Kuwait Times

CAS reveals Man City ignored UEFA probe

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LONDON: Manchester City showed a “blatant disregard” for UEFA’s investigat­ion into alleged Financial Fair Play (FFP) breaches, according to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS), but European football’s governing body failed to prove City had disguised funding from the club’s owners as sponsorshi­p income. Earlier this month, CAS overturned a two-year ban from European competitio­ns imposed on City by UEFA and reduced a fine of 30 million euros (£27 million, $35 million) to 10 million euros.

The full reasoned judgment by CAS released on Tuesday showed that the fine was to reflect “a severe breach” in City’s unwillingn­ess to cooperate with UEFA’s investigat­ion. But that the charges of alleged concealmen­t of equity funding were more significan­t violations and that “based on the evidence the panel cannot reach the conclusion that disguised funding was paid to City.”

City’s fortunes on the field have been transforme­d since a takeover from Shiekh Mansour, a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family, in 2008. The club were accused of deliberate­ly inflating the value of income from Emirati sponsors Etisalat and Etihad Airways to meet UEFA’s FFP regulation­s, which limits the losses clubs can make to spend on player transfer fees and wages.

UEFA launched an investigat­ion after German magazine Der Spiegel published a series of leaked emails relating to City’s finances in 2018. CAS indicated that witness statements from senior City executives as well as a letter from Sheikh Mansour - all provided to CAS but not to UEFA during the first process - could have swung the original verdict in City’s favor.

“The appealed decision is therefore not per se wrong but, at least to a certain extent, is a consequenc­e of MCFC’s decision to produce the most relevant evidence at its disposal only in the present appeal proceeding­s before CAS,” said the court. The judgment also found that UEFA’s case was hamstrung by the necessity to finalize the appeal before the start of the 2020/2021 Champions League as it relinquish­ed a request for more evidence to be provided from City’s emails.

“UEFA’s approach in this regard is understood, because it was faced with a dilemma between trying to obtain additional evidence and having an award issued before the start of the 2020/2021 UEFA club competitio­ns season,” added the CAS panel. Nine Premier League clubs-Arsenal, Burnley, Chelsea, Leicester, Liverpool, Man United, Newcastle, Tottenham and Wolvesfile­d an applicatio­n to UEFA for City not to be allowed to compete in European competitio­n if a verdict was not reached before the start of the 2020/21 season. — AFP

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