City play fair, spend fair – Pep
MANCHESTER City manager Pep Guardiola has defended the Premier League champions as “incredibly professional” in response to allegations they bent financial fair play rules.
Abu Dhabi-owned City said last week they would not comment on “out of context materials purported to have been hacked or stolen from City Football Group and Manchester City personnel and associated people”. They spoke also of an “organised and clear” attempt to damage their reputation.
Asked about the “Football leaks” documents, which have been published widely in the media, Guardiola said yesterday ahead of City’s Champions League game against Shakhtar Donetsk that he had faith in the club.
“What I can say personally is of course I trust a lot with the club and what they have done. Of course we want to follow the rules, whether Uefa, Fifa or the Premier League,” said the Spaniard. “Believe me, I am completely honest. I don’t know what happened because I am a manager. I am focused on what happened on the pitch, in the locker room. About the business, about how they handled this kind of situation, I am completely out. But I am part of the club and support the club absolutely and we want to do what we have to do in terms of the rules.”
The “Football Leaks” documents, which include emails, contracts and presentations, were obtained by German publication Der Spiegel and reviewed by Reuters in partnership with international media consortium European Investigative Collaborations.
The cache, which spans the past 10 years, includes previously undisclosed details of Uefa’s investigation of the financial affairs of City and Qatar-owned Paris Saint-Germain. Under Uefa’s “Financial Fair Play” rules, clubs must be transparent about revenues and broadly balance them against expenditure. Allegations against City are that they manipulated contracts to get around that. Asked whether these undermined City’s achievements, Guardiola said people had been saying for a decade that the club “just win because we have money” but there was also a lot of hard work involved. | Reuters