New Everton Owners: The Friedkin Group

What do we reckon?

  • 👍

    Votes: 951 67.1%
  • 🤷 | 🧀🥪

    Votes: 346 24.4%
  • 👎

    Votes: 121 8.5%

  • Total voters
    1,418
Yeah honestly I've not heard more 💵 cks from people who aren't season ticket holders. I've had mine for 40+ years I'm not giving up because of dreary Dave. The fact is if you give it up you're not getting it back. Does it mean I'm happy about situation -100% I'm not. It's not like the 80's when you could just rock up without a ticket and pay on the turnstiles to get in. Then you could judge people's dissatisfaction by ground numbers. Now with a big waiting list season ticket renewal isn't connected to dissatisfaction in any meaningful way and people spouting this argument are frankly talking rubbish.


Agree with that. Dissatisfaction wont manifest through discarding season tickets. It'll come through fan protest in and around the ground, as it always has.

That said, what happens - if as seems likely - ST prices head into the £1,000+ category in the next few seasons?

A shake out will happen and then STs will just be snaffled up by the club and sold on to corporate packaging organisations.

The season ticket holders retaining their STs are doing Everton a favour long term by keeping their STs and presence, because that new stadium would be a soul-less torture chamber otherwise.

Things are in flux though. American vampire owners always dictated it would be.
 
Agree with that. Dissatisfaction wont manifest through discarding season tickets. It'll come through fan protest in and aroiund the ground, as it always has.

That said, what happens - if as seems likely - ST prices head into the £1,000+ category in the next few seasons?

I shake out will happen and then STs will just be snaffled up by the club and sold on to corporate packaging organisations.

The season ticket holders retaining their STs are doing Everton a favour long term by keeping their STs and presence, because that new stadium would be a soul-less toirture chamber otherwie.

Things are in flux though. American vampire owners always dictated it would be.
Agree it's going to be price related. My view the worse owners you can have are Americans with no previous history of sports management. The second worse are Americans with history of sports management. Absolute blood suckers. I'm firmly of the belief that Bell & Downing would have been our best bet and that foreign ownership should be banned.
I should also add that thanks to Moshiri we've got a lot more season ticket holders than we would have had if Kenwright had sold up to yanks.
 
Can't speak for ST holders themselves but if I were one I wouldn't give it up. I'd just not buy blue doughnuts or other merch I reckon.
Yup. I can understand why people are terrified to give up their seats. It's probably asking too much of well-to-do fans. And yeah, a season ticket is a luxury. That said, people need to make their protest in ways that aren't self-defeating. It's not a huge sacrifice to stop stuffing your puss with overpriced crap in the stadium. That's where they can make their point while remaining matchday supporters.
 
Agree it's going to be price related. My view the worse owners you can have are Americans with no previous history of sports management. The second worse are Americans with history of sports management. Absolute blood suckers. I'm firmly of the belief that Bell & Downing would have been our best bet and that foreign ownership should be banned.
I should also add that thanks to Moshiri we've got a lot more season ticket holders than we would have had if Kenwright had sold up to yanks.


As a season ticket holder though you must surely look at the likes of City where ST prices are pegged right back to about £425?
 
As a season ticket holder though you must surely look at the likes of City where ST prices are pegged right back to about £425?
Of course and it's even more annoying knowing that Kenwright messed up a deal to sell to City's owners through his own greed. Ultimately I think the whole league needs independent regulator with teeth, who can cap season ticket and regular prices.
 
Okay so have emailed Dan Friedkin and Marc Watts. My email was titled 'A Question of Ambition'. Here it is

Dear Mr Friedkin and Mr Watts,

I am writing as a lifelong Everton fan who welcomed The Friedkin Group's acquisition of Everton Football Club and the vision that accompanied it. For many Evertonians, your arrival represented more than a change of ownership. It represented hope. After years of financial constraints, uncertainty and decline, fans believed Everton finally had an opportunity to reset its trajectory and begin building towards a brighter future.

The move to Hill Dickinson Stadium should have marked the beginning of that new era.

It is therefore difficult to understand the CEO's recent comments that he is "happily dissatisfied" at the conclusion of the 2025/26 season. For many fans, there appears to be very little in the club's on-field performance to be satisfied about and even less to be happy about.

My concern is not simply about one manager, one player or one season. My concern is about ambition.

Evertonians did not support the takeover simply because they wanted a more stable version of the club they already had. They supported it because they believed The Friedkin Group could help Everton become what it once was.

At the close of the twentieth century, only three clubs had won more English league titles than Everton. Everton was not built on a culture of survival, acceptance or managed decline. It was built on the principle that has defined the club for generations: Nil Satis Nisi Optimum.

Supporters understand that nobody can guarantee league titles. However, the ambition to restore Everton to a position where it can once again challenge, and compete among the leading clubs in English football should remain unchanged.

Everton's history should not be viewed as a burden or an unrealistic benchmark. It should be viewed as a reminder of what this football club is capable of becoming when ambition is matched by leadership.

That is why many fans are struggling to understand the apparent lack of ambition surrounding the club's football direction. Despite a full season under David Moyes, transfer investment, new ownership and the move to Hill Dickinson Stadium, Everton finished the season with just one more point than was achieved during the previous campaign. League position and points totals remain the primary measures by which football clubs are judged and whether progress is being made.

At a time when Everton has new ownership, a new stadium and a unique opportunity to redefine itself, two managers with proven records of sustained overachievement are available.

Oliver Glasner has repeatedly demonstrated an ability to take clubs beyond their expected level across multiple leagues and has added further silverware to an already impressive managerial record. Andoni Iraola has established himself as one of the Premier League's most progressive coaches, consistently improving clubs operating with fewer resources than many of their competitors.

Opportunities to appoint managers of that calibre do not arise frequently. Opportunities to consider two such managers simultaneously are rarer still.

Fans therefore have a legitimate question.

Has Everton genuinely challenged itself to identify the very best leadership available to drive the club forward, or has it settled for stability at a moment that called for greater ambition? The move to Hill Dickinson Stadium should be remembered as the moment Everton accelerated towards the future, not as the moment the club became comfortable with standing still.

The next few months will define the next decade of Everton Football Club.

If Everton is not prepared to be ambitious at the beginning of a new era, in a new stadium, under new ownership, then when exactly will that ambition arrive?

I remain hopeful that The Friedkin Group's vision for Everton extends beyond stability and towards genuine competitiveness at the highest levels of English and European football.

I hope the concerns of many fans are given serious consideration as the club determines its football strategy for the years ahead.

Hill Dickinson Stadium should be the platform from which Everton begins the long journey back towards the standards that once made it one of English football's most successful clubs, not a monument to reduced expectations.

Carpe Diem.
Liverpool - Slot -

Year 1 - League Title
Year 2 - Champions League

Sacked.

Everton

6 Months - Avoid relegation.
Year 1 - Rubbish


CEO Happily Dissatisfied - Pathetic.
 
Okay so have emailed Dan Friedkin and Marc Watts. My email was titled 'A Question of Ambition'. Here it is

Dear Mr Friedkin and Mr Watts,

I am writing as a lifelong Everton fan who welcomed The Friedkin Group's acquisition of Everton Football Club and the vision that accompanied it. For many Evertonians, your arrival represented more than a change of ownership. It represented hope. After years of financial constraints, uncertainty and decline, fans believed Everton finally had an opportunity to reset its trajectory and begin building towards a brighter future.

The move to Hill Dickinson Stadium should have marked the beginning of that new era.

It is therefore difficult to understand the CEO's recent comments that he is "happily dissatisfied" at the conclusion of the 2025/26 season. For many fans, there appears to be very little in the club's on-field performance to be satisfied about and even less to be happy about.

My concern is not simply about one manager, one player or one season. My concern is about ambition.

Evertonians did not support the takeover simply because they wanted a more stable version of the club they already had. They supported it because they believed The Friedkin Group could help Everton become what it once was.

At the close of the twentieth century, only three clubs had won more English league titles than Everton. Everton was not built on a culture of survival, acceptance or managed decline. It was built on the principle that has defined the club for generations: Nil Satis Nisi Optimum.

Supporters understand that nobody can guarantee league titles. However, the ambition to restore Everton to a position where it can once again challenge, and compete among the leading clubs in English football should remain unchanged.

Everton's history should not be viewed as a burden or an unrealistic benchmark. It should be viewed as a reminder of what this football club is capable of becoming when ambition is matched by leadership.

That is why many fans are struggling to understand the apparent lack of ambition surrounding the club's football direction. Despite a full season under David Moyes, transfer investment, new ownership and the move to Hill Dickinson Stadium, Everton finished the season with just one more point than was achieved during the previous campaign. League position and points totals remain the primary measures by which football clubs are judged and whether progress is being made.

At a time when Everton has new ownership, a new stadium and a unique opportunity to redefine itself, two managers with proven records of sustained overachievement are available.

Oliver Glasner has repeatedly demonstrated an ability to take clubs beyond their expected level across multiple leagues and has added further silverware to an already impressive managerial record. Andoni Iraola has established himself as one of the Premier League's most progressive coaches, consistently improving clubs operating with fewer resources than many of their competitors.

Opportunities to appoint managers of that calibre do not arise frequently. Opportunities to consider two such managers simultaneously are rarer still.

Fans therefore have a legitimate question.

Has Everton genuinely challenged itself to identify the very best leadership available to drive the club forward, or has it settled for stability at a moment that called for greater ambition? The move to Hill Dickinson Stadium should be remembered as the moment Everton accelerated towards the future, not as the moment the club became comfortable with standing still.

The next few months will define the next decade of Everton Football Club.

If Everton is not prepared to be ambitious at the beginning of a new era, in a new stadium, under new ownership, then when exactly will that ambition arrive?

I remain hopeful that The Friedkin Group's vision for Everton extends beyond stability and towards genuine competitiveness at the highest levels of English and European football.

I hope the concerns of many fans are given serious consideration as the club determines its football strategy for the years ahead.

Hill Dickinson Stadium should be the platform from which Everton begins the long journey back towards the standards that once made it one of English football's most successful clubs, not a monument to reduced expectations.

Carpe Diem.
Not reading all that
 
IMG_1923.webp

😂😂😂😂😂😂
 
Are people seriously complaining that we didn't get Iraola? If we sack Moyes it just makes Big Red move quicker. They tapped Iraola up months ago and it's why he's been stalling on Palace. If anything it should be a credit to them not getting drawn in
 

Similar Threads

Welcome

Join the Everton conversation today.
Fewer ads, full access, completely free.

🛒 Visit Shop

Support Grand Old Team by checking out our latest Everton gear!
Back
Top