy 90 per cent of the outstanding 25 per cent of shares in order to control 97.5 per cent and enable him to make compulsory purchases of remaining shares.
"We are absolutely confident of gathering the 2.5 per cent we need, about 6.5 million shares. We are all committed. We already have around 2 per cent, possibly more, and are gathering pledges from other shareholders all the time.
"There is also the possibility of 50 shareholders going to court to stop him taking the company private. We have to talk to our legal team about this but we are confident we can build a very good financial case. An emotional one, too, because of the circumstances surrounding the case, based on the fact that he wants to dispossess us of all our stockholding in the club."
Shareholders United, a professionally run organisation with a volunteer-staffed office in Manchester, is not short of funds, since 10 membership fees, which buy one share in the club, are due next month, providing a further 250,000.
The group will be backing the fans' call to boycott the products of sponsors such as Vodafone, Nike, Budweiser and Audi. "We want to send a signal they are going to suffer along with the club if they support Glazer," Towle said. "It will be a rolling and growing campaign.
"In the first year, when Glazer hikes the ticket prices and renames Old Trafford the Coca-Cola Theatre of Dreams, a lot of fans will get disillusioned with him and stop going to the ground," he predicted.
"Glazer doesn't understand the heritage or tradition of the club. He should not be there and we are going to make sure he isn't there, by using the fans and customer power."
It has emerged that several United players, including Wayne Rooney, Ryan Giggs and Ruud van Nistelrooy, were advised by police to stay away from a charity event at Old Trafford last Friday night because of a demonstration by hundreds of fans, who bombarded arriving guests with beer cans, accusing them of "putting money into Glazer's pocket".
Towle and his organisation, while fully in support, hope that nothing on a massive, disruptive scale will take place at Sunday's FA Cup final against Arsenal in Cardiff. "It is a game we are concerned to win."
United's assistant manager, Carlos Queiroz, claims the team will not be distracted.
"We have one thing on our minds: to prepare as best we can to play the cup final."
Fan power
* Fans provide 80 per cent of Manchester United's revenues
* New owner Malcolm Flazer is planning to trasfer 265 million of debt to the club
* Reports that Sir Alex Ferguson will walk from the club have been described as rubbish
- INDEPENDENT
Soccer: Manchester United fans vow to expel 'parasite'
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