Prices Starting from £375 per person.
The new football season kicks-off in August with some very exciting games at Old Trafford notably the third home game of the season where Man Utd entertain newly promoted Sunderland and after an impressive first season in management old favourite Roy Keane will be looking to cause a major upset against his former manager Sir Alex Ferguson. Whichever match you and your guests wish to watch we at Hospitalityfinder are delighted to offer first class hospitality to all premiership games throughout the season at Old Trafford.
Event Details
- Standard Hospitality packages include:
- Coffee & Biscuits
- Daily Newspaper
- Three Course Luncheon
- Complimentary Drinks
- Seated Match Ticket
- Souvenir Match Programme
- Post Match Buffet
- Car Parking
- Uniformed Hostesses
Fixture List
- Saturday 11th August - Reading - £375
- Saturday 25th August - Tottenham Hotspur - £395
- Saturday 01st September - Sunderland - £395
- Saturday 22nd September - Chelsea - £495
- Saturday 06th October - Wigan Athletic - £375
- Saturday 27th October - Middlesbrough - £395
- Saturday 10th November - Blackburn Rovers - £395
- Saturday 01st December - Fulham - £375
- Saturday 08th December - Derby County - £375
- Saturday 22nd December - Everton - £395
- Tuesday 01st January - Birmingham City - £395
- Saturday 12th January - Newcastle United - £395
- Wednesday 30th January - Portsmouth - £375
- Saturday 09th February - Manchester City - £425
- Saturday 08th March - Bolton Wanderers - £395
- Saturday 22nd March - Liverpool - £495
- Saturday 29th March - Aston Villa - £395
- Saturday 12th April - Arsenal - £495
- Saturday 03rd May - West Ham United - £425
All prices are per person + vat and subject to availability
Old Trafford
Part of the new seating was used for the first time on 26 March 2006,
when the attendance was 69,070, a record for The Premiership, a record
that was broken just 3 days later when 69,522 people watched United
play West Ham on 29 March. The stadium's record attendance was 76,962,
set on 25 March 1939 for a FA Cup semi-final between Wolverhampton
Wanderers F.C. and Grimsby Town F.C., although this is expected to be
beaten once all the new seating has been opened.
The Premiership's
current attendance record was set when 72,519 spectators saw United
Draw against Sunderland F.C. 0-0 on 14 April 2006.Old Trafford Football Stadium (given the nickname The Theatre of Dreams by Bobby Charlton) is the home of Manchester United F.C., the most famous football club in the world. Located in the borough of Trafford in Greater Manchester, it has been United's home since 1910. The stadium was bombed in 1941, forcing the club to temporarily share Manchester City's home ground, Maine Road, until the rebuilding of Old Trafford was completed in 1949.
Old Trafford is by far the largest club ground in Britain and is
all-seater, which is a legal requirement of all higher league British
club grounds and new stadia developments since the Taylor Report in the
early 1990s.Until the new Wembley Stadium is completed Old Trafford will have the largest ground capacity of any English football stadium, currently holding just over 70,000 spectators.
Ongoing work on two corner stands will result in a capacity of 76,000 by the 2006-07 season. Currently, the only larger football ground in the United Kingdom is the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
