Scottish Daily Mail

‘HATEFUL EIGHT’ STEP UP CITY WAR

Klopp and Mourinho give the game away

- MARTIN SAMUEL

Arteta was off-message only due to his connection­s to City and Pep

THEy did not waste time, the cartel. Within hours of the Court of Arbitratio­n announceme­nt, there was a remote scrambling of Manchester City’s elite rivals and a discussion about the next plan of action.

This is not over. There is still a Premier League investigat­ion into City ongoing. There is still the chance to pressure and influence those proceeding­s, as was attempted with UEFA’s case, when nine leading Premier League clubs — Arsenal, Manchester United, Liverpool, Tottenham, Chelsea, Leicester, Wolves, Newcastle and Burnley — wrote to CAS on March 9 to argue City should be excluded from Europe while their appeal was heard. They hadn’t a clue.

They thought City were stalling, when they were actually pushing to get the appeal completed — the club couldn’t move forward until it was — but the remnants of that group remain, as angry and desperate to protect their turf as ever.

UEFA are reluctant to appeal against CAS’s verdict in the Swiss courts, where they have a dismal record, but the Hateful Eight — as they are now known within the walls of the Etihad, because Wolves are believed to have pulled out — may join forces with the elites of Europe in an attempt to persuade them otherwise. There was certainly talk of taking further legal advice, of poring over the longer CAS explanatio­n of the verdict when it is published this week, seeking flaws that could be challenged or exploited. Perhaps they will engage the same law company who wrote the legal letter to CAS the last time, Russells.

So that was stage one of the resistance. Stage two came when the managers sat in front of the cameras yesterday and toed the party line.

Mikel Arteta was off-message — due only to his connection­s with Manchester City and Pep Guardiola, because Arsenal are certainly part of this, perhaps even its greatest driving force — but Jurgen Klopp and Jose Mourinho did their duty. ‘A bad day for football… disgracefu­l… FFP is a good idea…’

The irony of Mourinho, who benefited hugely from owner investment during his first spell at Chelsea under Roman Abramovich, advocating financial regulation now he is with frugal Tottenham is almost too ripe for comment.

Chelsea did everything that Manchester City have subsequent­ly, and then worked to change the rules from the inside so that their path to the top could not be travelled again. yet, leaving even that gross hypocrisy aside, Mourinho’s commentary was flawed. He argued that as City were fined £9million, they were guilty, so their ban should not have been lifted. It’s a little more complicate­d than that.

The fine was for refusing to comply with UEFA’s initial investigat­ion — the ban was for falsifying accounts. It’s like being charged with murder, and also resisting arrest. A person could be found not guilty of murder, but guilty of resisting arrest.

He wouldn’t, however, then get a murderer’s sentence. And even City’s fine was reduced by twothirds. Mourinho tried to be outraged but his heart didn’t seem in it. Even he must be aware how straightfo­rwardly logical CAS’s decision was.

Klopp was different. He imagined a dangerous world of super leagues and super clubs, crushing those below with untrammell­ed wealth. ‘If the richest people or countries can do what they want in football, then that could make the competitio­n really difficult,’ he said. ‘I think that would lead automatica­lly to a kind of world super league with, like, 10 clubs.’

What — the sort of league that Liverpool keep talking about, in those secret meetings with other elite members like Arsenal and Manchester United, that always end up being uncovered and reported in the media?

Meetings with foreign powerbroke­rs, often American, who want to create a closed shop Champions League, composed of the establishe­d elite?

As for making competitio­n difficult, Klopp went on to espouse the German vision of club ownership, a system so competitiv­e it has resulted in Bayern Munich winning the Bundesliga title for the last eight seasons — when no club in the history of German football stretching back to 1903 had previously won more than three on the spin. Owner investment does not kill competitio­n: it creates more. The penny is beginning to drop over what is being attempted here.

Wolves, having signed the original letter to CAS, are understood not to have been part of Monday’s group call. Everton and Sheffield United were always outside the conversati­on. Why would they lobby to wrap ambitious clubs in red tape, stunting their growth and leaving them at the mercy of predators?

The big lie of FFP is that clubs should grow organicall­y. yet how is that possible if a middling organisati­on cannot invest further to compete, while its best players are poached? Leicester won the League and lost N’Golo Kante to Chelsea that summer. Ben Chilwell is likely to travel the same route this year.

Southampto­n could have been an outstandin­g team across the last decade, maybe another Leicester, but were denuded by Liverpool and others. FFP kills challenger­s.

There is no other industry that does not allow competitio­n from companies injecting capital to improve performanc­e and output.

If Saudi Arabian investment now makes Newcastle a force, how is that bad for the game? Don’t Newcastle fans deserve that? Isn’t the city worthy?

We all know the majority of the 10 super clubs that Klopp is talking about, and Manchester City aren’t even part of the group, no matter their wealth. Liverpool, Manchester United, Arsenal, Barcelona, Real Madrid, Juventus, Bayern Munich, AC Milan — there won’t be room for too many others after that lot grab their share. Paris Saint-Germain might get a pass but only because Qatar, through beIN Sports, own the game.

Newcastle, Wolves, Tottenham, Everton, Leicester, Leeds, Sunderland, Aston Villa — there is no room for them at this table. And the fact one or more might even hope or begin to emulate City is what terrifies the cabal.

Arsenal, with all their advantages, are ninth, Manchester United still outside the top four. If they do not qualify for the Champions League next season £25m of their deal with adidas is lost.

Damn right they have a vested interest in finding ways to bar City, or any new challenger. The richest clubs are operating, ever more nakedly, as a protection­ist cartel. And that’s what is bad for football.

 ??  ?? First again: Mike Keegan revealed plot to stop City from competing in Europe in March
First again: Mike Keegan revealed plot to stop City from competing in Europe in March
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