City pull out of Thailand

Manchester City's hope of becoming 'Asia's Premier League club' is over after they shut their Thailand operations
  
  


Manchester City have closed their Thailand operations following former owner and ex-prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's sale of the club, ending City's ambitious plan to become "Asia's Premier League team". Jimmy Heosontaty, City's former representative in Thailand, said a plan for an academy had been abandoned and the club's merchandise shop, launched to great fanfare last year, had closed due to a lack of interest.

"We saw no point in carrying on after the [Shinawatra] family sold their share," said Heosontaty today. "City still have fans here, but there's not a lot of interest any more."

Thaksin, convicted of graft last year and a fugitive overseas, bought City in July 2007, 10 months after he was ousted in a bloodless military coup.

He hoped to make City Asia's most popular club. He also signed three barely known Thai players, a move widely dismissed as a political ploy to earn the support of football-loving Thais for a party formed by his supporters.

Amid rising discontent among City fans over his treatment of the then manager Sven-Goran Eriksson, Thaksin sold the club to a consortium from the United Arab Emirates in September and has been on the run since his British visa was revoked in November.

 

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