PL charge City for alleged breaches of financial rules

How the fuck has parry got enough sway and power to give a speech to then government on what I assume is a defense of the pl without government interference?

How is he the best representative of it? Fuck me!!!
I’m telling you, Liverpool and United have more power over the pl that we can even imagine. We’ve only heard snippets but imagine how deep it runs.


I always wonder if the sheik and his men were surprised how bad it is when they started getting targeted by them? And I wonder if they’re still a bit flabbergasted about how evil and bitter these fuckers are that they’re willing to kill the competition to take us down.

Tactically positioned by the red cartel Yanks years ago! to rule over the whole of the 72 league clubs bring in hard dictatorship PSR rules!

Just like that rag twat Gill in control of ffp bribed Reading to get it through and now it's ruining football! It's all down to these greedy fucking red cartel now the Americans buying up load of football clubs mainly with hedge funds which is in fact like a pension to the backers who are not needed to say who they are!
 
Not sure why anybody is upset by Crafton’s article. He’s a Middle East hating red that is prime candidate for these pieces.

He is US based now so perfect to get quotes from mystery US PL club execs demanding guilty verdicts before the charges have even been heard.

It’s a an article no doubt demanded by his editor on the day before the season starts - a piece based around the idea that EVERYBODY in football demands a guilty verdict - and if they don’t get it then football is ruined.
 
Absolute fucking hatchet job thinly disguised as journalism on The Athletic tonight!

Manchester City, the Premier League and the season everything might change

A few excerpts:

There are some (executives) who are so worn down by the decade-long pursuit of City that they fear Manchester City’s case may result in a financial settlement rather than a sporting penalty. Then there are rival executives who consider this outcome to be impossible, utterly outrageous, and say it would cast the death knell for financial sustainability not only within the English game but across European football.



As one Premier League club executive says: “The collective view I’ve heard is that an appropriate sanction would have to be a points deduction so substantial — we are talking here between 70 and 80 points — that it guarantees City a season in the Championship.”

Another of the sport’s leading figures suggests the punishment ought to be more creative, that a number of points could be deducted from City in each of the next three seasons, meaning the club’s chance of Champions League qualification would be severely restricted. Another compares the City case to that of the English rugby union side Saracens who, when Premiership champions in 2019, were deducted 35 points, hit with a £5.36million ($6.9m at current rates) fine and relegated to the second division owing to non-compliance with the league’s salary-cap rules.



A coach who came up against City has simply made his mind up about their guilt and argues they have not achieved their success with the same level of discipline as their rivals, but suspects it is too late now to truly remedy the matter. At the same time, there are fears that a failure to convict and punish City poses major questions about the Premier League’s ability to run itself, particularly with the prospect of an independent regulator still looming next year. Numerous club executives say their incentives to follow the rules would be greatly diminished if the Premier League proves toothless on City.



In English football, nobody is prepared to put their name to quotes about the City case. That is not the same for La Liga president Javier Tebas, who has been a longstanding critic of the impact of clubs linked to nation-states. City always insist they are not owned by the state of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), but Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan is the deputy prime minister of the UAE and the minister of presidential affairs. He is the majority shareholder in City via Newton Investment and Development, a company he wholly owns and which is registered in Abu Dhabi.

Tebas tells The Athletic: “It is difficult for me to say what is proportionate in England because I don’t know so well the English rules and law. But I can refer to what happened at UEFA… then what happened at CAS — in a resolution I would describe as a joke — is they took the sanction away. It was a very controversial decision to take away that sanction. Now, let’s see, I won’t dare to predict, but I am aware that there is a lot of concern among many clubs in the Premier League about what happens with City. What happens with Man City is a before and after moment for the Premier League itself.”



And so on…

Anyone would think the Euros are over, the Olympics are over, and City are about to embark on the chance to win a FIFTH STRAIGHT TITLE!!!

UFB…Oh wait, no, it’s entirely predictable!

If you thought the whole of English football was praying for an Arsenal title win last season, one can only imagine the narrative we face this season.

Let the games begin!

If these people are so confident of our “guilt”, why are they skulking behind the cloak of anonymity? At least señor teabag has the balls to stand up and be counted.

Out with it, you fucking cowards. Put your names to your words.

Some sort of evidence of this “guilt” would be handy as well. Whats that? You haven’t got any? Well now, there’s a turn-up for the books.

And the athletic expect City fans to pay for this shite? I don’t fucking think so.
 
by Adam Crafton Aug 15, 2024 8:15 PM

Adam Crafton began his journalistic career before he went to Cambridge University to study French and Spanish. A writer for the Daily Mail, he has been shortlisted four times for the SJA Young Sportswriter of the Year Award. He lives in London.

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Fearing the worst. Hoping for the best.
I’m not sure what to think anymore other than just wanting this over. We can’t seem to get any comment on us at all without the 115 add on. I’m torn between being confident in the professionalism of our club these days and the fact Pep has stuck around verses the pent up demand for us to fall and the sheer scale of the charges both in number and seriousness where I fear something might (has to?) stick.
 
If these people are so confident of our “guilt”, why are they skulking behind the cloak of anonymity? At least señor teabag has the balls to stand up and be counted.

Out with it, you fucking cowards. Put your names to your words.

And the athletic expect City fans to pay for this shite? I don’t fucking think so.
You only need to read the comments on any articles written by Sam Lee. Hundreds of responses from fans of red teams but nothing from blues.

Nothing they write is for City supporters. All aimed at supporters of other teams.

The Crafton article is a call to arms for the angry mob. The insinuation that nothing but a guilty verdict and the worst punishments possible will be accepted.
 

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