In part two of this special two-part episode of Don't Forget Your Ticket, host Carl-Erik Michalsen Moberg continues his conversation with Dr. Giambattista Rossi, Senior Lecturer at Birkbeck Business School, University of London. Where part one examined the economics of superstar signings and the structural decline of Italian football, part two widens the lens to England and beyond: the painful history that forced English football to rebuild itself, the wave of American ownership reshaping the Premier League, the Saudi Arabian experiment, and the question of where the global game goes from here.
Giambattista is as direct in this episode as he was in the first. Why did Hillsborough and Bradford change everything about how English football is run? Why did the Glazers get it so wrong at Manchester United while Liverpool and Arsenal got it right? What does a conversation with the chief revenue officer of Ronaldo's Saudi club reveal about the limits of money without culture? And why does he see Multi-Club Ownership as becoming, in his own words, a bit of a curse for the sport?
For a podcast rooted in the commercial and ticketing realities of sport, this episode is where the argument lands. The Premier League's dominance was built on a deliberate reinvention of the matchday experience: who it was for, what it cost, and what it felt like to be there. That transformation carried a price, and lower-league clubs and women's football are now absorbing the fans the top end has priced out. The connection between ownership strategy, community identity and what fans actually experience in the stadium has never been more important to understand.
How the Premier League was really built: The Hillsborough and Bradford disasters, the Taylor Report, and the deliberate repositioning of English football from a working-class product to a middle-class one, and why understanding that history is the only way to understand the present.
American owners in England: Why the Glazers at Manchester United got it so wrong, why Liverpool and Arsenal got it right, and why Chelsea's new ownership was a total disaster on the pitch, despite deep pockets.
The Saudi Arabia experiment: Why Giambattista calls it a chimera, what a conversation with the chief revenue officer of Ronaldo's club revealed about contracts, culture, and the limits of money without infrastructure, and why empty stands at an Italian Cup Final in Riyadh said everything.
The real England: Why local clubs are the oldest monuments in their communities, why fans are increasingly turning to women's football for the atmosphere the Premier League has priced out, and what English football risks losing if it does not protect that connection.
The future of the global game: Why the MLS is on track to enter the top five, why collective bargaining agreements are coming to football, and why Multi-Club Ownership, for all its financial logic, is becoming, in Giambattista's words, a bit of a curse for the sport.
Whether you follow the Premier League, work in sports business, or are fascinated by how commercial forces and community identity collide inside football clubs, this episode gives you a clear framework for what is actually happening and where it is heading. If you have not listened to part one yet, start there.