What does having their European ban overturned mean to Manchester City?
Manchester City have had their two-year ban from European competition overturned following an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Here, the PA news agency looks over the case.
In February European governing body UEFA found City guilty of breaching its Financial Fair Play regulations, imposing a ban of two years from European competition and issuing a fine of ā¬30m. The charges stemmed from a series of allegations, based on leaked information, published in German magazine Der Spiegel in November 2018.Ā
The most serious claimed City had over-inflated sponsorship deals to disguise payments into the club from its owner and meet FFP requirements. These alleged breaches took place in a period from 2012-16.Ā
City were previously fined ā¬54m for FFP breaches in 2014 but the latest allegations claimed the club deceived UEFA more than was realised at the time.
Manchester City / UEFA decision
— Arbitral du Sport (@ArbitralduSport) July 13, 2020
13.07.2020 10:30
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CAS has ruled City ādid not disguise equity funding as sponsorship contributionsā and so the European ban has been lifted. It pointed out the charges were āeither not established or time-barredā.Ā
However, a fine of ā¬10m has been imposed after City were found not to have co-operated fully with UEFAās investigation.
The club welcomes the implications of (the) ruling as a validation of the club's position and the body of evidence that it was able to present.
Man City statement
City had always been confident of winning the case, once it had been viewed by an independent body such as CAS, having previously claimed UEFAās process was āflawedā.Ā
The club has said it āwelcomes the implications of (the) ruling as a validation of the clubās positionā. UEFA has acknowledged the decision and recognised many of the charges fell outside āthe five-year time period foreseen in the UEFA regulationsā.
The implications for City in the short to medium term, had the ban been upheld, were potentially serious. There would have been speculation over the futures of manager Pep Guardiola and several key players such as Kevin De Bruyne, Sergio Aguero and Raheem Sterling.Ā
The clubās ability to attract players in the transfer market would also have been hit and the clubās off-field reputation would have suffered, potentially hindering future sponsorship agreements. Financially there would also have been a significant hit from the absence of Champions League football. This would undoubtedly have set the clubās ambitions back. Now they can plan ahead with greater certainty.
Yes. They are already mathematically certain of finishing in a qualifying position following the weekendās results in the Premier League. They will join champions Liverpool in the competition next year with Englandās other two entrants being the sides that finish third and fourth.Ā
Fifth will no longer qualify ā although Wolves and Manchester United have an additional avenue through the Europa League.
UEFA takes note of the decision taken by the Court of Arbitration for Sport to reduce the sanction imposed on Manchester City FC...
— UEFA (@UEFA) July 13, 2020
Cityās victory will lead some to question whether FFP is enforceable in its current form. UEFA insists that the system will be maintained. It said in a statement: āOver the last few years, Financial Fair Play has played a significant role in protecting clubs and helping them become financially sustainable and UEFA and ECA (European Club Association) remain committed to its principles.ā





