The Sentinel

SORIANO CALLS FOR CHANGE AS FOOTBALL LOOKS TO THE FUTURE

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MANCHESTER City chief executive Ferran Soriano has called for a rethink of the football pyramid to consider the inclusion of Premier League B teams, and has described the EFL’S business model as “not sustainabl­e enough”.

All eyes are on the Premier League to come up with a rescue package for EFL clubs struggling for survival amid the coronaviru­s pandemic which has deprived them of matchday income.

The Government has insisted the top-flight clubs should be the ones to look after the EFL, resisting calls for a state bailout.

The Premier League is in talks with the EFL over a bailout and they are looking for assurances over how the money is spent, with Championsh­ip clubs spending 107 per cent of revenue on wages in the 2018/19 season. Soriano believes this is a good time to look at the structure of the English football pyramid as a whole, including how young talent at the top clubs is given a platform to perform on. “One of the challenges is the EFL (is) a business that is not sustainabl­e enough,” he said at Leaderswee­k.direct. “They were discussing ways to improve it, they were discussing salary caps, now they were sort of nudged, almost pushed, to solve the existing problems.

“It’s an opportunit­y for the different elements of the football business to get together and solve these problems.

“There are other problems, the challenges of developing players in England where B teams are not allowed, we have a developmen­t gap of boys that are 17 or 18, they don’t find the right place to develop and for example they are taken from us by the German teams who try to sell them back to us for a price which is 10 times what they paid.

“This is something we needed to solve and now maybe the crisis will give us the opportunit­y and will nudge us to get together and solve these issues.” Soriano also defended his club’s spending in the summer transfer window. City signed defenders Nathan Ake and Ruben Dias for a reported fee of over £100m combined, but Soriano said: “Ultimately, if you believe like we believe that Covid is just a period of time, and that we have to carry on with our business, then we have to carry on with our business. “We believe that revenues will come back.”

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