The Stockport Iniesta
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 21 Aug 2008
- Messages
- 9,835
What date is the CAS hearing?
Hasn't been announced yet.
What date is the CAS hearing?
It's depressing how political sport has become. I am sure football has always been a bit corrupt but nowadays it's happening on a global scale.The UAE football association are at CAS later this week, the 12th, in a case vs the Qatar football association and the Asian football confederation.
The UAE have alleged that Qatar fielded ineligible players in the Asian cup which Qatar won.
Are they though? My understanding of Stefan Borson’s excellent piece on the 93:20 podcast was that CAS had previously confirmed that FFP was compatible with EU competition law (see below). A Court may take a different view, but I don’t think we would be wise to bank on it.
From the 93:20 podcast....
“For completeness, it seems to me that City are on less firm ground on the sort of well-trodden arguments UEFA rolled out in CAS 2018/A/5808 AC Milan v. UEFA. UEFA has successfully argued that clubs voluntarily submit to the rules and regulations of UEFA in order to participate in the European club championships. In particular it appears that UEFA will continue to argue that FFP does not breach competition law, EU competition law is not directly applicable to FFP generally and CAS jurisprudence has confirmed that the CL & FFP Regulations are compatible with EU competition law. This is likely to be relatively safe ground for UEFA at CAS – areas that have been tested before and more difficult for CAS to overturn in any meaningful way.”
Sounds about right - agreeing to take part suggests accepting the rules for taking part.
I suspect CAS view FFP as a whole to be outside their remit.
This is the bigger picture.
What I find most puzzling is how UEFA consider their rule-making to be above the law and how they hope to defend it in the courts.
It seems inconceivable to me that the stuff they come up with about football’s ‘uniqueness’ could be considered grounds to break internationally accepted laws.
I gave the analogy of setting up a Fast & Furious Speed Club. The rules of the club are you can drive at any speed you like. However the UK speed limit is 30. If the speed club challenge the speed limit, who's going to win? The speed club rules, or the law of the land?
FFP is not a law, but it's a rule of the competition.
Reasonable ask I suppose.Each writer signed up was supposedly told they needed to acquire so many hits, clicks and followers within a certain time period.
Don't know how true that is, but they have paid out a lot in salaries and need to get it back.
And yet, Football for some reason is the exception.
Not agreeing to take part would be stupidity if not commercial suicide, there is effectively no choice but to accept the rules