Quote from: Smithy on November 19, 2023, 12:07:12 PMQuote from: Simon Page on November 19, 2023, 11:15:02 AMThat wouldn't be a shock. I'm actually really iffy about deciding sporting events in the courts or tribunals. This feels a bit like tax law, where everything is so complex that the opportunities to create opaque and entangled - but probably legal - workarounds are infinite. If the football authorities really wanted to stop the cheating or bending of rules, salary caps, squad sizes including loans, multiple ownership bans, real-time transparency and the like would be the way to go. Much fairer than docking a club points seasons after the offence.I haven't actually read the FFP rules, so I don't know how complex the rules are, or how tightly defined they are, but it does feel a bit like Formula One. In that the the rules are defined, and then the teams find as many creative ways as they can circumvent them while "technically" still being on the right side. These things often end up the courts, because there is no other way to settle a disagreement between two parties who have a fundamentally different interpretations of the words on a page.I don't even really properly understand the "breaches" that Man City have been accused of, only that there are a lot of them. They certainly give the impression they've found a legal loophole that others haven't exploited. I hope they're wrong.Man City and Chelsea are both, in the main, accused of making payments to players outside their officials contracts. This isn't loopholes or remotely subtle, they've done things like booking a player as a 'consultant' for something and then paying them vast sums for the service despite there being no evidence that the player either did anything or would even be capable of doing what they were paid for. They know it's dodgy as fuck because the payments made from a 3rd party and went to either another 3rd party or to a hidden/off-shore \accounts.It's pretty much the exact same trick that Saracens tried to pull off in the rugby who were punished with a points deduction that was designed to ensure relegation, that's a better precedent to look at than what has happened with Everton.
Quote from: Simon Page on November 19, 2023, 11:15:02 AMThat wouldn't be a shock. I'm actually really iffy about deciding sporting events in the courts or tribunals. This feels a bit like tax law, where everything is so complex that the opportunities to create opaque and entangled - but probably legal - workarounds are infinite. If the football authorities really wanted to stop the cheating or bending of rules, salary caps, squad sizes including loans, multiple ownership bans, real-time transparency and the like would be the way to go. Much fairer than docking a club points seasons after the offence.I haven't actually read the FFP rules, so I don't know how complex the rules are, or how tightly defined they are, but it does feel a bit like Formula One. In that the the rules are defined, and then the teams find as many creative ways as they can circumvent them while "technically" still being on the right side. These things often end up the courts, because there is no other way to settle a disagreement between two parties who have a fundamentally different interpretations of the words on a page.I don't even really properly understand the "breaches" that Man City have been accused of, only that there are a lot of them. They certainly give the impression they've found a legal loophole that others haven't exploited. I hope they're wrong.
That wouldn't be a shock. I'm actually really iffy about deciding sporting events in the courts or tribunals. This feels a bit like tax law, where everything is so complex that the opportunities to create opaque and entangled - but probably legal - workarounds are infinite. If the football authorities really wanted to stop the cheating or bending of rules, salary caps, squad sizes including loans, multiple ownership bans, real-time transparency and the like would be the way to go. Much fairer than docking a club points seasons after the offence.
Quote from: paul_e on November 19, 2023, 02:26:03 PMQuote from: Smithy on November 19, 2023, 12:07:12 PMQuote from: Simon Page on November 19, 2023, 11:15:02 AMThat wouldn't be a shock. I'm actually really iffy about deciding sporting events in the courts or tribunals. This feels a bit like tax law, where everything is so complex that the opportunities to create opaque and entangled - but probably legal - workarounds are infinite. If the football authorities really wanted to stop the cheating or bending of rules, salary caps, squad sizes including loans, multiple ownership bans, real-time transparency and the like would be the way to go. Much fairer than docking a club points seasons after the offence.I haven't actually read the FFP rules, so I don't know how complex the rules are, or how tightly defined they are, but it does feel a bit like Formula One. In that the the rules are defined, and then the teams find as many creative ways as they can circumvent them while "technically" still being on the right side. These things often end up the courts, because there is no other way to settle a disagreement between two parties who have a fundamentally different interpretations of the words on a page.I don't even really properly understand the "breaches" that Man City have been accused of, only that there are a lot of them. They certainly give the impression they've found a legal loophole that others haven't exploited. I hope they're wrong.Man City and Chelsea are both, in the main, accused of making payments to players outside their officials contracts. This isn't loopholes or remotely subtle, they've done things like booking a player as a 'consultant' for something and then paying them vast sums for the service despite there being no evidence that the player either did anything or would even be capable of doing what they were paid for. They know it's dodgy as fuck because the payments made from a 3rd party and went to either another 3rd party or to a hidden/off-shore \accounts.It's pretty much the exact same trick that Saracens tried to pull off in the rugby who were punished with a points deduction that was designed to ensure relegation, that's a better precedent to look at than what has happened with Everton.Thanks Paul, that's the clearest/most succinct explanation I've seen of what they are accused of actually doing. It does make the mind boggle though, that if Man City's "official" wage bill is over £400m, what are they ACTUALLY paying these players?I'm guessing anyone in receipt of this money hasn't broken any rules as long as they declare it correctly to the tax man? I mean, the players aren't obliged to declare the sources of all their income to the premier league?
If Grealish is on the rumoured £350k per week, he won't be the only one, and Haaland is on considerably more. They've made record profits this year apparently, it just doesn't add up.
Quote from: Drummond on November 20, 2023, 11:58:57 AMIf Grealish is on the rumoured £350k per week, he won't be the only one, and Haaland is on considerably more. They've made record profits this year apparently, it just doesn't add up.I’m not surprised they’re profitable now given all the player sales, and some home grown at that, they’ve made in the last couple of years. It’s the illegal way they’ve fast-tracked themselves into this position that is disgraceful.I read it could be 2 years before the case is heard due to their lack of co-operation and how lawyered up they are.
Quote from: nick harper on November 20, 2023, 12:55:28 PMQuote from: Drummond on November 20, 2023, 11:58:57 AMIf Grealish is on the rumoured £350k per week, he won't be the only one, and Haaland is on considerably more. They've made record profits this year apparently, it just doesn't add up.I’m not surprised they’re profitable now given all the player sales, and some home grown at that, they’ve made in the last couple of years. It’s the illegal way they’ve fast-tracked themselves into this position that is disgraceful.I read it could be 2 years before the case is heard due to their lack of co-operation and how lawyered up they are.This is the key point. A points deduction or relegation will hardly touch them because of the position they have cheated their way into.
I also suspect that there would be quite a lot of noise along the lines of “you’re preventing us fans of seeing our heroes haaland, grealish etc” too.Sky need the tv revenue, so does the FA (is that who gets the tv money?), so there’s plenty if important stakeholders that will happily see it buried.
Quote from: Dante Lavelli on November 20, 2023, 01:14:12 PMI also suspect that there would be quite a lot of noise along the lines of “you’re preventing us fans of seeing our heroes haaland, grealish etc” too.Sky need the tv revenue, so does the FA (is that who gets the tv money?), so there’s plenty if important stakeholders that will happily see it buried. I am not sure this can be buried. Man City are a financial behemoth. Everton can't be the fall guys for what is going on elsewhere. Maybe this is why they wanted a super league so there could be none of this nonsense about trying to put a brake on their spending
Quote from: johnc on November 20, 2023, 01:30:45 PMQuote from: Dante Lavelli on November 20, 2023, 01:14:12 PMI also suspect that there would be quite a lot of noise along the lines of “you’re preventing us fans of seeing our heroes haaland, grealish etc” too.Sky need the tv revenue, so does the FA (is that who gets the tv money?), so there’s plenty if important stakeholders that will happily see it buried. I am not sure this can be buried. Man City are a financial behemoth. Everton can't be the fall guys for what is going on elsewhere. Maybe this is why they wanted a super league so there could be none of this nonsense about trying to put a brake on their spendingI agree, there is no way they can now bury this.If they've punished Everton pretty strongly, it's going to bring the Chelsea and Man City situations to the fore (already is) and put the PL in a situation where those clubs' cases can't be swept under the carpet.