It is half an hour walking from the new Birmingham station to Stepto to St Andrew’s, and this is enough from one of the city’s acquaintances to understand the depth of its unacceptable potential.
From the site of the abandoned Smithfield Festival to the sea of writing on the walls and garbage bags that leak in Digbeth, tourist attractions talk about the place of its council, and screams for investment. It is a kind of scene in the city center that watered Manchester, Lies and Liverpool years ago.
For this reason, too, KnightHead Capital, Birmingham City Group is the ownership of Tom Wagner, with Tom Brady as a small investor of the minority, hopes to overcome football, although the first storm of their team in the first half against Newcastle is nothing on Saturday evening.
Their plan is the “Sports Quarter” including the new Blues Stadium and the training ground in the city of Bordesley Green in the city. “KnightHead pays an open door,” says a city source. They are the ones who have a vision here. It is as much as the Council can do to pay the budget cuts and balance their books. We need to give Wagner the means to achieve plans.
There is a high possibility of football in its essence. The population of the second city in Britain is 1.14 million, and HS2 will place it within 49 minutes from London in eight years, if the table is met. This looks like a serious internal investment.
The question is whether KNIGHTHEAD will face patience to wait for their football club to be profitable, and he continued to lose millions during the period of ascending to the large time that will be complicated, with many of the ambitious Premier League clubs to compete. On Saturday evening, it was a reminder that BRUM would not be built in one day. The record for transferring the third level was not calculated at 15 million pounds to Jay Stanfield for nothing when a golden opportunity came on its way. He missed.
The new ownership group in Birmingham, led by Tom Wagner (in the photo), brought hope to the city

Tom Brady and Agener were both in “Hollywood Derby” in Birmingham with Wrexham in September

The Blues coach Chris Davis encouraged his team’s performance 3-2 on Saturday
Some suggestions and numbers are confusing. The cost of the new stadium complex is “2 billion pounds to 3 billion pounds,” and Wagner spoke about the club, which is moving there by 2029.
The entire number of investment is KnightHead under its administration is 9 billion pounds, so that other investors need.
The timeline is very ambitious, as official planning applications have not yet been submitted and the project that relies on the local authorities that agree to the creation of new transport links, which they have made for years.
There were reports heading to the Wagner game on Saturday, wanting to put a tunnel from a new street to the new stadium at a cost of 20 million pounds. The development of this – which does not seem necessary – will cost more.
The departure of Gary Cook as an executive head of City, which was announced three weeks ago, was not encouraging. Cook, who leaves “for personal reasons”, is a serious operator, convinced Abu Dhabi to buy Manchester City and employ some of his former executive team at the former Federation Stadium here. His departure, which is ambiguous, is a loss.
But nothing of this blocks the transformation of St. Andrew. The old place was bounced on Saturday, and it appears to be a light years away from the inefficiency and the distinctive decisions of its former Chinese owners, Birmingham Sports.
Wagner’s rise about Birmingham’s long-term horizons-through “economy and dynamic economy” high educated “-inspires his appeals to the less executive planning system, to awaken” animal lives “in the city, with the current government thinking. Unlike the American-owned Wrexham, City does not adopt On the potential for documentary films to maintain the presence of their owners.
For 45 minutes, City went to the soles of the feet with Newcastle. “We want to go on a journey and get out of the first league,” said director Chris Davis after a 3-2 defeat.

KnightHead Capital has suggested a new stadium complex, at a cost of up to 3 billion pounds, which will be completed in four years

The league team put a vibrant performance against Al -Aqsaq in the pattern on Saturday night

Saint Andrew was bounced while home fans saw their players contributing to the exciting Saddam of the FA Cup
“If we continue to play in this spirit, we will go to a place.” The soul will not be enough, of course. Newcastle, with two goals, Joe Welluk and a Danish threat under the age of 21, revealed this standard.
At the location of the old Custard Factory in the city, on its way to the stadium, John F. Kennedy stands the most obvious Birmingham link. “The man may die, and the countries may rise and fall, but the idea lives,” she says. If the idea of Wagner and Co swings a fruit and the club and the city are restored side by side, it will be perpetuated here as well.