Liverpool have responded to recent fan protests around ticket rises.
Supporters are continuing to demonstrate against the Anfield hierarchy’s plans to lock in inflationary price mark-ups for home matches over the next three years.
Flags have been withdrawn from The Kop for the remainder of this season while fans are being actively encouraged to spend no money inside the stadium.
The Reds’ CEO Billy Hogan previously wrote to ticket holders defending the controversial plans which has been backed up by legal chief Jonathan Bamber.
An alternative ’12th Man sponsorship’ has been floated which would see a brand or company sponsor the club to cover the £1.2 million that the ticket rises would raise.
But in a letter to the Liverpool Supporters’ Board, Bamber stated that the club has ‘not been able to reach a shared outcome’ in the dispute over the ticket price hikes.
He said: “We also want to be clear that the door remains open to continued dialogue.
“As confirmed in our communications to supporters, the club will review its position at the end of the three-year period and will engage with the Supporters Board accordingly, as part of our ongoing and legally binding relationship.
“As we have previously stated, we are also ready to continue to explore your commercial ideas, like the 12th Man sponsorship, following our meeting on 1 April, if this is something you remain open to working together on.
“As we have discussed, if any of these ideas were to progress to a successful outcome within the three-year period, we would obviously review our position at that time.”
