American investors have been buying European soccer clubsfor decades, so the news of FC Helsingor’s majority acquistion by an investment group led by Jordan Gardner isn’t startling except for one fact: The group intents to use the club as a home fordeveloping American talent.

The idea of buying a team to develop talented players from another country is nothing new.

Eupen, a top-flight Belgian club in a small, German-speakingtown, is known as a Qatari soccer factory, signing players from the Aspire Academy, the Qatari-financed development program. The New York Times reported last year on FC Stumbras, which plays in Lithuania’s A Lyga and operates on the fringes of theEuropean game, buying and selling players for profit.

The American investment group includes investors with stakes in teams in the NBA, MLS, USL as well as teams in Europe …

–Gardner, a minority investor with Swansea City and Ireland’s Dundalk.
— Golden State Warriors minority investors Nick Swinmurn, John Burbank, Harry Tsao and Michael DeAnda. (Swinmurn, the Zappo’s founder, and Tsao also have stakes in  Swansea City and LAFC, respectively.)
Brett Johnson and Taylor Reinhardt, investors with the USL’sPhoenix Rising FC.

Gardner told Forbes.com he and hispartners were investing 7.1 million Danish Kroner ($1.2 million) in Helsingor to purchase a 51% interest in the club.

They view Denmark as an attractive starting point for young Americans.Gardner was at the U.S. U-23 and U-20 camp in San Pedro del Pinatar, where three Danish-based players took part: Jonathan Amon of FC Nordsjaelland and Emmanuel Sabbi and ChristianCappis of Hobro.

Amon, who made his senior national team debut last fall, moved to Denmark to attend the Kies School, a sports boarding school. Sabbi joined Hobro after starting out hispro career in Spain, while Cappis, who scored in both U.S. U-20 games, signed when MLS rules on Homegrown rights blocked his efforts to join FC Dallas from its academy.

FC Helsingor, based inthe port city of Elsinore near Sweden, was only founded in 2005 and has been struggling recently. It was relegated from the Superliga in 2018 after one season in the elite and sits in the relegationzone of the second division with 10 games to play. It has a new 4,000-seat stadium that it expects to open this summer. Its current team consists entirely of Danes except two Brazilians.

YouTube video

FC Helsingor CEO Janus Kyhlsaid the goal is to build on the club’sreputation for developing players from the North Zealand area who might have fallen “through the cracks” elsewhere and to bring over Americans overlooked by MLS clubs.

“We are confident,” hesaid, “that there are some good players over there who we can introduce to European football and get their talent redeemed.”

Kyhl will remain the club’s CEO, while Gardner will initially serveas chairman of FC Helsingor’s corporation.

“I’m incredibly excited to complete the acquisition of a majority stake in FC Helsingor,” said Gardner. “The ownership group we haveassembled is as strong as any you will see in global soccer, and we are eager to leverage the connections and expertise we have to make Helsingor the next hub for football talentdevelopment.”

Join the Conversation

7 Comments

  1. Can’t see this being a profitable business model. Since the last decade, how many superstars have graduated from such small clubs?

  2. I think the focus is, at the worst, breaking even and giving young Americans a platform to develop. We have waited for the NCAA long enough to help in the path to pro process but in all honesty, i feel it fails quite badly in this aspect. 

  3. Jordan Gardner has done his due diligence, its one of the easiest places in Europe to get a work permit. Lax immigration laws. 

  4. Carlos should be wondering why American investment dollars are going to teams outside this country. Shouldn’t we be encouraging those dollars to stay at home?

  5. Is the  Danish government  MUCH MORE relaxed on work regulations  than other EURO  countries on Americans coming to its country to play pro soccer? 

Leave a comment