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Uefa probes Man City

- / AP

Manchester City is under formal investigat­ion by Uefa into whether financial monitoring rules were violated, after months of confidenti­al club documents being published in the Football Leaks series.

Europe’s soccer body can ban clubs from its Champions League in the most serious cases of breaking “Financial Fair Play” rules designed to control excessive spending on player transfers and wages.

Uefa said Thursday its independen­t club finance panel is focusing on “several alleged violations of FFP that were recently made public in various media outlets.”

Internal documents about Man City’s business and emails between club executives have been published in the Football Leaks series led by Der Spiegel magazine.

The revelation­s suggest Man City officials deceived Uefa over several years, including by disguising the source of revenue from overvalued sponsorshi­ps tied to the club’s owners in Abu Dhabi.

Uefa acted after the latest release last Friday included complete emails detailing how Abu Dhabi’s owners secretly paid into inflated commercial deals.

“The accusation of financial irregulari­ties are entirely false,” Man City said in a statement , adding it “welcomes the opening” of the formal probe.

“(It’s) an opportunit­y to bring to an end the speculatio­n resulting from the illegal hacking and out of context publicatio­n of City emails,” the English champion said.

The club has not disputed authentici­ty of the documents since publicatio­n began in November.

In one batch of communicat­ions between Man City officials, the club seemed ready to threaten to destroy Uefa with legal action before reaching a 2014 settlement agreement to close an investigat­ion.

Then, it forfeited $22.8 million to Uefa in Champions League prize money but continued to play in world soccer’s most prestigiou­s club competitio­n.

The Pep Guardiola-coached team is currently top of England’s Premier League, seeking its fourth league title in the past eight seasons. The team hosts Schalke next week in the Champions League, holding a 3-2 lead from the first leg. Uefa has since 2011 monitored the accounts of all clubs which qualify to play in the Champions League and Europa League.

It was launched as the flagship policy of Uefa’s then-president Michel Platini, who criticized “financial doping” by some club owners after the global financial downturn a decade ago.

Rules were drafted forcing clubs toward breaking even on their soccer-related income and spending to prevent clubs from becoming unsustaina­ble. It also sought to control wealthy owners distorting the market in transfers and wages by driving up costs.

The system includes assessing the fair market value of sponsor deals to prevent clubs evading limits on cash injections by owners.

Critics of FFP say it protects historical­ly successful clubs with global brands from challenges by ambitious newcomers.

The biggest forfeits were paid in 2014 by Man City and Paris Saint-Germain, which were bought using sovereign wealth respective­ly by Abu Dhabi’s ruling family in 2008 and Qatar’s in 2011.

It’s an opportunit­y to bring to an end the speculatio­n resulting from the illegal hacking and out of context publicatio­n of City emails. MANCHESTER CITY

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