Centurions
Well-Known Member
Then stop reading it maybe?The on line vile from other clubs is really upsetting.
Just read something from an Arsenal fan, it was horrible.
Then stop reading it maybe?The on line vile from other clubs is really upsetting.
Just read something from an Arsenal fan, it was horrible.
Take no notice of them, they know nothing and just make it up as they go along.The on line vile from other clubs is really upsetting.
Just read something from an Arsenal fan, it was horrible.
No, you’ve fallen into the trap of thinking “financial controls” means the current system. There’s a million ways you could use them like every other sport - to increase parity.
You ask the question of why the Premier League are picking up CAR baton and coming at us .The answer is the timing of the charges, two days before the Governments announcement of the proposed football regulator. They stick out their chest and proclaimed the Premier League did not need a regulator because it would clean up the PL it's self and where better to start than at the top.But instead of solving the problem it seems that daily more problems are surfacing.The law of unintended consequences springs to mind, i.e.outcomes of a purposeful action that are not intended or foreseenIt's like discussing the decor of the main ballroom on the Titanic, instead of bailing into the lifeboats.
I knew bits about FFP, but there seemed no coherent explanation about our specific situation until @Prestwich_Blue took part in a discussion on YouTube.
Using his take on matters, I did my own detailed research & tried to simplify it for the FFP lay-members amongst our fans.
Essentially, UEFA & the PL are accusing us of fraud, but daren't use the word for fear of the legal can of worms it would open.
When we as fans get entangled with all the innuendo, nods & winks from the governing bodies which are designed to damage our reputation & public image, & ultimately stunt our challenge to their cherished cartel clubs, we lose sight of what all these alleged breaches are really about & designed to do.
They've failed to stop us on the field, so now they're trying to stop us from the boardroom. That's the tall & short of it.
Cutting to the chase, I repeat they're essentially accusing City of fraud. If this is the case, it's long past the time that the PL & UEFA should come out & say so, or shut the fuck up.
Personally, I'm done playing their idiotic games. The more we try to unpick their 115 breach bollocks, the more we add fuel to the fire they started.
This is why when faced with vitriolic opposition fans, I keep it simple & basic. "If you're calling City cheats, this implies fraud. So where's your proof?". This for me is the beginning & end of the matter.
CAS have already ruled UEFA had no evidence, so why the fuck are the PL picking up their baton & coming at us using the same charges which have already failed?
It's all bollocks mate. They need to call our alleged breaches what they keep hinting at, & suffer the consequences. The thing I keep highlighting to all is why aren't/don't they?
Outside of this, I'm not getting dragged any deeper into their bullshit rabbit hole about processes, rules or whatever, which are plainly the only mechanisms they have left to stop Manchester City Football Club.
But this is all ideological and the ticket revenue sharing point, whilst well thought out, won't make a material difference.I think you have to start from the destination.
What do we want football to be?
I could write about ways to make it be competitive and have 3/4/5 way title, European and relegation battles, regularly rotating which teams are at the top and winning beyond “the top 4” but I feel like I’d get 20 comments from people who don’t want that and the whole thing would get derailed like the first post.
If you do want that then you have to narrow the gap between richest and poorest somehow, which means changing the revenue distribution, I’d definitely bring back ticket rev sharing because it would get rid of the arms race to exploit fans (5% ticket increase is less attractive when half is going to the other teams). Then you have to address the CL money problem, you’re always going to get a top 4 when 4th gets £60m extra a year to defend that position against 5th.
The ideas are easy, the difficulty is that you’re trying to bring in a system that benefits the poorer smaller players in the sport and hurts the big players by taking away their advantages.
If I remember correctly - and there's no guarantee of that over the years - but the maximum wage was a kind of FFP in reverse in that it was the "smaller" clubs which wished to maintain it to the letter in the name of competitive balance. The chairman of Preston appears to be one of the hardliners on the other pillar of competitive balance, the retain and transfer system. This took a blow in the courts and the pressure grew from clubs with any chance of competing in the European cup, especially after the "defections". The chairman of Preston "got away with it" in Finney's case but I wonder whether this was as much because Finney was a one club man and of a generation to which loyalty meant a great deal. He very decent man well settled in the town he was born and bred in and where he became a well respected plumbers' merchant. Tom Finney was an all round good egg! But Villa, City, Chelsea et al all needed the eye watering transfer fees the Italians were prepared to pay. A good deal for the club (City paid £53 000 for Law and got nearly £100 000 for him a season later), a great deal for the player but a blow to the English game.A small point. The retain and transfer system meant that a player contract was FOR LIFE and gave the power to grant a transfer or not to the club. The Preston side you mentioned contained Tom Finney who was offered a fortune by an Italian club, I forget which. The Preston chairman said no and that was that. Finney went back to the max wage and his job as a plumber. I do not recall the details of John Charles leaving for Italy, but presumably he was granted release by Leeds.
The system was confirmed as illegal when George Eastham sued Newcastle who would not grant him release. The case resulted in partial freedom of contract.
The crux of the matter is trying the best to make it level. Nothing works fully but its better than NOT doing anything. Surely?But this is all ideological and the ticket revenue sharing point, whilst well thought out, won't make a material difference.
This brings us to the crux of the matter: it is almost impossible to design financial controls that aren't ultimately damaging to the vast majority of clubs, and very easy to implement measures that are!
Well, the current set of regulations have almost unarguably made things worse?The crux of the matter is trying the best to make it level. Nothing works fully but its better than NOT doing anything. Surely?
No woman’s leaving you, with that usernameGood luck with that first sentence. I’m sure he’s related to my extremely argumentative ex-wife…. ;0)
Good luck with that first sentence. I’m sure he’s related to my extremely argumentative ex-wife…. ;0)
Ha ha ha! :-)No woman’s leaving you, with that username
Wrong again, it is true that there’s no time bar in the Premier League rules unlike UEFA’s. Thats a fact, I don’t care if you can’t stomach it.
Both are subject to the law of the land in which they’re enforced, like every single contract ever written which is why no one feels the needs to spell it out in every post.
That is what you’re pointing out, but that is something completely different. The panel won’t be making judgements on the statue of limitations, just as CAS would have allowed the earlier evidence into the case if it was looking at the PL’s rule book and the club would have to go to a high court after a verdict to appeal on the grounds of the statute of limitations.
I had a bit of a dance with someone some months ago on this point.You think the panel will be ignoring time limitation in its judgment and imposing penalties on all matters irrespective of the event dates, and then the club will have to appeal to the High Court to have the Limitation Act applied to the judgment?
If that's how it works then I'm changing my username to @MrDoubleFootLongNo woman’s leaving you, with that username
But with the overarching implication of breaching FFP/PSR.
I had a bit of a dance with someone some months ago on this point.
My point was that if ultimately the IC rules that there was evidence to prove the charges then by definition that will have been because or either. : Fraud , Concealment or a Mistake by virtue of that the charges aren’t time barred.
If the charges aren’t proved then the argument is irrelevant
Or human?If that's how it works then I'm changing my username to @MrDoubleFootLong
Also who says his ex was a woman?
Without sight of the PSR/ FFP submissions there may be an implication but would further charges follow ? I very much doubt it indeed in the Everton judgment the IC for me suggests that matters not on the charge sheet can’t be assessed and focusing on double jeopardy the PL couldn’t and shouldn’t return with further charges
It has no choice but to take into account the limitation act as the tribunal has to operate in accord with English law. My point wasn’t that at all it was what are the exceptions to dealing with time barredIt depends which allegations you are talking about, imho. And what the allegations actually are. Proving an allegation doesn't automatically mean "knowing concealment" (proving fraud presumably does). And I am not sure a mistake, or a difference in interpretation on an accounting matter, if you will, is either as, if you believed you were in the right, then there could be no "knowing concealment".
Anyway, that wasn't my point. My point is that I have never heard that a tribunal process, as described by @domalino , won't take into account the limitation periods of the Limitation Act in its judgment. I was asking, really, for his clarification on that and his reasoning. He may be right, the law is an ass, after all. But I very much doubt it.
The written agreement between the clubs and the PL will unquestionably have a boilerplate clause stating that the contract is subject to (and therefore enforceable by) the laws of England and Wales.Wrong again, it is true that there’s no time bar in the Premier League rules unlike UEFA’s. Thats a fact, I don’t care if you can’t stomach it.
Both are subject to the law of the land in which they’re enforced, like every single contract ever written which is why no one feels the needs to spell it out in every post.
That is what you’re pointing out, but that is something completely different. The panel won’t be making judgements on the statue of limitations, just as CAS would have allowed the earlier evidence into the case if it was looking at the PL’s rule book and the club would have to go to a high court after a verdict to appeal on the grounds of the statute of limitations.
The allegations already include breaching FFP over a number of assessment periods. My guess is they have adjusted earnings before tax for the effects of each of the alleged breaches and made the allegations on that basis.
Personally, I think the only matter that would push the club into a breach is the alleged disguised equity funding in the Etihad sponsorship, but they don't have a snowflake's chance in hell of proving that, imo.