Saturday, November 23, 2024

Swansea chairman hails ‘new era’ as takeover completed

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Andy Coleman became Swansea chairman in May 2023, when he bought what was a described as a “significant stake” in the club [Swansea City AFC]

Jason Levien and Steve Kaplan’s eight-year spell in charge of Swansea City is over after they sold their majority shareholding to Andy Coleman, fellow shareholders Brett Cravatt and Nigel Morris and businessman Jason Cohen.

Levien and Kaplan – plus fellow American Jake Silverstein and other background partners – have offloaded their 74.95% stake in Swansea, with chairman Coleman describing the ownership change as the start of a “new era” for the Championship club.

Coleman says he and fellow Americans Cravatt and Cohen now control 77.4% of Swansea’s shares, with Briton Morris holding a 14% stake.

He says remaining shares are owned by the club’s Supporters’ Trust – which has a protected 5% stake – as well as minor shareholders including former directors Martin Morgan and Brian Katzen. The Trust shareholding now stands at 7.5%.

Cohen, a business associate of Cravatt, will join the Swansea board, along with three further American investors, Tyler Morse, George Popstefanov, and Chris Sznewajs.

Coleman says the “momentous” ownership change will see more than £20m brought into the club.

“The new partners that I have inside of Swansea City are as fully committed as I am to helping every single day to take this club where it deserves to be,” Coleman said.

“We hopefully have the ability to reach out across the aisle to our supporters and to rebuild their trust and to work together on this fresh start here.

“I for one am terribly excited about what the future holds for us. I can’t wait to see where we go.”

Levien and Kaplan bought a controlling stake in Swansea in a deal that valued Swansea at around £100m to £110m in 2016, although the club was relegated from the Premier League just two years later.

There have been suggestions that Levien, Kaplan and Silverstein – who invested in the Welsh club four years later – have sold their shares for a minimal sum, with the promise of substantial further payments should Swansea return to the Premier League.

Coleman refused to discuss the terms of the takeover deal, saying: “We don’t talk about the financials surrounding the football club. Certain details of the transaction we’re just not going to get into.”

Steve Kaplan and Jason Levien at a Swansea game in 2017
Steve Kaplan (left) and Jason Levien (right) rarely attended Swansea games during their eight years in charge [Getty Images]

Coleman did confirm that more than £20m will now be brought into Swansea – but that will not prompt a spending spree in the transfer market.

Instead, he said the money will be used to “stabilise the business” with a focus on the “long-term sustainability of the club, while not holding back on our ambition”.

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