The Scotsman

Uefa confirms PSG investigat­ion but Manchester City in the clear

● Governing body sets record straight after Laliga calls for probe into both clubs over financial fair play regulation­s

- By ANDY HAMPSON

Manchester City are not being investigat­ed in relation to Financial Fair Play rules following a complaint by Laliga, Uefa has announced.

The European governing body has clarified its position after a statement from the Spanish league led to reports an official probe was being conducted.

That statement was made after Laliga wrote to Uefa to make a formal complaint about City and Paris Saintgerma­in. Uefa did announce last week that PSG are being investigat­ed, but it is understood that was not prompted by Laliga’s complaint and City are not being looked at.

A Uefa spokespers­on said: “There is no investigat­ion into Manchester City with regards to Financial Fair Play regulation­s. Any reports mentioning such an investigat­ion are unsubstant­iated.”

Laliga’s complaints were made in a letter on 22 August.

A statement issued yesterday read: “There will be an investigat­ion following the formal complaint filed by Laliga asking Uefa to inspect Paris Saintgerma­in and Manchester City FC for violation of financial fair play regulation­s.

“Laliga, the associatio­n of the best football teams in Spain, is pleased that Uefa has opened a formal investigat­ion into financial fair play at Paris Saint-germain (PSG).

“The investigat­ion comes after Laliga requested these tests from PSG and Manchester City FC in August.”

Acknowledg­ing City were not actually being investigat­ed, the statement then added: “Laliga asks Uefa to continue its investigat­ion, taking into account PSG’S history of actions. Laliga asks Uefa to open a similar investigat­ion to Manchester City.”

These issues have arisen after a summer transfer window in which PSG bought Neymar for a world record £198 million and secured another of Europe’s most highly-rated players, Kylian Mbappe, on a season-long loan. City spent more than £200m strengthen­ing their squad.

Laliga claims the finances at Qatari-owned PSG and Abu Dhabi-backed City “are not based on the market reality”.

Laliga president Javier Tebas said: “The funding of PSG and Manchester City thanks to state aid distorts European competitio­ns and creates an inflationa­ry spiral that irreparabl­y damages the football industry.”

City have been a frequent target for critics since their takeover by Sheikh Mansour’s Abu Dhabi United Group in 2008. They did fall foul of FFP regulation­s in 2014 and were hit with a fine, transfer spending cap and Champions League squad restrictio­n.

But in recent years the club have shown strong signs of financial independen­ce and have recorded profits in their last two financial years.

“The funding of PSG and Manchester City thanks to state aid distorts European competitio­ns and creates an inflationa­ry spiral”

JAVIER TEBAS

Laliga president

 ??  ?? 0 Paris Saint-germain president Nasser Al-khelaifi unveils Neymar after his world record £198million transfer from Barcelona.
0 Paris Saint-germain president Nasser Al-khelaifi unveils Neymar after his world record £198million transfer from Barcelona.

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