English Premier League club Liverpool went up for sale Friday after American owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett appointed Barclays Capital to find a buyer. Liverpool, English champion 18 times and winner of the European Cup five times, also said British Airways chief Martin Broughton had been appointed chairman with immediate effect and would oversee the sale. “Following numerous expressions of interest from third parties, the Club has engaged Barclays Capital to advise on the sale process,” the club said on its website. “The Club has the full support of its existing bankers for this process and has financing in place which will fully support the Club's operations.” Hicks and Gillett said in a joint statement that being owners of Liverpool for the past three years had been a “rewarding and exciting” experience. “Having grown the Club this far we have now decided together to look to sell the Club to owners committed to take the Club through its next level of growth and development,” they said. The American businessmen have faced intense scrutiny from Liverpool fans with protests for their removal a frequent occurrence at Anfield after ladening the club with the huge debts of its parent company. The duo are facing a demand to repay 100 million pounds ($160.4m) of the club's 237 million pounds debt to its lenders, Royal Bank of Scotland and US bank Wachovia, in July. Analysts had suggested Liverpool, which has plans for a new stadium at nearby Stanley Park, is worth £500m but Barclays is understood to believe it would fetch far more if given more time to improve its trading. Broughton will work alongside Liverpool's exisiting management team in the day-to-day running of the club.