‘My name is Manchester United’: the superfan who fought to change his identity
<p>There are supporters and then there was the Bulgarian Marin Levidzhov, who died this week aged 62</p><p>Ask any <a href="https://viewer.gutools.co.uk/football/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> fan of a certain age what 26 May 1999 means to them, and they will tell you the date has marked them for life. It was the night injury-time goals from Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjær sealed <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/football/1999/may/27/newsstory.sport3">United’s 2-1 comeback</a> in the Champions League final against Bayern Munich at the Camp Nou. It was also the night the life of one United fan in Bulgaria, who has died this week at the age of 62, changed for ever.</p><p>That supporter was born Marin Zdravkov Levidzhov in Svishtov, a town on the Danube with a population of 22,000. Growing up in communist Bulgaria adoring football, he dreamed of changing his name to … Manchester United. To claim the name of a football club from the capitalist west, however, was mission impossible. Had Marin tried to do so before the fall of the regime, he would almost certainly have ended up in jail.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/football/2025/oct/16/my-name-is-manchester-united-superfan-fought-to-change-his-identity-bulgaria">Continue reading...</a>
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The Guardian