City launch legal action against the Premier League | Club & PL reach settlement | Proceedings dropped (p1147)

One can assume any member can put forward a rule change as Wolves have regarding the removal of VAR

This is on the Premier League website:

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Is there anywhere that these meeting minutes are published? I would have thought that these would be made public, but it doesn't seem to be the case.
 
If city lose both cases and they relegate us then can we not refuse to play in the EFL and up sticks and join the super leauge with Madrid and Barca??

I could imagine a scenario where we join the super leauge leaving the red tops behind and after a few years they see it’s a better leauge and then regret not joking us and want to try and muscle into are super leauge lol,
 
I think its speculative but ask yourself this was there any outcry about associated parties when the rags signed a deal with chevrolet which was so ridiculous that it got the person that signed it off sacked, american company , american owners.
Wasn’t the sacking just because Chevrolet bosses thought it wasn’t a worthwhile business decision? Nothing to do with United
 
Who in the PL decides what is an associated party? Do you know if it is a panel and who makes up that panel?

With regards to you points 6 and 7, is there any evidence that they have or can discriminate against Gulf sates compared to the US ? Or is that just your speculation? Thanks
City have hinted about discrimination before and mentioned a disparaging remark about gulf based/owned clubs by a rival exec. We shall see. As Stefan said, asking for damages means something has happened to our detriment. Can City demonstrate that others have not been so targeted but have acted exactly the same? Eg, American sponsors of US owned clubs not asked to justify the sponsorship fee. What grounds did the PL give for changing our income, if that is what is alleged?
 
Are any of our sponsorship deals APT or alleged to be ? Presumably our argument is that some have been classed as this when they are not or are we just arguing over principle ?
 
Yes , incredibly vague as I have commented. This alone should be enough without even going into the witch hunt stuff
The witch hunt stuff is, I think, important. I am increasingly dismayed and concerned by the declining standards of our press. Increasingly it is interested less and less in reporting the news and more and more in trying to make it. The Mail and the Telegraph are prominent in this trend but the Times, once that bastion of truth and moderation, is also involved. And it is the Times which broke this story. The Times article, and subsequent press coverage, suggests that City are trying to undermine PL attempts to maintain competitive balance by challenging the ATP rule which prevents inflated sponsorship, and to do this the club is prepared to destroy the democratic procedure by which PL rules are made.

Now, we know that opinion has been prepared for this ridiculous coverage by articles which have portrayed Sheikh Mansour and all Arabs as basically dishonest, human rights abusing autocrats. The press coverage is also familiar in that it depends to a large degree on a pack of lies. City are not attacking the democratic process involved in PL rule making, but arguing that this process was not followed. The ATP rule did not get the support of 14 PL clubs and thus did not get to the threshold required to be adopted. It got the support of a majority of clubs but that is not enough according to the rules and so its adoption represents the "tyranny of the majority" rather than the process laid down. Nor are City trying to inflate sponsorship deals and destroy competition. It is the club's contention that this regulation is discriminatory in that it is aimed at specific club(s) (City and Newcastle??) but not at others, which were allowed to enjoy success without regard to any financial regulation. I might add that it is worth questioning what contriibution is made to Profit and Sustainability by making sponsorship deals harder to make while making sure that heavily indebted clubs can still spend way more than other more prudent ones.

Yet the pack of lies has already been put into print and is bearing fruit. If anyone wants proof they have simply to read the comments posted on the BBC article this morning.
 
Who in the PL decides what is an associated party? Do you know if it is a panel and who makes up that panel?

With regards to you points 6 and 7, is there any evidence that they have or can discriminate against Gulf sates compared to the US ? Or is that just your speculation? Thanks
I think the rules have changed slightly over the season. I think the club need to prove every associated party transaction is fair value (therefore the underlying assumption is that they won't be). Some independent assessor will then determine if it's FMV.

Talk was that some kind of database would be set up of previous transactions to act as data points for comparison. So a £20m shirt deal would not cause much concern but a £200m would. Of course as the database is anonymous I'm not sure how much nuance would be in that calculation.

The rules are linked previously in the thread but the definition of an associated party is quite broad.

Please note though that you've asked me questions like I'm an expert. I just read bluemoon and regurgitate what I think the experts are saying
 
Who in the PL decides what is an associated party? Do you know if it is a panel and who makes up that panel?

With regards to you points 6 and 7, is there any evidence that they have or can discriminate against Gulf sates compared to the US ? Or is that just your speculation? Thanks
1 The "Board".

2 You are asking us for proof? Presumably the club thinks it has sufficient proof to, at least, make a case. Personally, I would look at the timing of the December 2021 original APT rules, the timing of the failed new APT rules in November 2023 as a start. But then I would have got the AD spy agency to hack the PL's emails and get all correspondence between the PL and certain clubs around those times.
 
I thought that it applied to his contract in general meaning that the first one or two payments must have been prior to FFP.
CAS/UEFA were entitled to look at any transactions from the 2013/14 financial year onwards. Doesn't matter when the contract was signed or the payments commenced. The Mancini contract was rendered time-barred when CAS made its decision on the dare that would apply.
 
Wasn’t the sacking just because Chevrolet bosses thought it wasn’t a worthwhile business decision? Nothing to do with United
Apparently, he signed a whole raft of regional deals which was contrary to their policy.
 

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