Liverpool, Man Utd spearhead top clubs' post-pandemic Asia tours
Youths play football outside Rajamangala National Stadium in Bangkok on July 5, 2022, as it is being prepared for the upcoming exhibition football match between English Premier League teams Manchester United and Liverpool FC on July 12. (Photo by Lillian SUWANRUMPHA / AFP)
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Manchester United and Liverpool will next
week kick off a packed pre-season as European clubs return to the Asia-Pacific
region for the first time since the pandemic, keen to tap back into lucrative
markets.
The English Premier League
heavyweights face off in Bangkok on Tuesday for new United manager Erik ten
Hag's first game against Jurgen Klopp's side, who threatened to win a historic
quadruple last season before being pipped by Manchester City to the Premier
League crown and losing the Champions League final to Real Madrid.
Paris Saint-Germain and
their superstar players Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe will go to Japan
later this month with a new manager, Christophe Galtier, in charge after his
appointment this week to succeed Mauricio Pochettino.
Tottenham Hotspur and
Premier League Golden Boot winner Son Heung-min, Asia's most succesful player,
are bound to receive a rapturous reception when they play two matches in South
Korea next week.
And Aston Villa, Crystal
Palace and Leeds United will fly to Singapore and Australia as clubs reconnect
with their global fans after being grounded by virus restrictions since 2020.
"It has been very
challenging time for all clubs for the past two years," said PSG's Asia-Pacific
managing director Sebastien Wasels, whose club will play three games against
J-League sides.
"We know that it was
difficult for our fans all over the world not to have the opportunity to see
the team."
Thai fans of Liverpool and
Manchester United will get an unprecedented chance to watch the historic rivals
on their own doorstep when they meet at Bangkok's 51,000-capacity Rajamangala
Stadium.
But many will be
disappointed to be waking up Friday to the news that unsettled Cristiano
Ronaldo will not be making the trip with United, after the striker was given
additional time off to deal with a family issue.
Asian sport marketing
expert Marcus Luer, who brokered the deal to bring the teams to Thailand, said
the game would be "the single biggest football match ever hosted in Asia,
bar none".
"There is no Korean
pop band, or any other football club for that matter, which would be bigger
than those two clubs coming here," he said.
Fans will have to pay a
heavy price to see their heroes such as Liverpool's Mo Salah and Virgil van
Dijk or United's Bruno Fernandes and Harry Maguire, with the cheapest tickets
selling for an eye-watering 5,000 baht ($140).
Manchester United fan
Bhuwit Panjarattanakorn, 27, said he was looking forward to taking photos of
the players at their hotel but he did not plan to buy a ticket because they
were "too expensive".
"It's just a friendly
match and it doesn't guarantee you'd see a player like Cristiano Ronaldo
playing the whole match," he said, even before it was revealed the
Portuguese superstar would not be on the plane to Bangkok.
Manchester United will
move on after the game to Australia, where they will play Melbourne Victory,
Crystal Palace and Aston Villa.
Liverpool will face
Crystal Palace in Singapore, while Leeds United and Villa will compete in the
Queensland Champions Cup in Australia alongside local team Brisbane Roar.
Tottenham, who have the
captains of both the South Korea men's and women's national teams on their
books, will take on a K-League select team in Seoul, and Spain's Sevilla in
Suwon.
Luer says the fact that European teams will
face each other, rather than playing local sides, means it will be more like a
"proper competitive match".
"Liverpool and Manchester United play
each other in the third match of the Premier League season, so it's not far
off," he said.
"If you're the coach
or the players, this is a great opportunity to get into gear and see where you
are."
Commercial opportunities
are crucial as clubs look to build their brand in a region that Luer says is
"still very important for any football club in the world".
PSG are returning to Japan
for the first time since 1995 but they have an office in Tokyo and have been
active in retail, esports and fashion there.
Wasels describes Japan as
a "strategy country" where PSG have six million fans, and he says
this summer's tour is "the last part of the puzzle".
"Since the launch of
our project, Japan has always been very central in what we wanted to achieve in
terms of brand development," he said.
"We will have the top
players come and not a B team, because I've been hearing that some of the fans
in Japan were frustrated when some clubs came without the top stars," he
added.


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