Man Utd protest group release damning statement ahead of anti-Glazer march

A protest group in Manchester United has hit the current condition of the club this weekend prior to a planned march against the glassers.

United will organize Arsenal in Old Trafford on Sunday, and they are currently on track for their worst season of the Premier League era.

The Red Devils are 14th in the competition and were beaten out of the FA Cup on Sunday by Fulham, while they were also set up to make up to 200 in the coming weeks in the midst of cost-saving measures submitted by part-owners Ineos.

United fans lay the majority of the debt for their decline at the door of the glazers and will protest against the majority owners of the club prior to the Arsenal match.

Fans are encouraged to wear black to represent what the club is 'slowly dying', whereby the protest group also claims that this is the worst crisis of United in almost 70 years.

“The club is slowly dying before our eyes, on and next to the field and the debt is right in the current ownership model,” said spokesperson for the 1958 protest group Steve Crompton.

'In many ways this is the biggest crisis that United has confronted since the air disaster in Munich inspiring our name. The club is confronted with Financial Armageddon. Debt is the way to ruin. Sir Matt Busby would be brought to his grave of one of the world's largest football institutions that are brought to his knees and brought a smiling stock in many ways.

'The club is declining and it will probably get worse. We urge fans to get up, unite and join us on Sunday at 3 p.m. while we march and protest against the despised glazers and the deliberate attack of the club on the fan culture.

'We are working hard on both club and non-club boundaries for the improvement of fans, our club and football for a while. Today we announce protest details that are not only limited to action on the ground. This is more than just a club for us. We are more than just a number on a chair. '

The Munich air disaster from 1958 claimed 23 lives, including eight players from the United First Team.

Busby survived and continued with the rebuilding of the club, because United League titles won in 1965 and 1967, before won their first European cup in 1968.

It was a remarkable comeback story, and some supporters now seem to feel that a similar rebuild will be needed for United to return to their glory days under busby and then Sir Alex Ferguson.

Ruben Amorim has won only five of his 16 league matches since he was replaced Erik ten Hag in November and lost eight.

United now has to win the Europa League to go back to Europe next season after a disastrous domestic campaign.

There are also various problems outside the field, where fans fear that the prospect of rising ticket prices will be in the middle of worries about United Possible profit and sustainability rules (PSR), while the canteen is also closed for non-playing employees, which are now only offered free fruit.

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