Iran Daily

Manchester City blasts ‘false accusation­s’ as UEFA opens FFP probe

-

UEFA on Thursday announced it were opening an investigat­ion into whether or not Manchester City broke Financial Fair Play rules, a breach that could lead to a devastatin­g Champions League ban.

However, English champion City insisted the accusation­s against it are false and that it welcomed the opportunit­y to clear its name, AFP reported.

German magazine Der Spiegel, using material purportedl­y obtained from the whistleblo­wing outlet Football Leaks, alleged in November that City had set up sponsorshi­p deals to circumvent regulation­s limiting how much money owners can put into a club.

“The Investigat­ory Chamber of the independen­t UEFA Club Financial Control Body has today opened a formal investigat­ion into Manchester City FC for potential breaches of Financial Fair Play (FFP) regulation­s,” said a UEFA statement on Thursday.

“The investigat­ion will focus on several alleged violations of FFP that were recently made public in various media outlets.”

City responded immediatel­y by saying it supported the investigat­ion and that it had nothing to hide.

“Manchester City welcomes the opening of a formal UEFA investigat­ion as an opportunit­y to bring to an end the speculatio­n resulting from the illegal hacking and out of context publicatio­n of City emails,” the club said in a statement.

“The accusation of financial irregulari­ties are entirely false. The club’s published accounts are full and complete and a matter of legal and regulatory record.”

City had earlier responded to Der Spiegel’s claims by saying there had been an “organized and clear” attempt to damage the club’s reputation.

A ban from UEFA competitio­ns, including the Champions League, is a potential punishment if City are found guilty of FFP breaches.

City was fined €60 million ($67.3 million) and subjected to squad, wage and spending caps in a 2014 settlement agreed with UEFA following a previous breach of the rules.

City coach Pep Guardiola has always insisted that City would accept a ban but does not believe it is likely after discussion­s with the club’s UAE owners.

“We will not be banned, no. That’s what I think because I trust in my chairman, with my CEO, what they have explained to me,” he said.

“If it happens, because UEFA decide that, we will accept it and move forward.”

City is not the only European heavyweigh­t to be caught up in claims of breaking financial fair play rules.

French champion Paris Saint-germain quashed reports it could be forced to sell either Kylian Mbappe or Neymar in a bid to circumvent eventual FFP sanctions.

Qatar-owned PSG, which splashed a combined total of more than €400 million in 2017 for Brazil star Neymar and France World Cup winner Mbappe, blasted allegation­s as “totally false and ridiculous”.

Former European champion AC Milan was warned in December that it risks being excluded from European competitio­n if it fails to “break even”.

Milan had already been banned for a year from the Europa League due to breaching FFP regulation­s before winning an appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) last year.

But UEFA said the former seven-time European champion again faces suspension from continenta­l competitio­n in future seasons “should the club not be break-even compliant at 30 June 2021”.

 ??  ?? JON SUPER/REUTERS
JON SUPER/REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran