
Audio By Carbonatix
A partnership led by American businessman Bill Foley has completed its takeover of Bournemouth.
Previous owner Maxim Demin has sold his 100% stake in the Cherries to Foley's Black Knight Football Club.
Foley, the owner of NHL ice hockey franchise the Vegas Golden Knights, assumes the position of chairman.
In a statement, the club said Foley was "committed to providing the investment to sustain and build upon Bournemouth's recent accomplishments".
It is the latest American investment into the Premier League after a group led by Todd Boehly took over Chelsea in May.
Liverpool, Manchester United, Arsenal, Aston Villa, Crystal Palace, Fulham, Leeds, West Ham and Manchester City all also have US investment on some scale.
"I have tremendous respect for the passion and support the Bournemouth community shows for this club and believe that connection to the community is the foundation for success of any sports team," said Foley, 77.
"We will move forward with an 'always advance, never retreat' approach that has defined all of my endeavours. I am committed to work with the best football and business minds available to enhance player development, facilities, and the fan experience to put AFC Bournemouth in the best possible position to succeed."
Foley was in attendance at Bournemouth's win over Leicester in October and will be at their next home match against Crystal Palace on 31 December.
He has already purchased a home in the Bournemouth area to "reaffirm his commitment" to the club and surrounding community.
Foley is chairman of Cannae Holdings Inc., which has a 50.1% interest in the club.
The minority ownership group is led by Hollywood actor Michael B. Jordan, in what is his first foray into professional sports ownership.
Former owner Demin leaves Bournemouth after 11 years in which he oversaw their rise from League One to the Premier League in less than five years.
The Cherries are currently 14th in the English top flight and resume their Premier League campaign after the World Cup break when they travel to Chelsea on 27 December.
"Without the belief and financial backing of Maxim and his family, AFC Bournemouth might well have ceased to exist," said Foley.
"Maxim's support and involvement has allowed the club to establish itself as a top-flight team.
"We'd like to thank him for his co-operation throughout the process and praise his hard work while owner of the club. We wish him well as he focusses on his other business endeavours."
Latest Stories
-
Morocco and PSG player Hakimi to stand trial on rape charge
22 minutes -
African lawmakers back push for tougher anti-LGBT laws after Ghana conference
32 minutes -
Oil slips after US-Iran conclude talks in Switzerland
44 minutes -
Salah helps Egypt beat New Zealand to end 92-year wait for World Cup win
53 minutes -
Currency crash and visa crackdowns force Indian students to rethink studying abroad
1 hour -
Saka trains with England squad before Ghana match
1 hour -
Trump tells Axios he no longer views Anthropic as national security threat
1 hour -
Trump-backed political outsider wins Colombia election, initial count shows
1 hour -
First round of US-Iran talks end with ‘encouraging progress’, mediators say
1 hour -
Starmer considers political future as pressure to quit mounts
2 hours -
The BTS fans losing thousands as scammers cash in on comeback tour ‘ticket war’
2 hours -
Largest ever cocaine bust in Australia after police raid underground bunker
2 hours -
Cape Verde continue remarkable World Cup story with Uruguay draw
2 hours -
Toy Story 5 sees franchise’s biggest ever opening weekend
2 hours -
Absa to raise Kenya unit stake via $238 million tender offer
5 hours