3 days ago Amnesty International were putting on the pressure according to these types of papers.
Fair enough. No-one knows definitively, of course, but is your feeling that they have other issues than those in the DS emails? The opening of the investigation at more or less the same time as UEFA would suggest that isn't the case?
The problem is that the PL have clearly been acting in bad faith under pressure from our commercial rivals. I can't see a single reason why we should co-operate in a politically-driven witchunt against us. That's why we are supporting proposals for an independent regulator.
I suspect not, because the investigation was opened in response to the DS publication. However there might have been issues on which they were 50/50 on whether to investigate us, and the DS emails tipped the balance.
I don't think it's clear that they've been acting in bad faith, at least not in any way we could make use of in the current proceedings. I suspect you are right, because I can't imagine any world in which the PL hasn't been under pressure from the red tops to charge us with something, anything, from day one, and I know TH thinks the PL was under pressure from the red tops.
All that is quite apart from the frenzied rush job of charging us that led them to charge us with having grass that was too long and not playing in the FA cup, because they were under pressure to get the charges out before the announcement of the White Paper.
In principle, a defence that 'this is a witchhunt' doesn't get us off a non-co-operation charge, but it might lead to a significantly reduced fine. Despite our suspicions, however, I think it would be virtually impossible for us to show it more likely than not the PL was acting in bad faith. They had good reason to launch the investigation in the first place (the DS emails) and they were entitled to launch their own investigation independently of UEFA/CAS. For those reasons, we don't in my view, have a defence to the non-co-operation charge.
So we may think it's a witch hunt, and we may be right, but I think that takes us nowhere.
And Chelsea deprecating players over 10 years.Just to be clear, there was nothing wrong with the Fordham transaction from an accounting point of view, presumably, and nothing fraudulent about it. It was just a way of selling an asset for revenue up front, as the club needed it for FFP at that time, as opposed to working the asset over a number of years. Much like Barcelona have done with their broadcast deals. Is that right?
Yeah, they’ve twice concluded Lukaku is rubbishAnd Chelsea deprecating players over 10 years.
City were at pains to point out that they’d cooperated when they released their initial statement! Any thoughts would be appreciate, your input is excellent.I suspect not, because the investigation was opened in response to the DS publication. However there might have been issues on which they were 50/50 on whether to investigate us, and the DS emails tipped the balance.
I don't think it's clear that they've been acting in bad faith, at least not in any way we could make use of in the current proceedings. I suspect you are right, because I can't imagine any world in which the PL hasn't been under pressure from the red tops to charge us with something, anything, from day one, and I know TH thinks the PL was under pressure from the red tops.
All that is quite apart from the frenzied rush job of charging us that led them to charge us with having grass that was too long and not playing in the FA cup, because they were under pressure to get the charges out before the announcement of the White Paper.
In principle, a defence that 'this is a witchhunt' doesn't get us off a non-co-operation charge, but it might lead to a significantly reduced fine. Despite our suspicions, however, I think it would be virtually impossible for us to show it more likely than not the PL was acting in bad faith. They had good reason to launch the investigation in the first place (the DS emails) and they were entitled to launch their own investigation independently of UEFA/CAS. For those reasons, we don't in my view, have a defence to the non-co-operation charge.
So we may think it's a witch hunt, and we may be right, but I think that takes us nowhere.
To make it to that level, they probably have to be yes men. Dont rock the boat or you’re out. And at the very top the last thing you want is a yes man Refereeing!! Self fulfilling idiocy, hence why they are terrible!!Look I used to ref as a 17 year-old. I’m sure many here have. I referred youth games, mostly U-12 to U-16. I recall a couple of instances where coaches (managers) did things that pissed me off. Like one who would switch her kid (who was her team’s star and played striker) into the keeper position any time the opposition had a dangerous free kick, or even corner kick. And one who when winning would encourage his team to time waste by kicking the ball into Richardson Bay when putting it into touch. I can tell you I refereed those teams more harshly because I was irritated at the relative lack of sportsmanship for local youth amateur leagues. But I was a kid doing a service; it was a way to earn a few bucks on the weekend, and none of these kids were going to be pros. Professional referees should be far far above the “emotion” of a match — but sometimes I see them acting viscerally the way I did in those situations. That’s ridiculous. Conspiracy or no, what we do have evidence of is that too large a portion of those in these roles are simply fucking terrible at their jobs. I mean TERRIBLE.
Thanks for this clarification.Sort of.
The way it works is that the PL opened an investigation based on the leaked emails in Der Spiegel. As part of their investigation they were entitled to ask for, and we were obliged to provide, certain documents. We failed to do so, almost certainly having taken legal advice, and quite possibly (given the arguments we ran in the subsequent court case) on the basis that we were concerned about confidentiality being maintained.
It is true that the only disclosable documents within that investigation are documents that relate to the matters being investigated. However the rules in place at the time said this:
So there isn’t really an option to ‘take the fifth,’ so to speak. If there’s an allegation that we have cheated, the PL has the power to request documents that are relevant to that allegation.
It seems to me very likely that since Der Spiegel accused us of systematic cheating over many years the PL’s inquiry was wide enough to cover everything they asked for. Certainly that appears to have been the conclusion in the arbitration which was upheld by the High Court and the Court of Appeal. So whilst in theory we could have said ‘we aren’t providing X, it’s not relevant to your investigation’ the likelihood is that the investigation was so wide everything the PL asked for was potentially relevant. The question of what charges should be brought gets answered at the end of the investigation, not its beginning, so the charges we eventually faced were not relevant to what information we provided.
So to take the Al Jazira contract as an example, if that was all that was being investigated, we might well have said ‘we aren’t providing you with documents about image rights, they are irrelevant to your investigation’ But since the investigation was into, basically, everything , the disclosure requests were within the PL’s powers.
Our failure to comply with that is why, IMO, we are in trouble on the non-cooperation charge.
I agree. But when Mark Hendrick MP uses a phrase like “City have been targeted by the red-shirt cartel” it makes you think. He is very well connected in football governance circles.I suspect not, because the investigation was opened in response to the DS publication. However there might have been issues on which they were 50/50 on whether to investigate us, and the DS emails tipped the balance.
I don't think it's clear that they've been acting in bad faith, at least not in any way we could make use of in the current proceedings. I suspect you are right, because I can't imagine any world in which the PL hasn't been under pressure from the red tops to charge us with something, anything, from day one, and I know TH thinks the PL was under pressure from the red tops.
All that is quite apart from the frenzied rush job of charging us that led them to charge us with having grass that was too long and not playing in the FA cup, because they were under pressure to get the charges out before the announcement of the White Paper.
In principle, a defence that 'this is a witchhunt' doesn't get us off a non-co-operation charge, but it might lead to a significantly reduced fine. Despite our suspicions, however, I think it would be virtually impossible for us to show it more likely than not the PL was acting in bad faith. They had good reason to launch the investigation in the first place (the DS emails) and they were entitled to launch their own investigation independently of UEFA/CAS. For those reasons, we don't in my view, have a defence to the non-co-operation charge.
So we may think it's a witch hunt, and we may be right, but I think that takes us nowhere.