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Are the Dodgers ruining baseball? Inside the Roki Sasaki signing -- and a spending spree that has rocked MLB

SIX YEARS AGO, when the world knew next to nothing of a gangly 17-year-old pitcher in Japan, a Los Angeles Dodgers evaluator sat in the stands at his high school games with a video camera to capture the splendor. Roki Sasaki's fastball regularly reached 100 mph, his right arm a whirling force of nature. The Dodgers were smitten. Sasaki could eventually be the best pitcher in the world, team officials told one another. And when the time came for his inevitable move to Major League Baseball, they wanted to ensure he felt as strongly about them as they did him.
In the time since, the Dodgers have conquered baseball in nearly every fashion imaginable. Armed with immense wealth from their owners and buoyed by the largest local-television contract in the game, the Dodgers have spared no expense in trying to win. Their major league payroll consistently ranks at the top of the game, yes, but other line items are best-in-class, too, from their technology infrastructure to their coaching staff's compensation to the quality of the food they serve their minor league players.
When this winter arrived and Sasaki, now 23, declared his intentions to come to MLB, the Dodgers didn't need a sales pitch, because the allure for players is obvious: If you covet winning, come join a burgeoning dynasty. Since being sold to the Guggenheim Baseball Management group in 2012 following the disastrous ownership of Frank McCourt that led the team to file for bankruptcy, the Dodgers have remade themselves into conquerors: of the National League West (11 titles in 12 years), their October demons (two World Series championships in five years) and the Japanese baseball market (the signings of Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto for more than $1 billion guaranteed).
Every front office pined for the latest Japanese ace this offseason. Eight teams were granted an audience with Sasaki. Three became finalists. The Dodgers were one. The San Diego Padres, Los Angeles' chief rival in the NL West and another team whose early scouting of Sasaki won them favor, were the second. The third came down to the Toronto Blue Jays, Texas Rangers, Chicago Cubs and New York Yankees -- four other teams whose years of work in Japan and history with Japanese players spoke to an understanding of Sasaki and his desires. The rapport built with Toronto's international scouting apparatus won the Blue Jays the third finalist slot.
Toronto impressed Sasaki with its answer to a burning question: Why had his sizzling fastball lost velocity in 2024? The explanation from Frank Herrmann, a Blue Jays baseball-operations staffer who had pitched in the big leagues and was Sasaki's teammate with the Chiba Lotte Marines, and Sam Greene, the Blue Jays' assistant pitching coach, blended a discussion of data, mechanics and feel that boosted their pursuit. Sasaki spent multiple days in Toronto, and as he departed, the Blue Jays were confident that whatever advantages the Dodgers might have, they were surmountable.
The visit to San Diego left the Padres similarly assured. Star third baseman Manny Machado held a gathering at his house, where a Japanese chef cooked familiar cuisine. Jackson Merrill, the Padres' 21-year-old center fielder expected to blossom into a superstar in coming seasons, attended, as did Ethan Salas, the 18-year-old catcher seen as a linchpin in future seasons. And San Diego had an ace in the hole: Yu Darvish, the progenitor of modern Japanese pitching, whom Sasaki regards as a mentor with peerless knowledge.
The successful meetings put that much more pressure on the Dodgers, who hosted Sasaki on Jan. 14 at minority owner Peter Guber's Bel Air home and summoned an array of players, all locked up to long-term deals: superstars Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, catcher Will Smith and super-utility man Tommy Edman. Ohtani, knowing that Sasaki loves dogs, brought his Dutch Kooikerhondje, Decoy, to the presentation.
With the international signing period opening Jan. 15 and the window for Sasaki to sign closing Jan. 23, the decision zone arrived and forced action. All three teams lined up trades to acquire more international-bonus money to help their pursuit. San Diego was eliminated first. Toronto, attempting to demonstrate its willingness to go above and beyond for Sasaki, struck a deal with Cleveland to take on $11.75 million remaining on center fielder Myles Straw's contract along with an additional $2 million in international money even before he had made his decision.
Soon thereafter, he did -- and it wasn't the Blue Jays. What so many in baseball saw as a fait accompli -- to the point MLB did a pre-emptive investigation into whether Sasaki had any sort of prearranged deal (and determined he didn't) -- played out. While some teams in meetings asked if Sasaki wanted to be Kevin Durant or Michael Jordan -- to join a superteam or help build one -- the allure of the Dodgers was impossible to ignore. All of their games are broadcast on national TV in Japan. The stores at Nippon Professional Baseball stadiums that include racks of Dodgers gear will now feature jerseys with his name on them. The Dodgers' plan when they signed Ohtani -- "One of our goals is for baseball fans in Japan to convert to Dodger blue," president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said -- had borne fruit.
In executing that vision, the team has set off alarms inside the sport. The Dodgers' signing of Sasaki for $6.5 million -- a sum artificially deflated by MLB's rules on international amateurs that offers Los Angeles hundreds of millions of dollars in surplus value -- left front offices and fans alike gobsmacked. Watching the Dodgers pick off free agent after free agent with heavily deferred deals has built a wave of frustration. Seeing them land one of the most valuable contracts in the game -- the sort typically reserved for the worst teams via the draft -- reinforced something that has become increasingly clear.
The Dodgers are no longer just a team chasing championships. They are a stress test for the game itself.
THE ANGER -- from disillusioned fans, from dispirited front offices, from owners made to look like they don't care -- is very real. And it's growing to the point where people at the highest levels of Major League Baseball acknowledge it concerns them. Most worrisome is the rhetoric that fans are done with the game. That what L.A. is doing is unfair. That the financial imbalance ruins the sport.
A villain around which people can rally is tolerable; an unbeatable monolith is not. An exemplar for how teams can operate is instructive; an extinguishing of hope is not. With every transaction pushing the Dodgers further from the former and more toward the latter, MLB faces growing cynicism that has reignited calls for a salary cap -- and made collective-bargaining discussions set to start a year from now, before the current basic agreement expires following the 2026 season, that much more fraught with peril.
Over the last 13 months, the Dodgers have morphed from a large-market, big-money jewel franchise that spent exceptional sums of money and didn't have much to show for it into a referendum on the state of MLB in 2025. Because baseball is the last of the major North American professional sports leagues without a salary cap or floor, the difference between the Dodgers -- who currently carry a payroll in the $375 million range -- and the next-highest team, the Philadelphia Phillies, is nearly $70 million. That's to say nothing of the gap between the Dodgers and the 30th-ranked Miami Marlins: around $300 million. The $120 million or so the Dodgers are in line to pay in luxury-tax penalties on top of their payroll is more than the projected Opening Day payroll of 10 teams.
In the last 411 days, the Dodgers have:
Signed Ohtani to a 10-year, $700 million contract, with $680 million deferred
Traded for right-hander Tyler Glasnow and signed him to a five-year, $136.5 million contract extension
Signed right-hander Yoshinobu Yamamoto to a 12-year, $325 million contract
Signed Smith to a 10-year, $140 million contract extension, with $50 million deferred
Signed two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell to a five-year, $182 million contract, with $66 million deferred
Signed Edman, acquired at the 2024 trade deadline, to a five-year, $74 million contract extension, with $25 million deferred
Signed outfielder Michael Conforto to a one-year, $17 million contract
Signed reliever Blake Treinen to a two-year, $22 million contract
Signed outfielder Teoscar Hernandez to a pair of deals totaling $89.5 million over four years, with $32 million deferred
Signed Korean infielder Hyeseong Kim to a three-year, $12.5 million contract
Signed Sasaki
Signed closer Tanner Scott to a four-year, $72 million contract, with $21 million deferred
In total, they have guaranteed $1.778 billion -- nearly half of it ($874 million) deferred. For a team that already had Betts and Freeman under contract -- a team that over its six previous full seasons won at least 100 games five times -- to turn over more than half its roster and add nearly a dozen impact players registered as baseball gluttony.
A day after Sasaki's signing, Chicago Cubs owner Tom Ricketts told 670 AM in Chicago that "it's really hard to compete" with the Dodgers. Ricketts bought the Cubs for $845 million in 2009. They are worth around $5 billion now, according to a person who values professional sports franchises. The Cubs, according to Forbes, have the third-highest revenue in MLB, behind the Yankees and Dodgers. They are the epitome of a big-market, high-earning franchise. Ricketts said the Cubs attempt to break even every year. Forbes estimates they have earned more than $585 million before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization over the last decade in addition to the more than $4 billion appreciation of the team.
At the time, the Cubs were attempting to sign Scott, among the most coveted relievers this winter. The next day, with a final offer of four years and $66 million -- $6 million shy of where the Dodgers landed -- they lost. The $18 million-a-year salary Scott received fell in line with other elite closers.
This is not a chicken-and-egg situation. Teams like the Cubs and Boston Red Sox -- should-be powerhouses -- earn reputations quickly among players by not spending. When franchises show they care about winning, players take note. The flocking of talented players to the Dodgers is not a function of a willingness to overpay. The vast majority of the long-term deals handed out by the Dodgers are market price or club-friendly. Betts', Freeman's, Smith's. Ohtani's deal -- with $68 million of his annual $70 million salary deferred for a decade -- was proposed by him to the Dodgers as well as the other teams that pursued him: Toronto, San Francisco and the Los Angeles Angels.
While the Dodgers are among the rare teams that can carry three $300 million-plus deals (and four other nine-figure pacts on top of that) without bleeding money, they also thrive in the middle market. They took advantage of Ricketts' unwillingness to push -- he has limited the Cubs' budget this winter, even after trading for Kyle Tucker -- and won the bidding for Scott. Any team could have pursued Hernández, whose deal this winter was at market value. Every team passed on signing Snell to a long-term deal in the 2023-24 offseason. Edman was widely available at the trade deadline.
Every MLB club, even those with the lowest revenues, can compete for that sort of talent. So many operate with unbending devotion to their computer models, though, that the simple act of spending has become an even greater advantage for the Dodgers. With a history of teams on limited budgets annually performing among the best in the game, those franchises could fare even better stretching themselves financially and investing in winning, at very least proportionally to those who devote a higher percentage of revenue to payroll. The Dodgers' willingness to spend in grand sums and success with it should motivate other teams to keep up, not preclude them from doing so.
THREE DECADES AFTER the longest work stoppage in MLB history, the inequity baked into the game's financial system remains. MLB's pursuit of a salary cap in 1994 led to the cancellation of the World Series that year. The rekindling of a cap conversation has already begun -- particularly by owners peeved by the Dodgers' spending and the sheer size of Juan Soto's 15-year, $765 million, no-deferred-money deal with the New York Mets. Proposing a cap in next year's CBA negotiations would be tantamount to a declaration of war by MLB -- and already those owners are prepared for commissioner Rob Manfred to lock the players out Dec. 1, 2026.
It's clear, by now, that the punitive elements the last collective-bargaining agreement put in place -- the luxury tax, the qualifying-offer system, draft-pick punishment -- are anti-spending measures that just don't apply to some. The Mets have spent exceptional amounts of money and been OK. The Dodgers clearly see money as a competitive advantage they're willing to flaunt. There is room to incentivize other teams to spend without having to institute a cap and a floor.
For now, though, this is the game. These are the rules. Players overwhelmingly supported the collective-bargaining agreement that governs baseball. Owners voted unanimously in favor of it.
The Dodgers are the symptom, not the cause.
Players will point out that a cap is not a panacea. Without one, baseball has found parity on par or better than capped leagues. In the last quarter-century, the team with the largest payroll in baseball has won the World Series just four times. Over the last 15 years, it's just twice. No team has captured back-to-back championships since the Yankees won three straight from 1998-2000. MLB's postseason this year featured teams from Kansas City, Milwaukee, Detroit, Cleveland, Baltimore and San Diego. Perhaps most important: The randomness of baseball's postseason typically serves as an equalizer, keeping even the most talented teams from their most dynastic aspirations.
As the Dodgers exceed the base luxury-tax threshold of $241 million by more than 50%, it's worth remembering that baseball has seen financial disparity like this before. There's little solace to take in that this year, though, because the team that the Dodgers have put together is genuinely great, extraordinarily deep and prepared to weather injury, ineffectiveness and the other vagaries that would torpedo opponents' seasons.
For all of the Dodgers' advantages, it's worth acknowledging the most overblown element of their approach. The deep misunderstanding of deferred money has painted it as a tool to avoid paying salaries for long periods of time and lessen a team's luxury-tax payroll. Neither of these is true.
Within two years of agreeing to a contract with deferred money, teams must place cash to cover future payments in an account and show statements annually to the league, according to the collective-bargaining agreement. Deferrals are regarded by MLB the same way any business in any industry would: accounting for the time value of money. A dollar tomorrow is not worth as much as a dollar today. And a dollar 10 years down the road is worth much less than it is today. While Ohtani's contract will ultimately pay him $70 million a year, its present-day worth is closer to the $46 million he counts against the luxury tax. This is not a loophole. It's math. So is the fact that what they pay under luxury-tax accounting -- which uses the average annual value of a contract -- exceeds the cash they'll spend on payroll this year. The reality: They're paying more in luxury tax this year.
An actual loophole does exist in the California tax system, incentivizing players who don't live in the state to defer money and secure large signing bonuses, both of which allow them to skirt state taxes. This is nothing new for professional athletes across sports. Teams in Texas and Florida have been using a lack of state taxes to their advantages for decades. It's not a particularly significant advantage -- except for Ohtani, who California lawmakers said could avoid around $90 million in state taxes as they pursue legislation to fix the law.
What's undeniable -- and undeniably frustrating to fans and owners alike -- is that despite the inflated dollar figure, Ohtani's contract is the team-friendliest free agent deal in baseball history. Between his production and the revenue he helps the Dodgers generate, he is worth well over $100 million annually, not $46 million. And once the Dodgers were able to secure his services for the next decade, the franchise could still turn around and spend more than a billion dollars however it saw fit, perfectly content to pay the luxury tax.
Under McCourt's ownership, the Dodgers were directionless underachievers. They became a fury-inducing juggernaut when they sought to maximize themselves, and that is the ultimate endgame of the stress test: Have they mastered this system to the point where it must be overhauled?
As the 2025 season unfolds and attempts to answer that question, they will wear the boos and the chirping and all of the nastiness in opposing ballparks. But this is not their fight. It is the commissioner's and the owners' and the union's. Those stakeholders need to find an answer that isn't just kicking the can down the road for five years but actually, actively changing baseball's economic structure so players continue to make what they're worth and fans see a tolerably fair system.
The greatest drug of sports fandom is belief, and right now, belief in baseball is waning. October has always been the great equalizer, a time when hot teams regularly beat more talented teams. If that happens to the Dodgers in 2025, the schadenfreude will be strong enough to part the Red Sea. Should the Dodgers become repeat champions, though, the chorus will grow louder and the distrust deeper. The stress test has arrived, and for all of the game's resiliency, baseball's future depends on its ability to navigate a situation of its own making.

Wales hooker Dewi Lake has signed a new contract to stay at Ospreys.
Lake, 25, joins Ospreys and Wales captain Jac Morgan in committing his future to the Welsh side.
Lake captained Wales during the 2024 summer tour of Australia and the autumn internationals in Cardiff but is unavailable for most of the Six Nations because of a biceps injury.
"He's an unbelievable professional, that gives his all for the team every time he steps on to the pitch," said Ospreys head coach Mark Jones.
"When you have someone his size with his athleticism, that combines those attributes with a first-class work-rate and set-piece astuteness, you're left with an elite modern-day hooker, and that's what Dewi is.
"What sets him apart though, is his willingness to improve himself and everyone else around him.
"With so many promising youngsters in the squad at the moment, it's imperative we have difference-makers like Dewi at the club, giving them advice and helping them to get better every day."

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Patrick Long was named the 2024 recipient of the RRDC Bob Akin Award. He was honored at the annual Road Racing Drivers Club members dinner on January 22.
Each recipient of this honor, considered the top prize in motorsports for amateur, vintage/historic or semi-professional drivers, is selected by Akins son Bobby, RRDC members Brian Redman and Judy Stropus, and approved by RRDC president Bobby Rahal.
The distinctive trophy was conceived by the RRDC in 2003 to honor the memory of longtime RRDC member and past president Bob Akin, who lost his life following a testing accident in 2002.
It was designed by Steuben Glass in Corning, New York, and is given to a driver who best exemplifies the extraordinary qualities and characteristics that Akin represented, including a passion for motorsports and automobiles, a high level of sportsmanship and fair play, and who has contributed to the sport of motor racing and the community at large.
The primary award, etched with the names of the recipients, is displayed at the International Motor Racing Research Center in Watkins Glen, N.Y. Each honoree receives a smaller replica.
Im super honored and humbled, said Long. When I got this phone call from Bobby [Akin], I was emotional and it led me into a little bit of reflection. Everything that Ive always known about Bob Akin is what a gentleman he was, what a competitor he was, what a leader he was, what a family man he was. All these things that you would aspire to be recognized for one day.
When Bobby told me Id be receiving this award, I felt a sense of relief and a sense of pride that the last four years have been a reset button for me. Its been about being present, about being conscious, about being a leader and a family man, and everything that my ability didnt allow me to do when I was a Works driver because I was just completely on edge and would do anything to put it on pole or bring a car across the finish line.
I am very, very honored to accept this award and my pledge going forward is to think about who Bob Akin was as a character and to make myself available to the next generation and to lead my team in business, and my family, as Bob Akin wouldve done. Thanks for having me.

YPSILANTI, Mich. Longtime NHRA Funny Car Crew chief Dickie Venables is the new crew chief for J.R. Todds DHL GR Supra Funny Car.
The 2025 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series begins March 7-9 at the Amalie Oil NHRA Gatornationals in Gainesville, Fla.
Venables, 60, is a four-time NHRA Funny Car championship crew chief having won the title in 2007 with then driver Tony Pedregon at Tony Pedregon Racing; he was the assistant crew chief for Pedregons 2003 title at John Force Racing.
After working with Del Worsham at Alan Johnson Racing, Venables joined Don Schumacher Racing in 2011 and led driver Matt Hagan to the NHRA Funny Car championship in 2014, 20 and 23.
Venables comes to Kalitta Motorsports from Tony Stewart Racing where he teamed with Hagan since the teams inception. Longtime Kalitta Motorsports team member Jon Oberhofer will serve as Venables Assistant Crew Chief. Venables replaced Todd Smith who joined Kalitta Motorsports in 2016.
Im super excited about this next phase of my career Im really happy to be in Michigan getting comfortable with everybody and meeting people I didnt know before, Venables said. Kalitta Motorsports obviously has a lot of resources and great teams so Im really happy to be part of it.
There is no magic wand you can wave over one of these cars. Its something we have to take one step at a time as long we make progress with the changes were thinking about making, I think well eventually get to our goal. The biggest thing about that is you have to have good people, and the whole Kalitta organization is well represented out there.
Ive seen what they were able to accomplish with some of the mishaps and unfortunate things that happened to the race cars in both Funny Car and Top Fuel. Those guys never gave up. They got the chassis fixed and got the cars back on the race track thats the definition of team work. Im excited and looking forward to getting the season started.
Dickie Venables is real pro, and hes a major addition to a talented DHL GR Supra team, Team Kalitta General Manager Chad Head said. Dickies talents and experience will put the DHL team in a position to challenge for the 2025 Funny Car championship.
The Team Kalitta Top Fuel teams finished second and fourth in 2024, and each team will have the same leadership in the new season. Doug Kalitta followed his 2023 NHRA Top Fuel championship with a second-place finish in 2024. Crew Chief Alan Johnson and Assistant Crew Chief Mac Savage return to the Mac Tools team for the 2025 season. Shawn Langdon finished fourth in the final season standings last year in Crew Chief Brian Husens first season at the helm of the Kalitta Air Careers Top Fuel team, and the talented duo both return for the new season.
Alan Reinhart Joins IHRA As VP Of Racing Operations

HAMILTON, Ohio Alan Reinhart, one of the most familiar names in drag racing, has joined the International Hot Rod Assn as the Vice President of Racing Operations.
Reinhart is the longtime voice of the sport with decades of experience, announcing at the largest national events, including the NHRA.
Reinhart will have an expanded role with IHRA. One of his initial priorities is to work with new IHRA President Rich Schaefer on establishing schedules.
Besides providing commentary at the IHRA Nitro Jam events, Reinhart will be a liaison for the professional teams and work with track operators and other stakeholders. He will also serve in a leadership role where hes involved with management in setting policies and procedures.
Im looking forward to a new challenge, Reinhart said. I was with NHRA a long time, and it was an adventure for 30-plus years going to all the races. The opportunity to take on this new venture at a management level, it was time for a change.
His experience gained over decades of attending everything from national events to weekend bracket races are going to be drawn upon in this new role. The years on the road taught him what works and doesnt work, what makes racers happy and how to make an event run smoothly.
The IHRA, which was purchased by Cuttell Motorsports in December and named Alex Roach as CEO and Schaefer as President last week. Reinharts hiring was announced via a press release on its website and a post on social media.
Were talking about harnessing the full spectrum of Alans capabilities, from his strategic acumen to his visionary approach, to redefine whats possible on the dragstrip, the IHRA posted on X. This monumental merger of man, machine, and mission marks the dawn of a new era in drag racing. Expect unparalleled competition, a surge in opportunities, and a unified vision that will propel drag racing into the digital age like never before!

LAS VEGAS -- The slumping Vegas Golden Knights suffered another loss Thursday when they announced center William Karlsson is week-to-week with a lower-body injury.
The club recalled Tanner Laczynski and Brendan Brisson from its American Hockey League affiliate in Henderson, Nevada.
Karlsson, 32, has seven goals and 11 assists in 38 games this season, well off the pace of the 30-30 mark he posted last year. He doesn't have a point in his past seven games.
The Golden Knights entered Thursday's game at St. Louis first in the Pacific Division with 62 points. But they were 1-5-1 in their previous seven games, allowing the Edmonton Oilers to creep to within a point.
Karlsson has dealt with injuries in recent years, appearing in 70 or fewer games in four of the past five seasons. He played in all 82 games two years ago.
Karlsson missed the first eight games this season because of a hamstring injury he sustained in last season's playoffs.

Tottenham Hotspur captain Son Heung-Min scored in each half to earn his side a crucial 3-2 victory at Hoffenheim in the Europa League on Thursday.
Spurs were quickly into their stride with James Maddison opening the scoring in the third minute with a deft finish from a long pass, and Son doubled the lead after 22 minutes.
Hoffenheim dominated the second half and their efforts paid off in the 68th minute when Anton Stach connected with a cross from a counter-attack and slid the ball home.
Yet the hosts' momentum was halted when Son scored with a low shot from an acute angle inside the box in the 77th minute.
Hoffenheim's David Mokwa headed in a cross from Andrej Kramaric in the 88th minute, but the hosts could not find an equaliser. (Reporting by Tommy Lund in Gdansk Editing by Toby Davis)

Ronald Araújo has signed a new contract with Barcelona, committing to the Catalan club until 2031 and ending any lingering doubt over his future.
The 25-year-old's previous contract was due to expire in 2026 and he had drawn interest from Juventus, among other sides, this month.
However, ESPN revealed recently that a meeting with sporting director Deco had convinced him to stay.
Araújo put pen to paper on his new terms at the club's offices on Thursday alongside Deco, president Joan Laporta and vice president Rafa Yuste.
The defender has recently returned from a hamstring injury that ruled him out of the first half of the season.
During that time, Pau Cubarsí and Iñigo Martínez struck up a partnership in the middle of Barça's back four.
An untimely injury to Martínez opened the door for Araujo to return to the side, though, and the Uruguay international has started four of Barça's last six games.
Araújo joined Barça from modest Uruguayan side Boston River in 2018 and, after a spell in the club's reserve team, has gone on to make over 150 appearances for the club, playing a key role as they won the LaLiga title in 2022-23.

Manchester United said on Thursday that they are "in danger" of breaching the Premier League's Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR).
The club made the admission in a letter sent to fans groups in response to concerns over rising ticket prices. United have reported losses before tax of 312.9 million over the last three years with the precarious financial position so far, preventing head coach Ruben Amorim from making any signings in the January transfer window.
"We are currently making a significant loss each year totalling over 300 million in the past three years," the letter issued by the club said. "This is not sustainable and if we do not act now we are in danger of failing to comply with PSR/FFP (Financial Fair Play) requirements in future years and significantly impacting our ability to compete on the pitch.
"We will get back to a cash positive position as soon as possible and we will have to make some difficult choices to get there."
Premier League clubs in breach of PSR rules can be hit with fines and points deductions. New co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe has implemented wide-ranging cost-cutting measures since taking over in February including making 250 club staff redundant in the summer.
Sources have told ESPN that United's tight finances mean they are open to offers for any senior player in January. That includes academy graduate Alejandro Garnacho.
Although the club does not want the youngster to depart, they may be forced into negotiations with either Chelsea or Napoli before the deadline.
Lord's reshapes global role as Jay Shah joins new MCC advisory board

Jay Shah, the ICC chair and ex-secretary of the BCCI, has joined a new Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) advisory board, which will replace the club's world cricket committee.
"An important step has been made in the forming of the World Cricket Connects Advisory Board," Nicholas said. "We have assembled an impressive group of the best minds in cricket across several different areas relevant to our sport. I am delighted to be working with this experienced group and excited about what we can collectively achieve for the benefit of the global game."
The world cricket committee was an independent body which did not hold any formal power, but its recommendations have often been adopted by the ICC. These have included calls for a Decision Review System, the formation of a World Test Championship, the introduction of day-night Test cricket, and the use of a shot clock to improve slow over-rates,
The new advisory board will meet virtually throughout the year, and in person after the symposium at Lord's. MCC said: "This independent group will shape the annual World Cricket Connects agenda, help facilitate the event's discussions and in turn maximise the opportunity for genuine impact on the health of the game."
World Cricket Connects advisory board members: Kumar Sangakkara (chair), Anurag Dahiya (ICC chief commercial officer), Chris Dehring (CWI CEO), Sourav Ganguly, Sanjog Gupta (JioStar CEO - Sports), Mel Jones, Heather Knight, Trudy Lindblade (Cricket Scotland CEO), Heath Mills (World Cricketers' Association chair), Imtiaz Patel (Former SuperSport chair), Jay Shah, Graeme Smith, Andrew Strauss.