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City closer to Uefa ban

- ROB DRAPER

THE prospect of Manchester City facing a ban from the Champions League moved a step closer as a new tranche of leaked emails from German magazine Der Spiegel provided more details of how they allegedly circumnavi­gated Uefa’s Financial Fair Play rules. In addition, City look as though they are facing another FA inquiry, after it was alleged that they misled the FA over the third-party ownership of a player, Bruno Zuculini. But the most serious outcome for City would be a Champions League ban, which would affect their ability to recruit players and to balance their books without additional funding from their owner, Sheik Mansour, which is not allowed by Uefa rules. City are already being investigat­ed by Uefa after leaked emails last November appeared to show how they used direct funding from Abu Dhabi United Group, the investment fund owned by Sheik Mansour to supplement sponsorshi­p deals. Uefa’s rules place a strict limit on the cash an owner can inject directly into a club to prevent over-inflation in the football market. Yves Leterme, the chairman and chief investigat­or of the UEFA Club Financial Control Body, said in January that City face “the heaviest punishment” if the allegation­s are proven, which would mean exclusion from the Champions League. Now the further raft of emails provides further evidence of how City have made it appear as though their record income in recent years came through increased sponsorshi­p deals rather than simply funding from Sheik Mansour. In one email dated April 2010 City director Simon Pearce is writing to an executive of City’s sponsors, Aabar, an Abu Dhabi investment firm. Pearce wrote: “As we discussed the annual direct obligation for Aabar is £3 million. The remaining £12m required will come from His Highness.” An internal City document seems to indicate that up until 2012 the “supplement to Abu Dhabi partnershi­p deals” amounted to £149.5m. That appears to refer to the funding Abu Dhabi United Group (ADUG) was allegedly giving to sponsors. However, the money should come directly from the sponsors, so Uefa knew that it was genuine sponsorshi­p money. The November email leak revealed that ADUG channelled cash into the sponsors’ bank accounts so it could then be paid directly to Manchester City. And in the latest tranche of leaked emails, Graham Wallace, who was then City’s chief operating officer and who was writing in September 2012, explained why this was necessary. Referring to the “direct equity funding”, which is Sheikh Mansour’s funding of the clubs, he wrote: “What we therefore need is that monies we are attributin­g to (City’s sponsors) Etisalat, ADTA, Aabar and Etihad … are physically remitted to us by those businesses … to avoid any related party influence/control considerat­ions.” Further emails between chief financial officer Jorge Chumillas and Pearce speak of “additional sponsorshi­p flowing through ADUG” and lists the amounts that should be paid. In January 2013, in an email discussing Etihad’s sponsorshi­p of the club, £57m is listed as the “ADUG contributi­on to the 13/14 sponsorshi­p fee.” These all appear to be breaches of Uefa’S rules. City are vulnerable to severe punishment by Uefa because, in 2014, they promised to abide by the regulation­s in future in return for a lesser punishment for the breaches they had incurred. But Uefa didn’t know then about the funding of sponsorshi­p deals. A fresh FA probe is also now likely after Zuculini was signed by City in 2014 and loaned out to Valencia, though he was then still part-owned by a company, MPI. That in itself was not against the rules. However, according to Der Spiegel, when the FA asked who was behind MPI, City did not disclose that Mangrove was funded by a €30m cash injection which had been organised by City chief executive Ferran Soriano. An FA spokespers­on said: “We are aware of the allegation­s and will consider them.” City are already facing an FA investigat­ion into a £200 000 payment to the agent of Jadon Sancho when he transferre­d to the club at the age of 14. City issued a statement saying: “We will not be providing any comment on out-ofcontext materials purported to have been hacked or stolen from City Football Group and City personnel and associated people. The attempt to damage the club’s reputation is clear.” | Mail On Sunday

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