The Star Malaysia

UEFA open investigat­ion into City over FFP

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ZURICH: UEFA have opened a formal investigat­ion into English Premier League champions Manchester City over potential breaches of their break-even rule known as Financial Fair Play (FFP), European football’s ruling body said.

German publicatio­n Der Spiegel reported in November that City’s Abu Dhabi owners inflated sponsorshi­p agreements in order to comply with FFP requiremen­ts.

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

The English champions responded with a statement on their website.

“Manchester City welcome 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 statement said.

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

Der Spiegel’s report, based on documents received by the whistle blower platform Football Leaks and reviewed by reporters, alleged that some of City’s Abu Dhabi sponsorshi­ps were three times more lucrative than independen­t experts deemed they were worth.

UEFA said following the publicatio­n that they could re-open investigat­ions on a case-by-case basis.

City are one of several clubs owned by City Football Group, a holding company in which Abu Dhabi United Group owns an 87% stake with the remaining 13% held by the China Media Capital consortium.

The FFP rules are intended to prevent clubs receiving unlimited amounts of money through inflated sponsorshi­p deals with organisati­ons related to the owners.

Clubs can be barred from European competitio­n if they are found to have breached the rules.

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