The Glazer family's new-found reputation as benevolent owners of Manchester United will be seriously tested if Sir Alex Ferguson pursues his interest in Mahamadou Diarra, with the Lyon midfielder saddled with a price tag of more than £24.5 million ($69.3 million) by the French champions-designate.
United chief executive David Gill insisted the Glazers had altered their initial aggressive business strategy for the club after concerns expressed by the Old Trafford hierarchy.
But it is the most critical phase of the manager's latest rebuilding programme - the extensive overhaul of his ageing and depleted midfield - that will reveal their ability to compete financially with Europe's leading clubs.
The United manager was at San Siro last week as part of his search for Roy Keane's replacement, with Milan's Gennaro Gattuso also observed, and saw Diarra head Lyon's goal in the Champions' League defeat by the Rossoneri.
Lyon, however, have responded to interest from United and Real Madrid by declaring they will sell the powerful 24-year-old only if he attracts a better offer than the £24.5 million that took their former employee Michael Essien to Stamford Bridge last summer.
"There will be no revolution," said Lyon chairman Jean-Michel Aulas, even though his club will be in the market for new strikers during the closed season.
"Diarra will be with us next season. Even if a good deal is possible, people must know he will be more expensive than Essien."
Reports in Marca, the Spanish sports daily with close ties to the Bernabeu, claimed United had agreed to a deal in principle for Diarra but, as Chelsea discovered in their arduous pursuit of Essien, Lyon are difficult negotiators and possess a player who signed a two-year extension to his contract at Stade Gerland last summer.
"This is an invention of the Spanish press," said the player's agent, Frederic Guerra. "I will tell you more about Mahamadou's future within a month."
Gill, in an interview with BBC Five Live, revealed that Malcolm Glazer had revised the business plan that drew protests from many financial advisers - and United's own chief executive - before last summer's £790 million takeover and will employ a long-term strategy to repay the club's extensive debt.
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Soccer: Manchester United to put owners' generosity to the test
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