PL charge City for alleged breaches of financial rules

Here's my collage of comments culled from this thread and stitched together as a letter of complaint to The Economist - thanks to to all concerned!

Editorial Complaint - Appalling Article about Manchester City FC


To:letters@economist.com

Sat 30 May at 16:13

Dear Editor,

May I draw your attention to the highlighted sentence in the article copied below and ask how such a disgraceful statement has found its way into your publication?

"In the otherwise sunny story of the Premier League there is one big cloud. In 2023 Manchester City, one of England’s most successful clubs, was charged with well over 100 breaches of the league’s rules. Some of City’s alleged transgressions (all resolutely denied by the club) relate to non-co-operation with league officials. Most deal with failures to accurately report the club’s accounts, thus avoiding “financial fair play” regulations that could have curtailed the spending—over £1.9bn ($2.5bn)—that took City from mediocrity to dominance. In the 14 seasons covered by the charges, Manchester City won seven Premier League titles.

To adjudicate the case the Premier League has employed an independent commission of three anonymous judges. The hearing took place behind closed doors in December 2024. A lengthy judgment is still being prepared. The long wait for a verdict has caused frustration and fuelled conspiracy theories among fans. Chief among them are unsubstantiated suggestions of diplomatic interference (Manchester City are owned by Sheikh Mansour, the vice-president and deputy prime minister of the United Arab Emirates).

In recent years Everton and Nottingham Forest have received points deductions (of six and four points respectively) for single breaches of the league’s financial rules. If City were to be found guilty, Premier League rules mean they could face a fine, a points deduction or even expulsion from the league. Given the sheer number of charges, the scale of any potential punishment would almost certainly invite an appeal and legal challenges from the club.
If City are cleared, receive a light punishment or strike a favourable plea bargain, fans and clubs alike will question the sporting integrity of the competition. It is without doubt the most consequential case in English football’s 163-year history.
An initial decision, rumoured for the summer, is unlikely to put the matter to bed. Any sanctions would have to wait until after the inevitable appeal. That could easily take another year. This looks destined to stretch into extra time plus plenty of injury time."


The author claims that if City are cleared (other) clubs will question the sporting integrity of the competition, rather than whether the competition’s administrative body is fit for purpose, which would surely be the correct issue to identify in those circumstances.

If City are cleared, why wouldn't it demonstrate that a process had been properly applied, evidence rigorously examined and finally put to bed this decade long witch hunt by the Premier League with its US-owned club majority who have turned it - via PSR - into what Martin Samuel in 'The Times' has described as a 'protection racket carefully designed to damage specific competitors outside their coterie like Man City and Newcastle'?

The article also contains numerous basic errors, in fact almost every statement made about timing, financial amounts and the tribunal process is wrong. In addition it repeats a completely baseless slur while failing to include any mention of the key CAS judgement in 2020 and concludes with this outrageous claim that the only two options are Man City being found guilty or the process will be found to be lacking integrity.

It saddens me that such material can be found in your long established and reputable magazine and I believe an immediate published apology is in order.

Yours sincerely,
 
Here's my collage of comments culled from this thread and stitched together as a letter of complaint to The Economist - thanks to to all concerned!

Editorial Complaint - Appalling Article about Manchester City FC


To:letters@economist.com

Sat 30 May at 16:13

Dear Editor,

May I draw your attention to the highlighted sentence in the article copied below and ask how such a disgraceful statement has found its way into your publication?

"In the otherwise sunny story of the Premier League there is one big cloud. In 2023 Manchester City, one of England’s most successful clubs, was charged with well over 100 breaches of the league’s rules. Some of City’s alleged transgressions (all resolutely denied by the club) relate to non-co-operation with league officials. Most deal with failures to accurately report the club’s accounts, thus avoiding “financial fair play” regulations that could have curtailed the spending—over £1.9bn ($2.5bn)—that took City from mediocrity to dominance. In the 14 seasons covered by the charges, Manchester City won seven Premier League titles.

To adjudicate the case the Premier League has employed an independent commission of three anonymous judges. The hearing took place behind closed doors in December 2024. A lengthy judgment is still being prepared. The long wait for a verdict has caused frustration and fuelled conspiracy theories among fans. Chief among them are unsubstantiated suggestions of diplomatic interference (Manchester City are owned by Sheikh Mansour, the vice-president and deputy prime minister of the United Arab Emirates).

In recent years Everton and Nottingham Forest have received points deductions (of six and four points respectively) for single breaches of the league’s financial rules. If City were to be found guilty, Premier League rules mean they could face a fine, a points deduction or even expulsion from the league. Given the sheer number of charges, the scale of any potential punishment would almost certainly invite an appeal and legal challenges from the club.
If City are cleared, receive a light punishment or strike a favourable plea bargain, fans and clubs alike will question the sporting integrity of the competition. It is without doubt the most consequential case in English football’s 163-year history.
An initial decision, rumoured for the summer, is unlikely to put the matter to bed. Any sanctions would have to wait until after the inevitable appeal. That could easily take another year. This looks destined to stretch into extra time plus plenty of injury time."


The author claims that if City are cleared (other) clubs will question the sporting integrity of the competition, rather than whether the competition’s administrative body is fit for purpose, which would surely be the correct issue to identify in those circumstances.

If City are cleared, why wouldn't it demonstrate that a process had been properly applied, evidence rigorously examined and finally put to bed this decade long witch hunt by the Premier League with its US-owned club majority who have turned it - via PSR - into what Martin Samuel in 'The Times' has described as a 'protection racket carefully designed to damage specific competitors outside their coterie like Man City and Newcastle'?

The article also contains numerous basic errors, in fact almost every statement made about timing, financial amounts and the tribunal process is wrong. In addition it repeats a completely baseless slur while failing to include any mention of the key CAS judgement in 2020 and concludes with this outrageous claim that the only two options are Man City being found guilty or the process will be found to be lacking integrity.

It saddens me that such material can be found in your long established and reputable magazine and I believe an immediate published apology is in order.

Yours sincerely,
That'll just be filed in the bin.
 
the issue of the 115 legal costs incurred by the premier league seems a complex one to me...

the 20 clubs get their prize money from the premier league for the past season in 2 stages, july and august.

if the 115 announcement comes out before that and the premier league has to pay all our costs, when will that be due?

immediately, and having to come out of this season's fund?
or have the amounts per club already been announced?

so would it come out of next season's pot?
and why should, say, coventry have to cough up?

or do the premier league have a big wedge of cash they hold back in reserve for shit like this?

I would imagine the PL's costs have been paid regularly and, as such, would have reduced the amounts distributed to the clubs in previous years. In which case an unfavourable outcome on costs wouldn't make much difference to the clubs next year as they will have absorbed most of it already.

But yes, if they end up having to pay, say 50 million of, the club's costs that would have to be paid out of the amount distributed to the club's in the year the judgment has been issued, appealed, appealed again, "queried, lost, found, subjected to public inquiry, lost again, and finally buried in soft peat for three months and recycled as firelighters." Poor Coventry. The bastards.
 
Check this one out.
Atomic number 115 even has the initials for Manchester City.

View attachment 193691
Isn't that Bob Lazar's famous element 115, that powers the UFOs he worked on at area 51? Discovered to actually exist years after Lazar's claims, by Russian scientists and therefore named Moscovium.

Well, it was said that we'd be the first team to play on the moon. What I didn't expect is that we're behind Roswell, and captured the alien bodies for genetic manipulation into a quadruple winning team generations later.

Manchester City. Ruining football in this galaxy and the next.
 
Interesting, when we were watching the penalty shootout just then. The camera panned to Arsene Wenger, and he was sat next to the great Luis Figo, and to his right was old Richard Masters. Wenger had plenty to say about us in the past, and he was sat with one of his best mates.
Yes, the cheating bastards... The fat pig masterss with that garlic breath, cheese eating, paedo lookalike vengerr sitting together... Good God, thank you that arsenal loose this game... Today is a good day for football ;-) aaaaahahahahahahahahahH
 
Here's my collage of comments culled from this thread and stitched together as a letter of complaint to The Economist - thanks to to all concerned!

Editorial Complaint - Appalling Article about Manchester City FC


To:letters@economist.com

Sat 30 May at 16:13

Dear Editor,

May I draw your attention to the highlighted sentence in the article copied below and ask how such a disgraceful statement has found its way into your publication?

"In the otherwise sunny story of the Premier League there is one big cloud. In 2023 Manchester City, one of England’s most successful clubs, was charged with well over 100 breaches of the league’s rules. Some of City’s alleged transgressions (all resolutely denied by the club) relate to non-co-operation with league officials. Most deal with failures to accurately report the club’s accounts, thus avoiding “financial fair play” regulations that could have curtailed the spending—over £1.9bn ($2.5bn)—that took City from mediocrity to dominance. In the 14 seasons covered by the charges, Manchester City won seven Premier League titles.

To adjudicate the case the Premier League has employed an independent commission of three anonymous judges. The hearing took place behind closed doors in December 2024. A lengthy judgment is still being prepared. The long wait for a verdict has caused frustration and fuelled conspiracy theories among fans. Chief among them are unsubstantiated suggestions of diplomatic interference (Manchester City are owned by Sheikh Mansour, the vice-president and deputy prime minister of the United Arab Emirates).

In recent years Everton and Nottingham Forest have received points deductions (of six and four points respectively) for single breaches of the league’s financial rules. If City were to be found guilty, Premier League rules mean they could face a fine, a points deduction or even expulsion from the league. Given the sheer number of charges, the scale of any potential punishment would almost certainly invite an appeal and legal challenges from the club.
If City are cleared, receive a light punishment or strike a favourable plea bargain, fans and clubs alike will question the sporting integrity of the competition. It is without doubt the most consequential case in English football’s 163-year history.
An initial decision, rumoured for the summer, is unlikely to put the matter to bed. Any sanctions would have to wait until after the inevitable appeal. That could easily take another year. This looks destined to stretch into extra time plus plenty of injury time."


The author claims that if City are cleared (other) clubs will question the sporting integrity of the competition, rather than whether the competition’s administrative body is fit for purpose, which would surely be the correct issue to identify in those circumstances.

If City are cleared, why wouldn't it demonstrate that a process had been properly applied, evidence rigorously examined and finally put to bed this decade long witch hunt by the Premier League with its US-owned club majority who have turned it - via PSR - into what Martin Samuel in 'The Times' has described as a 'protection racket carefully designed to damage specific competitors outside their coterie like Man City and Newcastle'?

The article also contains numerous basic errors, in fact almost every statement made about timing, financial amounts and the tribunal process is wrong. In addition it repeats a completely baseless slur while failing to include any mention of the key CAS judgement in 2020 and concludes with this outrageous claim that the only two options are Man City being found guilty or the process will be found to be lacking integrity.

It saddens me that such material can be found in your long established and reputable magazine and I believe an immediate published apology is in order.

Yours sincerely,
you tell 'em, j.c.
 
Yes, the cheating bastards... The fat pig masterss with that garlic breath, cheese eating, paedo lookalike vengerr sitting together... Good God, thank you that arsenal loose this game... Today is a good day for football ;-) aaaaahahahahahahahahahH
what's wrong with cheese or garlic?
 
Next week?

Come on city let’s show this shitshow for what it is. A total pack of lies.

A stain on the league, those in charge and those who pulled the string should be booted out asap.
 
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the issue of the 115 legal costs incurred by the premier league seems a complex one to me...

the 20 clubs get their prize money from the premier league for the past season in 2 stages, july and august.

if the 115 announcement comes out before that and the premier league has to pay all our costs, when will that be due?

immediately, and having to come out of this season's fund?
or have the amounts per club already been announced?

so would it come out of next season's pot?
and why should, say, coventry have to cough up?

or do the premier league have a big wedge of cash they hold back in reserve for shit like this?
And what about the teams that were in the PL when the charges were brought but no longer are? Seems a mess to me
 

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