Reverting to type, I see. It's pretty clear from the Sec material that they were open to selling. Indeed, a full sale was their preferred route. Yet, you continue to perpetuate the myth that JR had no choice, the Glazers didn't want to sell. Crazy stuff. If a legally acceptable offer is the definition of a serious offer, then the other "bidder" was a way more serious as he made many more legally acceptable offers than JR.
Neville should really have asked:
1) You had an opportunity to buy out the club, why didn't you take it? Why go in to partnership with the Glazers?
2) What does the ownership look like in a few years?
3) Not all the debt will come down by becoming more profitable, a decision has to be made wrt to the legacy LBO debt, how do you intend to deal with that while planning for a new stadium?
Overall, I though Radcliffe did ok. A few slip ups- the "nobody suggested that" to Neville's suggest fix for the 40,000 cut, his definition of a faithful fan went a bit wayward, his bit about the club being more generous in the future should the good times rolls. He also inadvertently gave away some privileged information relating to the club's operational costs. No harm done.
He may have been a little reluctant to be critical of the Glazers, but his attempt to absolve them from blame by pinning it on Woodward and Arnold was both unnecessary and disingenuous.