After stunning during his loan spell at the club in the second half of the season, Antony pushed hard for a permanent move to Betis. The love he received from the Betis faithful and the confidence shown by head coach Manuel Pellegrini meant that he was unwilling to entertain a switch to any other club. With United demanding €40 million (£35m/$46m), Betis' hopes of signing Antony diminished due to their inability to fork out that amount. However, United and Betis agreed on a cut-price €25m (£22m/$29m) fee, which saw the Brazil international return to Seville on a five-year deal.
Fajardo provided insights on how the two clubs reached middle ground after intense negotiations. "We started to discuss with Manchester about Antony in May, June because we needed a lot of time for convincing Manchester," Fajardo said. "But Antony, the agent, his family were convinced to come to Betis again.
"In the first moment we spoke with Manchester United for Antony to stay in Betis one year more on loan. But for Antony, for Manchester it was very, very important to recover the investment, so for Betis it was not easy. The move was too much for us [from a financial standpoint].
"But Manchester United made a big effort, Betis made a big effort, Antony made a big, big effort to play here again. Maybe in that situation that was the secret.
"For Betis it is not easy to sign players from Premier League, because the difference in respect to the salary between the Premier League and La Liga is too big. But when a player like Antony, for example, wants to come to Betis it's easier. Antony only thought to play in Betis again, so when you have a negotiation with a big club in Manchester United, a club that paid a big amount for Antony, it's not easy. But the player wants to play in Betis."