Malta Independent

Spanish league wants UEFA to investigat­e Man City’s spending

- Rob Harris

The Spanish soccer league wants UEFA to investigat­e Manchester City’s spending and expand its newly-launched probe into whether Paris Saint-Germain has breached Financial Fair Play rules.

Spanish league president Javier Tebas said in a statement to The Associated Press yesterday that Abu Dhabi-funded City and Qatari-owned PSG are benefiting from state aid which distorts European competitio­ns and “is irreparabl­y harming the football industry.”

Tebas wrote separate letters to European soccer’s governing body on 22 August requesting investigat­ions into Man City and PSG.

UEFA said on Friday it would look into whether PSG was flouting rules designed to control excessive spending by top European clubs. Tebas wants UEFA to go further and look into “PSG’s history of noncomplia­nce.”

Both City and PSG spent hundreds of millions of dollars in the transfer window that closed last week, and the Spanish league claims the teams “benefit from sponsorshi­ps that make no economic sense and lack any fair value” to help them comply with FFP.

Ultimately, clubs breaching rules can be banned from playing in the Champions League or Europa League.

“PSG and Man City’s funding by state-aid distorts European competitio­ns and creates an inflationa­ry spiral that is irreparabl­y harming the football industry,” Tebas said. “UEFA must enforce FFP regulation­s to avoid discrimina­tion among clubs.”

In 2014, PSG and City were the main targets of the first round of FFP sanctions. Both had €20 million of their Champions League prize money deducted and had limits imposed on their spending and squad size for matches.

Then, UEFA judges told PSG that a sponsorshi­p deal with Qatar’s tourism authority had been inflated above fair market value to help the club comply with the rules. It was only in April that UEFA declared that PSG had fulfilled its obligation­s of stricter ongoing scrutiny.

But Tebas said both City and PSG are still trying to evade spending rules intended to ensure clubs break even.

“PSG is a habitual offender and has been violating UEFA’s Financial Fair Play regulation­s for years,” Tebas said. “It is important that UEFA doesn’t just look at the most recent player transfers, but at PSG’s history of noncomplia­nce. The transfers are merely the result of years of financial doping at PSG.”

UEFA’s club finance monitoring panel intervened last week to open a fresh investigat­ion into PSG after the Frenchclub broke the world record fee to sign Neymar from Barcelona for €222 million and on Thursday signed Monaco forward Kylian Mbappe.

The deal for the 18-year-old Mbappe was unusual as a one-season loan with a commitment to pay a reported €180 million next year, delaying PSG’s financial commitment to the deal.

City was the biggest spending club in European soccer’s recent transfer window, with an outlay exceeding £220 million. The purchase of defenders Kyle Walker (Tottenham) and Benjamin Mendy (Monaco) accounted for about £100 million of the spending.

During the current three-year FFP assessment period that runs through 2018, clubs playing in European competitio­ns can incur losses of €30 million and not just rely on cash that has been injected by owners. To achieve that, according to Tebas, PSG and City are inflating their income by using sponsorshi­p state-backed companies.

Tebas has cited to UEFA how Man City is sponsored by several state-backed companies: Etihad Airways, the Abu Dhabi Tourism & Culture Authority, sovereign investment fund Aabar, Etisalat communicat­ions firm and First Gulf Bank.

PSG had seven Qatari sponsorshi­ps last season: communicat­ions firm Ooredoo, Qatar National Bank, Aspire Academy, Aspetar hospital, Katara cultural project, broadcaste­r BeIN Sports and Qatar Tourism Authority.

PSG was bought in 2011 by the energy-rich country’s Qatar Sports Investment.

City has been owned since 2008 by Sheikh Mansour, who is a member of the ruling family of Abu Dhabi - the oil-rich capital of the United Arab Emirates. He also serves as a deputy prime minister and minister of presidenti­al affairs.

 ??  ?? La Liga president Javier Tebas Photo: AP
La Liga president Javier Tebas Photo: AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta