uwe rosler 28
Well-Known Member
Nothing to worry about here
I'm sure we'll be investigated and I'm sure it'll go to Court, but the catalyst won't be City wishing to defend themselves. It'll be the pressure being cranked up on UEFA and the EPL by the old guard. They want the total destruction of our club and they want it permanent, and faced with either losing the Champions League or taking on City, UEFA will take the latter option IMO, however much danger that entails for them
I'm sure we'll be investigated and I'm sure it'll go to Court, but the catalyst won't be City wishing to defend themselves. It'll be the pressure being cranked up on UEFA and the EPL by the old guard. They want the total destruction of our club and they want it permanent, and faced with either losing the Champions League or taking on City, UEFA will take the latter option IMO, however much danger that entails for them
I'm sure we'll be investigated and I'm sure it'll go to Court, but the catalyst won't be City wishing to defend themselves. It'll be the pressure being cranked up on UEFA and the EPL by the old guard. They want the total destruction of our club and they want it permanent, and faced with either losing the Champions League or taking on City, UEFA will take the latter option IMO, however much danger that entails for them
Nothing to worry about here
Is unfortunately the correct answer.How do you know?? I don’t trust the spineless b********. They don’t care about right and wrong as long as the so-called elite old clubs are kept happy
I think he's said John isn't his real name and he lived in Portugal but might not be Portuguese and he was handed the data by someone and is not sure where it came from but it is not hacked
Many have said that if UEFA had not moved the goal posts City would have passed FFP first time round but would we have still passed FFP if UEFA knew that Sheikh Mansour was the one paying many of our sponsorships (assuming this to in fact be true)?
Can only see this ending up in court as the attacks are relentless and at some point we have to defend ourselves.
I'd like to think so mate but the nagging doubt I have is that, by accepting the full and final settlement with UEFA, City may be regarded as having implicitly accepted the validity of FFP.
BT wading in now with their podcast featuring these three contemptible Mirror hacks
http://sport.bt.com/sport-hurts/foo...ished-by-off-field-allegations-91364309657278
currently not loading for some reason - I made a formal complaint last night although it's unlikely the two events are connected
"Football Writers Podcast: Man City brilliance tarnished by off-field allegations
"Mike Calvin, Darren Lewis and Tom Hopkinson look at the financial allegations against Manchester City following their dominant derby victory over Man United and break down the key talking points at both ends of the Premier League table.”
Published on 12 November 2018"
You have allowed these 3 Mirror employees to use BT Sport to create the impression that Man City FC has done something wrong and that the achievements of the club have in some way been tainted.
You are no doubt aware of the club’s statement that these allegations are an organised attempt to damage their reputation and are based on purportedly stolen materials. You should also be further aware the source of Der Spiegel's leaks is a known extortionist.
BT has a legal and moral duty to ensure that unlawfully obtained documents are not used to make unsubstantiated allegations on its platform and you have failed to meet your obligations in this respect.
It is an indefensible editorial decision to allow these individuals air time to try to damage Man City and I would like an explanation of your conduct in this matter.
Was any payment made or received by BT for this reprehensible podcast?
His Highness, Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, wooed the wrong noisy neighbour.
Instead of blowing £1billion on Manchester City, he should have donated £1million to FC United.
He wouldn’t have been able to shape a club owned by the fans, for the fans.
But, for a relative pittance, he would have become a folk hero.
He would have helped expose the hypocrisy of the Glazers, the unfair burden of leveraged debt.
In so doing, football’s richest man would have discovered what football is all about.
The empowerment of a community, rather than the enrichment of opportunists.
Faith, defiance, and the credibility of commitment.
Passion, unprocessed and deliciously unrefined.
Joy, rather than empty rhetoric, and massaged opinion.
You don’t need advertising copywriters and simpering apologists to make a statement of intent.
Alienated Manchester United fans did that, when they formed a football club to give a human dimension to a protest movement.
Equally, the League pyramid cannot adequately measure the difference between City and FC United.
On paper it is seven Divisions. In essence the clubs are separated by a chasm, which separates constructive outrage and graceless vulgarity.
I defy anyone to watch a re-run of FC United’s FA Cup win at Rochdale without a smile. Players were stripped to homemade Superman underpants by euphoric fans.
They cavorted for the cameras in the dressing room, and promised not to turn up for work on Monday.
Their manager was wide eyed, and about to be legless. “We’ll have a couple of sherberts, here and there” he promised.
I’ll take Karl Marginson, before Roberto Mancini, any day of the week.
The FC United boss does need a personal website that is beyond parody.
“Roberto Mancini,” it croons. “The football. The class. The champion.”
Strange how it didn’t mention the cautious coach, the closet politician, and the cry baby.
Marginson used to be a milkman, reliant on boot money from the likes of Salford City and Bacup Borough.
You wouldn’t catch him posing for soft-focus photos, like a 10th-rate George Clooney.
Blue Moon Rising?
I prefer the red flares of class warriors, which illuminated Spotland’s Willbutts Lane Stand.
Money has siphoned innocence from football.
City’s purchasing power is intimidating, and intoxicating to outsiders.
I came across a caricature of a marketing executive late on Friday night.
He was worried my views would compromise his commercial relationship with Eastlands.
His type – swivel-eyed networkers who couldn’t spell the word integrity, let alone grasp its meaning – are everywhere.
I loathe what they represent, why they genuflect at the feet of the City hierarchy.
They are prepared to overlook the positive aspects of City’s problems.
Three successive defeats remind us that wealth is worthless, if used unwisely.
Briefings, and counter briefings, tell a cautionary tale of unchecked egos and unseemly ambition.
This is no time to sit on the fence. I once loved what City represented.
They were my “second” club as a schoolboy, an acceptable antidote to my chemical romance with Watford.
I wore the sky blue shirt, savoured the silly setbacks, and salivated at the skill of Colin Bell
To be fair, the new regime paid exemplary homage to Malcolm Allison.
The club tribute was simple, affecting, classy
But, with apologies to the vast majority of City fans who will understand my disillusion, let’s light the bonfire of the vanities.
I hope Mancini crashes and burns.
I pray FC United realise their impossible dream, a third round tie at Old Trafford.
And that someone, somewhere, has the courage to inform His Highness that he needs to act. Now!
195 posts, at least 3 of which have been in this thread since June 2009. If the three negative ones in here are anything to go by, what are your other posts like ?
Just askin'.
You could try reading them?
Is it not fair for me to ask questions about something I do not know the answers to?
I would love to be as confident as other people on this and by asking questions I hope to find out but you would rather act like an idiot and make me feel bad for asking a question.
We were never going to pass FFP but, had UEFA not changed a key rule, we might have avoided sanctions. Had we done that and UEFA subsequently found out that we'd done things that would have disqualified us from using that rule had they known, then we might well be in trouble. But, ironically, changing it (whether intentionally or otherwise) caused us to be punished.Many have said that if UEFA had not moved the goal posts City would have passed FFP first time round but would we have still passed FFP if UEFA knew that Sheikh Mansour was the one paying many of our sponsorships (assuming this to in fact be true)?