PL charge City for alleged breaches of financial rules

A contract with a manager is not anything to do with related parties or am I missing something?

Correct imho. I think his point is that it looks suspicious for City directors/employees to be involved in negotiations/discussions with any company with which a senior employee has a second contract. I just don't see it. I think the opposite. It would be negligent not to be involved to ensure the club isn't at any fiscal or legal risk from a second contract.

The related party argument is a red herring. If Mancini had taken a part-time job to manage England in the international breaks I would equally expect the leading club to be involved in negotiations/discussions for the same reasons.
 
That’s exactly the potential issue though as your scenario is all within the same group. If Al Jazira was part of the CFG and his contract was negotiated by them on behalf of City and Al Jazira then that would have been fine (as long as the City side of it wasn’t deliberately undervalued).

I really don't see that it matters who discusses or negotiates what. The only important things are the signed contracts, who signed them, whether the amounts in each can be justified fiscally and whether the contracted services were provided or not. The rest is just noise, imho, released to make the club look guilty of something.

Put it this way, Pearce and the club executives can be asked by ADUG to discuss how much of Mancini's contracts should be paid by the club and how much should be paid by AJ, but it's AJ that have to sign the contract. If they don't like it. They don't sign. The emails mean nothing.

[ There may be some explaining necessary as to why, apparently, some payments were made to cover Mancini's AJ salary, but, once again, that doesn't concern me. I am sure there are business reasons for that. The fact I just don't know what they are doesn't make me uncomfortable. It just makes me ignorant :) ]

And as we all agree it is peanuts, it doesn't affect the true and fair view given by the accounts, it isn't fraudulent, there was no FFP at the time and no requirement to report manager's remuneration other than with the club, I really don't see any issue with any of this.
 
Last edited:
Yeah I agree. Like I said even if they do pull us up on it and we don’t have a valid defence it really should be just a slap on the wrists.

I do think it’s only small fry what the PL potentially actually has on us though.

I find the idea that the club doesn't have a valid defence extraordinary, I have to say.

What is it about the other allegations that worries you?
 
I am not saying there are related party transactions or off the book payments. It's a split salary under two separate contracts. I don't see any problem with that as long as the amounts involved can be justified under both contracts. I would imagine that the club got legal and tax clearance before signing anyway.

It's apparent from the emails that the club was involved in negotiating the contracts and, it seems, in some payments. We can't pretend the implications of the emails don't exist. They have to be covered by the defence. But none of that bothers me particularly.

When I was getting a split salary, I wasn't negotiating separately with the three group companies. I negotiated with one, the lead company, and they handled the rest with the other companies. It's all normal to me.

All imho, of course. Feel free to disagree.
Surely they must be related party then or should be that’s what worries me your effectively saying they where group negations like being employed by City and CFG and CFG doing the contract for both
 
KSurely they must be related party then or should be that’s what worries me your effectively saying they where group negations like being employed by City and CFG and CFG doing the contract for both

I am not saying they are or aren't related parties. I am saying, prima facie, there are no related party transactions (a simple movement of cash isn't a related party transaction although it may give rise to a related party receivable/ payable).

Anyway, we are discussing whether Pearce or anyone else from the club being involved in negotiating the terms of a split salary is a problem. I don't see any problem at all. Other people seemingly do. I can live with that.

And, quite frankly, I would like to move on. A whole day discussing something I don't see as an issue is driving me nuts. :)
 
I am not saying they are or aren't related parties. I am saying, prima facie, there are no related party transactions (a simple movement of cash isn't a related party transaction although it may give rise to a related party receivable/ payable).

Anyway, we are discussing whether Pearce or anyone else from the club being involved in negotiating the terms of a split salary is a problem. I don't see any problem at all. Other people seemingly do. I can live with that.

And, quite frankly, I would like to move on. A whole day discussing something I don't see as an issue is driving me nuts. :)
Steering wheel shaped penis?
 
My point to the other poster was that he said he thought we had settled with Fordham in 2014; if that inferred there was a problem that was put right in 2014 and the premier league cunts were going back earlier than 2014 then might we have an issue with it?

Well yes, I don't think there is anything to stop the PL revisiting things that were settled with UEFA in 2014, other than time limitation which may apply to Fordham.

Iirc, CAS concluded UEFA could revisit some of them in 2019 (as they did on the sponsorships) although they don't seem to have pushed anything too contentious like related parties and fair values. To be expeditious, maybe.
 
Last edited:
Ashworth is from Salford isn't he & was parachuted into Leicester. It might just be politically expedient to claim he's a Leicester fan, that's of he's even said he is one.
Manchesters politicians have been very quiet on the whole issue, considering the investment in East Mcr by City.
 
Correct imho. I think his point is that it looks suspicious for City directors/employees to be involved in negotiations/discussions with any company with which a senior employee has a second contract. I just don't see it. I think the opposite. It would be negligent not to be involved to ensure the club isn't at any fiscal or legal risk from a second contract.

The related party argument is a red herring. If Mancini had taken a part-time job to manage England in the international breaks I would equally expect the leading club to be involved in negotiations/discussions for the same reasons.
As someone who used to draft and approve/decline secondary employment contracts we would look at the following (in the UK) : working time regulations and potential opt out, reputational risk (we would not allow people to do a similar 2nd job or imply this second job is in anyway connected to the main employers role) and also ensure the employee knew it was their role to inform hmrc of any tax implications. Payments or terms of the contract were none of our business and just between the employee and second employer (or self employed etc)
 

Don't have an account? Register now and see fewer ads!

SIGN UP
Back
Top
  AdBlock Detected
Bluemoon relies on advertising to pay our hosting fees. Please support the site by disabling your ad blocking software to help keep the forum sustainable. Thanks.