Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

City scramble for CAS clean chit

UEFA JOLT Premier League champions to appeal two-year ban for violating financial fairplay rules

- Agence France-Presse sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com ■

NYON, SWITZERLAN­D: Manchester City have been banned from European competitio­ns for the next two seasons for “serious financial fairplay breaches”, UEFA announced on Friday, with the verdict immediatel­y contested by Pep Guardiola’s English champions.

City, who were also fined 30 million euros, announced they were appealing the suspension to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) “at the earliest opportunit­y”. “Manchester City is disappoint­ed but not surprised by today’s announceme­nt by the UEFA Adjudicato­ry Chamber,” the club said.“The... flawed and consistent­ly leaked UEFA process he (the UEFA chief investigat­or) oversaw has meant that there was little doubt in the result that he would deliver...

“Simply put, this is a case initiated by UEFA, prosecuted by UEFA and judged by UEFA.

“With this prejudicia­l process now over, the club will pursue an impartial judgment as quickly as possible” at CAS.

Guardiola’s City face Real Madrid in this season’s Champions League last 16.

Announcing the ban, a UEFA statement said: “The Adjudicato­ry Chamber has imposed disciplina­ry measures on Manchester City Football Club directing that it shall be excluded from participat­ion in UEFA club competitio­ns in the next two seasons (2020/21 and 2021/22 .”

European football’s governing body said City “failed to cooperate in the investigat­ion”.

“The adjudicato­ry chamber, having considered all the evidence, has found that Manchester City Football Club committed serious breaches of the UEFA Club Licensing and Financial Fair Play Regulation­s by overstatin­g its sponsorshi­p revenue in its accounts and in the breakeven informatio­n submitted to UEFA between 2012 and 2016.”

City lost a previous appeal to CAS over UEFA’s original decision to refer them to its adjudicato­ry chamber over the alleged FFP violations. “An appeal would not necessaril­y lift the suspension but the request can be made,” UEFA said. The investigat­ion into City was based on leaked emails published last year by German magazine Der Spiegel as part of “Football Leaks”.

Guardiola’s City currently sit second in the Premier League table, meaning the fourth Champions League slot available for English teams would likely go to the fifth-placed club this term. Sheffield United, promoted to the top flight last year, sit in fifth.

THE BREACH

City have been found to be in breach of UEFA’s financial fairplay rules, which place restrictio­ns on how much money a club can lose. Over a three-year period, clubs are not permitted to lose more than 30m euros with exceptions for some costs such as youth developmen­t and women’s teams.

UEFA’s club financial control body found that City ensured they did not fall foul of those restrictio­ns by overstatin­g their sponsorshi­p revenue between 2012 and 2016.

It is not the first time Man City have fallen foul of FFP regulation­s, having been fined 60m euros and seeing their Champions League squad reduced in May 2014.

The ban will raise questions about the future of City coach Guardiola and their key players. Guardiola said last month that he could be sacked if he failed to beat Real Madrid in the Champions League last 16.

“If we don’t beat them, OK, come the chairman or the sport director and say, ‘it’s not good enough, we want the Champions League, I’m going to sack you’,” he told Sky Sports.

“I don’t know (if this would happen). It has happened many times and could maybe happen.”

Similarly, players such as Kevin De Bruyne and Raheem Sterling are unlikely to want to waste two of their peak years without Champions League football.

It would still take huge fees from rival clubs to tempt City to sell, but they may be forced to downsize to gain re-entry to the Champions League even after their ban is over.

Qatari-owned PSG were also fined in 2014. Seven-time European champions AC Milan were banned from this season’s Europa League for FFP breaches.

La Liga president Javier Tebas applauded UEFA for their sanctions of Man City, saying: “UEFA is finally taking decisive action. Enforcing the rules of financial fair play and punishing financial doping is essential for the future of football... we finally have a good example of action.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? ■
Pep Guardiola’s (in pic) Manchester City are second on the Premier League table.
GETTY IMAGES ■ Pep Guardiola’s (in pic) Manchester City are second on the Premier League table.

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