The club said its shares priced at $14 apiece, below the $16-$20 per share range it had in mind. At the high end of the range, the team would have been valued at $3.3 billion.

The club priced 16.7 million shares, as planned, and raised $233.2 million - which will be split equally between it and its owners, the Florida-based Glazer family.

The loss of as much as $50 million proceeds for the club will be a blow as it copes with a heavy debt burden and seeks to buy new players, who cost tens of millions of dollars each.

While the deal still makes it the largest sports-team IPO on record, the valuation is a setback for the 134-year-old club, which had to abort plans for an offering in Singapore and then saw Morgan Stanley (>> Morgan Stanley) leave the underwriting syndicate partly due to disagreements over valuation.

Investors, bankers and analysts have said the U.S. IPO range represented an exceptionally rich valuation. One analyst said shareholders were paying up even at the IPO price.

"I'm surprised it wasn't more of a discount," said Ken Perkins, an analyst with Morningstar. "Our value was around $10. It's still a rich price. They're asking people to pay up a lot to take on a lot of operational and financial risk."

The Glazers, whose interests include shopping centers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers football team, will also take in less money from the share sale, but the deal still represents a return of some 2.5 times their equity investment in the club.

The club is planning to use the money to pay down its pile of debt that dates back to the Glazers' 790 million pounds ($1.2 billion) leveraged buyout in 2005. Manchester United's debt load stood at over 437 million pounds ($682 million) as of June 30.

Some fans of the team have protested the IPO, criticizing the Glazers for only using half of the deal's proceeds to pay down debt. They argue that this hefty debt load has led to reduced financial flexibility which came at the expense of investment in players and the team's performance.

Buying players can be expensive.

The club, for example, is trying to sign Dutch international striker Robin van Persie from Premier League rivals Arsenal. Britain's Daily Mail reported on its website on Thursday that Manchester United had bid 15 million pounds for van Persie.

Manchester United will start trading on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker "MANU", with the team's management expected to ring the opening bell at the exchange.

The deal tops off a mixed week for U.S. IPOs. Restaurant operator CKE Inc postponed its offering on Thursday, citing market conditions. Earlier this week, Outback Steakhouse operator Bloomin' Brands Inc raised $176 million, selling fewer shares than expected and pricing below the expected range. Peregrine Semiconductor Corp raised $77 million, pricing shares at the low end of its expected $14 to $16 range.

PRICEY DEAL

The underwriters for Manchester United's IPO, who were led by Jefferies Group Inc (>> Jefferies Group, Inc.), sought to pitch the club to potential investors not as a sports franchise but as a global consumer brand.

Different banks in the syndicate used vastly different comparisons for the club, ranging from media companies such as Walt Disney Co (>> The Walt Disney Company), e-commerce companies like Amazon.com Inc (>> Amazon.com, Inc.) and branded consumer names similar to Michael Kors Holdings Ltd (>> Michael Kors Holdings Ltd), sources have previously said.

Other banks in the syndicate include Credit Suisse (>> Credit Suisse Group AG), JPMorgan Chase (>> JPMorgan Chase & Co.), Bank of America Merrill Lynch (>> Bank of America Corp) and Deutsche Bank (>> Deutsche Bank AG).

At the IPO price, the club's enterprise value comes to about 5.5 times revenue. That is far below the 8.3 times multiple paid by a group of investors for the sale of Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team, in what was one of the richest deals in recent times. At the high end of the price range, Manchester United would have been valued at 8 times revenue.

But the IPO price also values Manchester United at 19 times its adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) in the 12 months through June 30, making it richer than Disney, which trades at around 10 times.

(Reporting by Olivia Oran; Editing by Paritosh Bansal, Gary Hill, Steve Orlofsky and Richard Pullin)

By Olivia Oran