Daily Nation Newspaper

Man City face critical appeal against two-season European ban

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MANCHESTER City's appeal against a two-year ban from European competitio­n will be heard by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (Cas) from Monday in a case of wide-reaching repercussi­ons.

City are accused of overstatin­g sponsorshi­p revenue to hide that they had not complied with Uefa's financial fair play (FFP) rules between 2012 and 2016 and were also handed a 30 million euro fine. Uefa's case was prompted when German magazine Der Spiegel published a series of leaked emails in 2018 that purported to show how City manufactur­ed extra sponsorshi­p revenue from a series of companies with connection­s to the club's Abu Dhabi-based owner Sheikh Mansour.

Under the Sheikh's ownership, City's fortunes have been transforme­d from perenniall­y living in the shadow of local rivals Manchester United to winning four Premier League titles in the past eight years.

However, billions of investment in players and managers has not yet been able to deliver the club's first-ever Champions League title.

City are still involved in this season's competitio­n and will be allowed to compete should the 2019-20 edition of Champions League return in August no matter the outcome of the appeal.

But a two-season ban from the competitio­n would represent a huge blow to the club's prestige, finances and hope of hanging onto manager Pep Guardiola and key players like Kevin de Bruyne and Raheem Sterling. "Two years would be long. One year is something I might be able to cope with," De Bruyne told Het Laatste Nieuws last month.

City banked 93 million euros from prize money and television rights alone by reaching the quarterfin­als of last season's Champions League.

The added loss of gate receipts and commercial revenue would make it extremely difficult for the club to meet FFP regulation­s in the future without cutting costs.

City have steadfastl­y refuted Uefa's allegation­s.

"Based on our experience and our perception, this seems to be less about justice and more about politics," said CEO of the City Football Group Ferran Soriano.

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