I've also said that if you look at the Mancini contract and Fordham stuff in context, there's nothing there.
For the former, he was being paid £1.45m a year under the Al Jazira contract, at a time when we were making huge losses. And we were paying him a lot more officially as his contract was heavily incentive based. Does that sound like an attempt to cook the books? It was far more likely an attempt to give him some tax advantage in some way.
The Fordham stuff was actually about bringing revenue INTO City in 2012/13, rather than hiding payments going out. The only real issue in that case was if we failed to declare those payments to UEFA as part of player remuneration. As UEFA were clearly aware of the arrangement, because they discussed it with us in 2015, and didn't charge us when we were still under sanction after the 2014 settlement agreement, I'd say that doesn't suggest any great wrongdoing.
And as far as the sponsorships are concerned, I've also said that I suspect a large part of that will be the accusation that we didn't declare those payments to be related party transactions. That will almost certainly fail but even if they were RPs, the charges would have to show that they weren't fair value, whereas UEFA had already accepted they probably were. If they were fair value then there's no issue as our revenue won't have been affected.
If they're going after us on the basis that Sheikh Mansour funded the bulk of these, then they're going against the most respected sport arbitration court in the world, where we showed that wasn't the case.
As I said to Didsbury Dave, this case is based on scraps. That's why I'm confident. I also struggle to believe that the hearing didn't comprehensively demonstrate that this was a flimsy set of accusations, hence that the broad outcome has been known for a while, even if the formal verdict hasn't been handed down.