Jordan Gardner is an American sports executive and investor whose path from tech entrepreneurship to European football leadership exemplifies a “start small and learn” philosophy focused on culture, stability, and leadership. He founded a secondary ticketing company at UC San Diego and later acquired minority stakes in Swansea City AFC and Dundalk FC (also joining the Irish club’s Board of Directors), gaining grassroots operational experience. In 2019, he became Chairman, Chief Executive, and Managing Partner of FC Helsingør, guiding the club to promotion from the Danish 2nd Division to the 1st Division in 2020 and near Superliga elevation through youth development and community engagement. Since 2022, he has served as an Investment Intelligence Specialist with London based football consultancy Twenty First Group. He has done extensive work for various global investment groups looking at European Football both pre and post acquisition, and his work has also included special projects such a multi-club ownership and women’s football investment strategy.
Early Entrepreneurship & Football Entry
Gardner launched a secondary ticketing platform during his undergraduate years at UC San Diego, operating it for 15 years before exiting to pursue sports investments. His first football investments were minority stakes in Swansea City AFC and Dundalk FC, choosing to get on-the-ground, practical experience rather than impose capital-driven strategies.
FC Helsingør Tenure & Impact
Appointed Chairman, Chief Executive, and Managing Partner in 2019, Gardner rebuilt FC Helsingør’s leadership team, emphasizing collaboration between coach, sporting director, and CEO to reset club culture. Under his stewardship, the club earned promotion to the Danish 1st Division in 2020 and secured back‑to‑back top‑four finishes despite limited budgets. He also led community outreach initiatives and youth academy enhancements that bolstered local support and long‑term talent pipelines.
Culture, Stability & Leadership Framework
Gardner identifies “human capital”—the right people and mindset—as the core driver of success in sports organizations. His three‑pillar framework stresses culture (organic, people‑built environments), stability (consistency in management and finances), and leadership presence (owners and directors consistently engaged with their investment and spending time at their club in person as much as possible). He contrasts this with “vanity project” ownership, advocating for data‑informed decision‑making and internal talent identification rather than agent‑driven signings.
Advisory & Thought Leadership
Since 2022, Gardner has advised Twenty First Group’s Commercial Specialist Group on in‑market intelligence, club valuations, and M&A strategy across Europe and North America. He also consults for Shamrock Capital on sports‑focused private equity and speaks regularly at the FIFA Diploma in Club Management and European Club Association programmes.
Recognition & Future Outlook
Named a finalist for “Best Executive” at the World Football Summit Industry Awards in 2021, Gardner joined the WFS Speakers Bureau, sharing his insights in the WFS Digest. Based in San Francisco and London, he remains active on social media, discussing football governance and investment trends. Gardner continues exploring opportunities to professionalize multi‑club ownership models and drive sustainable growth across emerging football markets.
Our Exclusive Interview with Jordan Gardner
Who is Jordan Gardner outside of football and investment, and what personal values drive your professional decisions?
I’m a pretty easy going guy outside of football. I spend a lot of time traveling the world with my wife, taking boxing classes to stay in shape and walking the dog. My personal values are built around honesty, integrity and trust. When it comes to the football industry, there unfortunately aren’t a lot of those values being put into practice. Even when speaking to new clients or prospective owners, it’s important for me to understand why these folks want to invest in a football club, and if their motivations are genuine. The biggest compliment I’ve received in this industry is when a client said I was a ‘straight shooter’ and how they appreciated my honesty and transparency, something they found lacking in the industry from their experience.
You often emphasize culture, stability, and leadership. How do you evaluate whether a club is ready for long-term investment or strategic transformation?
It’s usually pretty obvious when clubs need help whether they recognize it or not. Many global football clubs are either distressed financially, or are mismanaged in one form or another. You even look at some of the biggest clubs in Europe, and while they may be having success on the pitch, their financial performance is often times quite poor. Every club in the world would love an influx of more long term capital to buy more players and presumably field a better squad on the pitch, but I see less desire to understand how to efficiently use that capital to grow a club and make it more sustainable. My work often comes in at the very end of the process when a club has been relegated or is in deep financial distress and then the changes and strategic transformation is being done by necessity.
What lessons from your time at FC Helsingør do you believe are most applicable to clubs in emerging or under-resourced markets?
We had a bit of a challenging environment during our time in Denmark. We bought the club a few months before the COVID-19 pandemic hit which forced us to drastically change our investment strategy. I learned very quickly that the most important part of football club ownership is dealing with uncertainty and change, and more importantly having an outstanding management team, led by people who you can trust to implement your vision for the club. I was able to surround myself with really sharp and motivated people both on the football and commercial/operations side who shared my vision and passion for the club. I felt it was important that as a club with limited resources, we were making better and more efficient decisions than our competitors. We consistently finished well above our expected place in the table based on wage bill spending, out performing much bigger clubs with more resources. It took good people, a cohesive recruitment strategy, proper club management and a disciplined financial approach for us to have success in Denmark.
How do you approach building a leadership team that balances local knowledge with global business standards?
I’m a firm believer in combining the best sport business and commercial practices from different parts of the world. For example, bringing in North American commercial ideas and cost management strategy into European Football while having a sensitivity to the history, cultural connectivity and intricacies of the sport in Europe. At FC Helsingør, we had a four person management team with two people (myself included) with a North American business background, and two folks with a Danish, football focused background. We would often times have lively debate on strategy and decision making, but at the end of the day this diversity of thought and view point helped me (the chairman and chief executive) make the best decisions for the club. You cannot come into a European Football club as an American and assume it’s just like a NFL, NBA or Major League Baseball franchise, that simply won’t work for a variety of reasons. On the flip side, European football clubs need to modernize and evolve as businesses and the push from North American investment into the sport I think is helping over time the industry progress and eventually become more professionalized and sustainable.
What are the biggest misconceptions you encounter about multi-club ownership, and how do you see that model evolving over the next five years?
I like to say that successfully owning and managing one football club is very difficult, but then building out a multi-club platform where you now have clubs in multiple countries with differing footballing cultures, languages, tax and labor laws makes things infinitely more challenging. I think the perception looking at Red Bull and City Football Group is that it’s generally pretty easy and straight forward to build a MCO and do it successfully. However, people severely underestimate the amount of resources, both in people and money needed to successfully build out the infrastructure to capture the benefits of a MCO. Most groups fail because there’s limited or no integration between the clubs to start, there’s also limited oversight from a holding company and the operational strain is too great. Generally speaking, the groups that have success are disciplined (they do not expand too quickly), they have a proper long term strategy and significant financial backing. In the next five years, I think we are going to see less MCO’s that are strictly focused on men’s football clubs, rather we will see more diversified investment portfolios that may include one men’s football club in Europe, one women’s club in North America, an investment in a sports technology company, maybe an investment in another emerging sport or league, etc. These type of diversified business models help reduce risk and offer greater financial upside in the long run for most investors.
As someone active in both North American and European markets, how do you adapt your strategy to different sporting cultures and regulatory environments?
It’s very important for anyone working in this environment to understand the complexities and challenges in the European versus North American markets. Everything from the supporter culture, to regulatory environment to tax and labor laws vary greatly in different parts of the world. Whether it’s structures in place that are unique to the sport globally such as promotion/ relegation or a financial system that does not have any salary caps or revenue sharing, I spend a lot of time with American investors specifically educating them on this unique environment. European football clubs are entirely different businesses to a NBA, NFL or Major League Baseball franchise and the folks who are successful understand these differences and can learn quickly to adapt their best practices from North American sport and business to the European environment.
What role do non-financial factors such as community engagement or supporter culture play in your investment and management decisions?
I do think fan engagement is an important piece of a successful football club. Owners who understand the importance of communication and transparency are likely to have a positive relationship with their stakeholders and supporters which will often lead to better commercial outcomes (more revenue from tickets, sponsorship, etc.). That being said, management decisions need to be done without influence or pressure from supporters and without the influence of emotion if possible. Unfortunately many clubs are negatively influenced on player signings or spending decisions by supporter pressure which can be detrimental to the overall health of the club.
Looking ahead, what kind of project or club would challenge you in a new way and align with your vision for football’s future?
I’ve turned down several opportunities to jump back into club projects in the last two years. I’m passionate about financial sustainability in European Football and I’d like to find a project where I can build a truly sustainable football club that is not reliant on the owner cutting checks every year or massive player sales to survive. I firmly believe that clubs absolutely can have success on the pitch, show strong financial results and give investors a return on their investment – especially in leagues with massive media rights distributions. There’s no reason Premier League, La Liga or Serie A clubs should be losing money, and I’d love to take on the challenge to prove that.