In an unprecedented move, a group of influential Arsenal supporters’ organisations, fanzines and blogs have joined forces to call for “better leadership” of the club and hit out at Stan Kroenke’s “passive ownership.” The Gooners insist the sports magnate is using the North London club as an investment vehicle rather than investing to grow it.
A total of 16 signatories published a statement on Monday morning demanding change as the Gunners prepare for a third successive season without Champions League football.
Under a heading of ‘#WeCareDoYou’, a hashtag which has been trending across the capital all say, the open letter criticised the imbalance of the Arsenal board, “soulless” atmosphere at the Emirates Stadium and a lack of transfer strategy.
A club once famed as “the Bank of England Club”, for Double-winners and Invincibles are now “at a cross-roads”, the supporters wrote in a scathing letter to the club.
As fans took to social media to spread the message, the letter demanding “better leadership” and “some new and dynamic appointments” to the board went viral.
Here is the #WeCareDoYou full letter:
“As Arsenal fans we have watched with frustration as the team’s football performances have declined over the past decade,” the statement began.
“When Stan Kroenke began buying Arsenal shares the club had just competed in a first Champions League final.
“Twelve years on, Arsenal are about to play in the Europa League for the third year running.”
Here is a link where Arsenal fans can sign the letter: Sign
Fans have protested against their Denver-based rulers, Kroenke Sports & Entertainment, before today’s letter shows unprecedented determination.
Kroenke began purchasing shares in April 2007, just under a year after Arsenal had lost 2-1 to Barcelona in the Champions League.
Through his company, Kroenke Sports & Entertainment, he continued to increase his stake until he became majority shareholder in 2009, going on to take sole ownership of the club in August 2018, a move which included the 71-year-old using his right to buy all remaining shares, many of which were small investments held by supporters.
“Off the pitch, fans have never felt more marginalised, less listened to or valued,” the joint statement continued.
This was sadly illustrated when Stan Kroenke forcibly bought out the last remaining supporter-shareholders without even a word of appreciation of their custodianship role in the club.”
The timing of the statement is likely to be no coincidence, given Arsenal face Colorado Rapids – a Major League Soccer franchise also owned by KSE – in their first pre-season match on their tour of the United States in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
There have been ‘Kroenke Out’ campaigns gathering pace over recent seasons, but they were often overlooked by calls for former manager Arsene Wenger to be replaced.
The Frenchman left the club in 2018 and Unai Emery was appointed his successor, with Arsenal finishing fifth and losing the Europa League final to Chelsea in his first season in charge.
But now the signatories on this latest message, which include the Arsenal Supporters’ Trust among others, have called on Kroenke to show “meaningful action” to “reinvigorate” the club.
“It feels as though Arsenal is at a crossroads. Things need to change,” the statement read.
“What all of us as signatories to this statement want to see is meaningful action by Stan Kroenke to reinvigorate our football club.
“This requires work to strengthen the club’s board and football executive and once again make Arsenal a place where fans have a real sense of belonging.”
The statement went on to claim Kroenke was using Arsenal as an “investment vehicle” with “passive ownership”.
As well as calling for an “independently-minded” director to be appointed to the board and for an “uncoordinated” approach to transfers and contracts to be addressed, the signatories also want to see the “soulless” Emirates Stadium reinvigorated.
They called all for Arsenal to clarify their position on any potential European Super League, saying the the club should “have no part” in what they described as the “franchisation” of European football.
The message signed off by asking the club to respond and show that they care about the club, with the statement’s hashtag #WeCareDoYou trending on Twitter soon after it was released.