Before the gold rush: remembering Manchester City’s last season before Sheikh Mansour

A new owner, a new manager and a surge of fresh hope. Manchester City experienced all three twice in quick succession. The first was a false dawn; the second turned out to be the real thing. The club was catapulted to glory and global prominence by the Abu Dhabi royal family, but not before a briefly promising-yet-chaotic interlude under Thaksin Shinawatra.

Manchester City had been drifting listlessly with Stuart Pearce in charge, becoming all too accustomed to uninspiring football and life in the lower reaches of the Premier League. Shinawatra’s takeover in June 2007 was intended to remedy this. The former Prime Minister of Thailand appointed Sven-Goran Eriksson as manager, a year on from the Swede leaving the England job.

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Sean Cole
Writer

Sean Cole is a freelance journalist. He has written for FourFourTwo, BBC Sport and When Saturday Comes among others. A Birmingham City supporter and staunch Nikola Zigic advocate, he once scored a hat-trick at St. Andrew’s (in a half-time game). He also has far too many football shirts and spends far too much time reading the Wikipedia pages of obscure players.