City and Chelsea to Fail Financial Fair Play....

DenisLawBackHeel74

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according to the BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/9450671.stm

How will Man City 'play fair' financially?

Two of English football's top-four clubs could be excluded from European competition in future as they fail Uefa rules that are about to be introduced.

The Financial Fair Play Regulations do not come into force until 1 June and will not really bite until 2013.

However, a study of recent accounts by BBC Sport shows Chelsea and Manchester City would fall well short of the rules if they were being applied today.

City were £110m in the red while Chelsea showed a deficit of over £50m.

Uefa's rules allow clubs to run up losses of £65m over the first five years.

Financial fair play has been introduced by European football's governing body Uefa to try and level the playing field between clubs funded by the super rich and those less fortunate.

In simple terms, teams cannot spend more than they generate from the football side of their business.

I don't think it will be difficult for the English clubs to comply because they are very well managed and very well aware of what is coming

Gianni Infantino
Uefa general secretary
Uefa will have the power to ban any side that repeatedly flouts the rules from European competition.

The guidelines aim to measure a club's football business. Any revenue earned from side businesses such as property, hotels or media are excluded. So too are any costs not directly associated with the football club - such as huge interest payments like the ones incurred by Manchester United's owners the Glazer family.

United made a pre-tax loss of £79m in 2010 but, by Uefa's measure, actually returned a positive break-even result of £42m.

Arsenal would also easily meet the guidelines, posting a surplus of £55m. With no single wealthy owner at the Emirates Stadium, they pride themselves on running a sustainable football business.

Football finance expert Andy Green, who writes the blog andersred, carried out the analysis of the clubs' accounts. He believes Chelsea and Manchester City in particular have a mountain to climb to meet the guidelines.

"For Chelsea, I think if they can get a bigger ground they can probably get there," he told BBC sports editor David Bond.

"For City, they've got a long way to go. They need to get into the Champions League, stay there year after year, probably put their ticket prices up and really turn around their commercial side - in fact they need to make it one of the best in the world - to even have a chance of meeting these rules."

Uefa general secretary Gianni Infantino said he was optimistic that English clubs would be able to comply with the rules though.

"I don't think it will be difficult for the English clubs to comply because they are very well managed and very well aware of what is coming," he told BBC Sport.

"There is sufficient time in order to implement the regulations. The English clubs are among those generating the highest revenues in Europe.

"The basic rule is the break-even rule that says you cannot spend more than you generate, so if you generate more than the others you have an advantage. So I am not worried at all about the English.

"I'm sure the managers of the English clubs are thinking about this, because they know the regulations are coming into force.

"They know what these rules mean and how we will implement them. I am sure that tomorrow they will put their finances in order so they are able to break even.

"Our president spoke to Manchester City's owners over a year ago when we started with this process and they were very happy with it."<br /><br />-- Fri Apr 08, 2011 8:19 am --<br /><br />of course that depends who you believe here...the UEFA secretary who claims we willl not have a problem...or some dirty rag who blogs on football finances

Taken from the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/green-andy

Profile
Andy Green is a London based financial analyst and professional investor. He writes the "andersred blog" about football finance and ownership issues and is an advisor to the Manchester United Supporters Trust. After many years as a Stretford End season ticket holder, he gave up his seat this year in protest at the Glazers' ownership of Manchester United but still attends the occasional game, especially away from home
 
I got this far, then stopped reading:

The Financial Fair Play Regulations do not come into force until 1 June and will not really bite until 2013.

However, a study of recent accounts by BBC Sport shows Chelsea and Manchester City would fall well short of the rules if they were being applied today.

The rules aren't being applied today, so the rest of the article is meaningless.

Can they not see our losses of £110m were accrued by accelerating our transfer policy, precisely to fall in line with FFP by 2013?
 
They also played stuff on 5 Live about this.

And that was the same myopic shite they had a piece on 6 months ago.

Time for Dan Roan to get off his lazy arse and dig a bit deeper.
 
It's all bollocks to keep the scum winning things, uefa have noticed their cash cow is on the wain so they had to do something.

Not that they have spent thier way to success.
 
Football finance expert Andy Green, who writes the blog andersred, carried out the analysis of the clubs' accounts. He believes Chelsea and Manchester City in particular have a mountain to climb to meet the guidelines.

RAG. do one.
 
I wouldnt read too much into what Andersred writes, he has been frequently wrong about the state of MUFC's finances.
 
I think the point I'm trying to make is at the bottom of the article....I'm suggesting its a non story as the UEFA secretary suggests we will not have a problem....also the fact Andy Green is a dirty rag suggests a different agenda in publishing the piece....maybe something to do with a CL quarter final and an FA cup semi.
 
de niro said:
It's all bollocks to keep the scum winning things, uefa have noticed their cash cow is on the wain so they had to do something.

Not that they have spent thier way to success.

Fucks sake
 
camelcoat said:
de niro said:
It's all bollocks to keep the scum winning things, uefa have noticed their cash cow is on the wain so they had to do something.

Not that they have spent thier way to success.

Fucks sake

You can fucks sake as much as you want pal.

Why wasn't fair play brought in when the cosy little gang of Rags, Chelsea, Arse, Scouse, Inter, AC, Real, Barca, Bayern etc carving everything up between them and spending like there was no tomorrow?

City enter the fray with more money than anyone and chairman of the above clubs cry foul and demand action.

You cant spend your own money but debt is all good and well?

Suits you sir!

No worries anyway as we will deal with this little hindrance without too many problems and you lot can worry about the next repayment on the loan.
 

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