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Newcastle United chief's clear hint club could leave St James' Park in new revelation

Newcastle's chief operating officer, Brad Miller, has told supporters the club are "seriously" looking at moving to a new stadium that could earn TWICE as much revenue than St James' Park - and will house more fans.

Speaking at the 'We Are United' event at the club's STACK fan zone, Miller, CEO Darren Eales, sporting director Paul Mitchell, and commercial chief Peter Silverstone invited a large crowd to listen to their views. The future of St James' Park is the big question on every supporter's lips.

However, what was also made clear was that fans would be consulted every step of the way and asked for their opinion on a range of decisions. With a big crowd packed inside the 3,000-capacity venue, those in attendance were asked their views - and there was an overwhelming show of hands to MOVE stadium.

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It was stressed to supporters that moving the stadium would increase the club's PSR fortunes and give them the opportunity to increase the capacity.

Miller told a packed fanzone at STACK: "It is an absolute privilege to be able to be involved in such a massive project that means so much to so many people. I feel the weight of that responsibility of that, but I am not hindered by it.

"It is a once in a lifetime opportunity. So everything we are doing, do we invest and transform St James' as we see it today on site where we are? Or do we take that bold move and think about moving? We want to make sure it is a very robust process. So regardless of the outcome, I want to stand up in front of everybody through the process and say: 'This is why it is a logical decision'.

"With the long-term competitiveness in mind because as you have heard a lot it is all about revenue and PSR. We have to work hard to make sure everybody contributes to that to make sure we give as much money as possible to Paul (Mitchell) and the football side in order to remain competitive on the field. And so in terms of next steps. We are coming towards the end of the next stage, the briefing stage.

"There are a lot of risks and opportunities at St James'. We have take time to dig into those and make sure we've got the devil in the detail. In terms of the programme, how long it will take and what will it do for us in terms of revenue."

Newcastle United's top brass speak with fans outside St James' Park
Newcastle United's top brass speak with fans outside St James' Park -Credit:Lee Ryder

The suggestion from Miller was that Newcastle have looked closely into staying at St James' Park and "transforming it" or moving to a bigger venue that would not be too far away from the current ground.

Significantly, Miller then added: "We have also taken the opportunity to look at what will a new stadium look like. It's not comparing apples with apples, they are not like for like. It's comparing apples with pears. The brilliant thing about St James' is it is an iconic location, the atmosphere and the competitive edge it gives the team on the pitch - and it has 52,000 seats already.

"But a new stadium doesn't have that and we'd have to pay for all those seats again. A new stadium has the potential to earn a lot more, both on match days, and non-match days, a bit like STACK, - it is giving us an indication that we can actually contribute even more to the football club and football side if we had a new stadium.

"I don't know how you are all feeling or whether it has warmed you up. Can I dare to ask if you are up for some audience participation. I won't hold you to any of it, and it won't go into a planning application. It is a little bit of fun."

Miller then put the two proposals to supporters, saying: "The first choice is if we stayed at St James' we have the 52,000 seats already. It comes with significantly more money if we transform it and it will look amazing. That's option one.

"Option two is if we were to move away, and not too far away as we aren't going to stretch the elastic band to the point of breaking. The second option we are looking at it seriously as it does have the potential to earn more than twice as much in terms of revenue, compared to a transformation of St James' Park. And more seats, a lot more seats potentially."

The show of hands to move to a new stadium seemed to be the majority of the room with Miller responding: "Wow, wow. As you may have contributed to last year, there was a survey. At that time 71% of everybody that responded said stay at St James' Park.

"Only 29% were open to moving. I think it is credit to everybody that they are open minded. Everybody now understands the importance of PSR."