CAS judgement: UEFA ban overturned, City exonerated (report out p603)

Based on the CAS document the Etihad deal was renogotiated 4 times between 2013 and 2016. Back in 2014 the terms were expressed as £67.5 million.

It seem implausible it has not been increased since but as far as I'm aware there's nothing come out about it - we just don't know how much it is now.
I didn't know the 2014 value was given in the CAS report, that's probably my own fault for being lazy and relying on second hand information then. That means £67.5m was fair market value for City back in 2014. The anti-city clowns would be mad to argue City haven't grown loads under Pep. He's been brilliant for City.

Regarding the current amount, we do know what our commercial revenue is from the financial reports that are released each season. BlueCityBrain has done some good work collecting the information on how much each sponsor is paying. I think it's still at £67.5m judging by those figures. The only thing I'm not sure on is how the Puma deal works, ie how much of that can be used in City's accounts.
 
@Gary James is the essential reading for anyone interested in reading about the bribery and illegal payments scandal of 1906. It's covered in great detail in his peerless history of the club and also, IIRC, in the excellent Manchester - A Football History.

It's an involved and complicated story, but my memory is that at the heart of it was a desire on the part of the football establishment to punish a club regarded as an upstart. The authorities trawled remorselessly to find grounds for punishment and hammered us beyond any degree of fairness for offences that were known to be standard practice throughout the game yet were ignored in other cases.

Unfortunately, back in the early 20th century there was no legal recourse for a club in our position. Thankfully, that had changed by the time UEFA banned us in 2020.
Thanks. Yes, it’s one of my pet topics. City were the upstarts and traditional successful teams like Villa and Everton hated it. It’s no coincidence that it was games against those clubs that led to the investigation. It was a truly shocking tale. Maybe I’ll post the full story on my website soon?
www.gjfootballarchive.com
 
@Gary James is the essential reading for anyone interested in reading about the bribery and illegal payments scandal of 1906. It's covered in great detail in his peerless history of the club and also, IIRC, in the excellent Manchester - A Football History.

It's an involved and complicated story, but my memory is that at the heart of it was a desire on the part of the football establishment to punish a club regarded as an upstart. The authorities trawled remorselessly to find grounds for punishment and hammered us beyond any degree of fairness for offences that were known to be standard practice throughout the game yet were ignored in other cases.

Unfortunately, back in the early 20th century there was no legal recourse for a club in our position. Thankfully, that had changed by the time UEFA banned us in 2020.
You're spot on. The FA didn't want some riff raff club from the north dominating English football in the coming years which it very much looked like City would be doing. Unlike today with the red shirts their pet club then was Aston Villa.

It's notable that when United bribed Liverpool players to throw the last game of the season in 1915 to save them from relegation the club went unpunished. A few players were subsequently banned but with football suspended for the remainder of the First World War as far as the club was concerned it was swept under the carpet and coveniently forgotten about.
 
You're spot on. The FA didn't want some riff raff club from the north dominating English football in the coming years which it very much looked like City would be doing. Unlike today with the red shirts their pet club then was Aston Villa.

It's notable that when United bribed Liverpool players to throw the last game of the season in 1915 to save them from relegation the club went unpunished. A few players were subsequently banned but with football suspended for the remainder of the First World War as far as the club was concerned it was swept under the carpet and coveniently forgotten about.
True - I wrote an extremely long article on this for my website (for subscribers):


One of the investigators appointed to see if Utd had done anything wrong was… MUFC’s own solicitor!
 
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I may be wrong but as I understand it Masters and the Premier League hired a tranche of lawyers ,Solicitors and anyone else they could find to conduct this investigation.
I did have the list , but can't locate it now.

How are investigations initiated, does there need to be 14 signatures or just TWO.
 

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