
Manchester United have been left frustrated at their away ticket allocation for their Champions League group game against FC Copenhagen in Denmark next month, according to the Daily Mail.
The Red Devils visit the Danish Superliga on November 8 for the return leg of their group A fixture and have received six percent of the Parken Stadium’s 38,000 capacity (2,250 tickets), which is 1% higher than UEFA’s minimum requirement.
However, Man United are annoyed that they have not been given the same number of tickets as Manchester City.
The Cityzens were given 3,856 tickets for their away game against Copenhagen in the group stage last season, considerably higher than what has been allocated to Man United.
The Red Devils pushed to be given a similar number of away tickets, but the Danish club turned down their request and there was no official challenge from the club.
Copenhagen have been given some new options in dividing up the stadium so that they can sell the rest of the area near the away section to their own fans.
They have prioritised that for all their three home games, and Man United will have to be satisfied with the allocation they have been given.
The Red Devils host Copenhagen in the first leg at Old Trafford on October 24 and will be desperate to secure their first win of the Champions League group stage in 2023-24, having lost 4-3 to Bayern Munich and 3-2 to Galatasaray in their opening two games.
Some Galatasaray fans got their hands on home tickets for their game at Old Trafford, and Man United will want to prevent such from repeating itself against Copenhagen in a must-win game.
