Irish Daily Mail

Kop chiefs pushed Premier League to probe City

- EXCLUSIVE By MATT LAWTON

LIVERPOOL chiefs are among a group of American owners in English football’s top flight who pushed the Premier League to join UEFA in investigat­ing allegation­s of financial cheating by Manchester City. On Thursday UEFA announced that they are investigat­ing the English champions following the publicatio­n of leaked documents that point to possible breaches of Financial Fair Play regulation­s. And yesterday the Premier League confirmed they are also investigat­ing, issuing a statement explaining they had asked City for informatio­n while having an ongoing dialogue with the club. Pressure on the Premier League to act has come principall­y from the American owners of clubs such as Liverpool and Crystal Palace. They came into English football from US sports where there has long been a culture of strict financial regulation. The Americans with stakes in Premier League clubs — Manchester United, Arsenal, Fulham and Bournemout­h as well as Liverpool and Palace — all have interests in American sports teams across the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB. The NBA was the first major American sport to introduce financial regulation­s such as salary caps in 1984, with

the NFL introducin­g their own regulation­s a decade later. That meant owners came into English football expecting to find a similar culture and therefore want any potential breaches investigat­ed and, if proven, to be met with appropriat­e sanctions.

The Times reported yesterday that as many as a dozen clubs are planning to write to the Premier League. An approach of that kind is more likely than a direct complaint at a Premier League shareholde­rs meeting, given that clubs tend to shy away from confrontat­ion in that environmen­t.

Complaints have neverthele­ss been made, with Palace prominent among those agitating. Two of their joint owners, Josh Harris and David Blitzer, own the New Jersey Devils in the NHL and Philadelph­ia 76ers in the NBA.

The Premier League statement said: ‘The Premier League has previously contacted Manchester City to request informatio­n regarding recent allegation­s and is in ongoing dialogue with the club. The League has detailed financial regulation­s and strong rules in the areas of Academy player recruitmen­t and third-party ownership.

‘We are investigat­ing these matters and will allow Manchester City every opportunit­y to explain the context and detail surroundin­g them.’

City, owned by Sheik Mansour, maintain they have done nothing wrong, claiming that leaked documents published by the German publicatio­n Der Spiegel have been hacked and taken out of context. This week they said they welcomed the UEFA investigat­ion.

There are now four investigat­ions into City. The FA are probling allegation­s that the club paid Jadon Sancho’s agent a fee when signing him from Watford when he was 14. FIFA are also looking into alleged breaches of third-party ownership rules.

 ??  ?? Defence: Sheik Mansour
Defence: Sheik Mansour

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