Quote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 09:55:25 AMI know they've broken the rules, I just think the rule concerned is kind of bollocks.Yeah it is, but taking each case on its merits nobody forced them to sign the gazillion players that ended up with them needing to flog Johnson to balance the books.
I know they've broken the rules, I just think the rule concerned is kind of bollocks.
Quote from: LeeB on January 18, 2024, 09:57:54 AMQuote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 09:55:25 AMI know they've broken the rules, I just think the rule concerned is kind of bollocks.Yeah it is, but taking each case on its merits nobody forced them to sign the gazillion players that ended up with them needing to flog Johnson to balance the books.But they finished the transfer window within the rules! Plenty of teams buy in anticipation of a sale to balance it. The exact timing of it is arbitrary and doesn't line up at all with the actual opportunity afforded the club to get their p&s in order.
Quote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 10:00:31 AMQuote from: LeeB on January 18, 2024, 09:57:54 AMQuote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 09:55:25 AMI know they've broken the rules, I just think the rule concerned is kind of bollocks.Yeah it is, but taking each case on its merits nobody forced them to sign the gazillion players that ended up with them needing to flog Johnson to balance the books.But they finished the transfer window within the rules! Plenty of teams buy in anticipation of a sale to balance it. The exact timing of it is arbitrary and doesn't line up at all with the actual opportunity afforded the club to get their p&s in order.I don't think it is arbitrary, it was mentioned earlier in the thread the point where one season finishes and ends contractually and in competitive terms is end of June.
The thing is though, most of the stuff is out there in the public domain. I mentioned before the Mancini contracts. One with Man City, an identical one with a UAE company for something like £4m for 4 days 'consultancy work'. They're guilty, and there's plenty of evidence. Find them guilty, relegate them to League 2, ban them from signing players for three years then let them appeal if they want to.
Quote from: Risso on January 16, 2024, 09:11:01 AMThe thing is though, most of the stuff is out there in the public domain. I mentioned before the Mancini contracts. One with Man City, an identical one with a UAE company for something like £4m for 4 days 'consultancy work'. They're guilty, and there's plenty of evidence. Find them guilty, relegate them to League 2, ban them from signing players for three years then let them appeal if they want to.I agree when you look at the evidence out there the whole thing stinks. The thing I can't get my around is exactly why the Premier League have gone so two footed on this with that amount of charges? If it turns out their case is built on similar evidence to the UEFA case that went to CAS then I'm struggling to understand how they could return a guilty verdict here? Add in the political element and it seems even less likely. Surely the Premier League are going to have to win this to save their reputation and avoid an independent regulator coming in down the line? It seems like a big gamble.
Would say, as with many cases in life, a lesser penalty for late compliance than for flagrant non-compliance.
Quote from: LeeB on January 18, 2024, 10:03:25 AMQuote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 10:00:31 AMQuote from: LeeB on January 18, 2024, 09:57:54 AMQuote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 09:55:25 AMI know they've broken the rules, I just think the rule concerned is kind of bollocks.Yeah it is, but taking each case on its merits nobody forced them to sign the gazillion players that ended up with them needing to flog Johnson to balance the books.But they finished the transfer window within the rules! Plenty of teams buy in anticipation of a sale to balance it. The exact timing of it is arbitrary and doesn't line up at all with the actual opportunity afforded the club to get their p&s in order.I don't think it is arbitrary, it was mentioned earlier in the thread the point where one season finishes and ends contractually and in competitive terms is end of June.If it doesn't line up with the actual window of opportunity to get their financial house in order, i.e. the transfer window, I'd say it's at least skewed.Chris, I see the point, I do, I just can't actually see where Forest gained some huge advantage here. They sold their best player by miles to stay within the regulations.
Quote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 10:07:02 AMQuote from: LeeB on January 18, 2024, 10:03:25 AMQuote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 10:00:31 AMQuote from: LeeB on January 18, 2024, 09:57:54 AMQuote from: Monty on January 18, 2024, 09:55:25 AMI know they've broken the rules, I just think the rule concerned is kind of bollocks.Yeah it is, but taking each case on its merits nobody forced them to sign the gazillion players that ended up with them needing to flog Johnson to balance the books.But they finished the transfer window within the rules! Plenty of teams buy in anticipation of a sale to balance it. The exact timing of it is arbitrary and doesn't line up at all with the actual opportunity afforded the club to get their p&s in order.I don't think it is arbitrary, it was mentioned earlier in the thread the point where one season finishes and ends contractually and in competitive terms is end of June.If it doesn't line up with the actual window of opportunity to get their financial house in order, i.e. the transfer window, I'd say it's at least skewed.Chris, I see the point, I do, I just can't actually see where Forest gained some huge advantage here. They sold their best player by miles to stay within the regulations.For me, Forest signed players that summer knowing (or at least, they should've known) that the books needed to be balanced on 30th June. It's nobody else's fault but their own that they were in a position where they had to sell a player for under his market value because they were in a bit of a pickle financially.The "Best price" argument is bollocks as far as I'm concerned. Yeah, sure, if you have to sell a player by a certain date then you're not going to get as good a price as if you didn't. Tough shit, you put yourself in that position in the first place.All that said, I do have some amount of sympathy with them, and given they had resolved their problems by the end of that transfer window, I'd think a fine would be more appropriate than a points deduction. They'd played to the spirit of the laws rather than to the letter in my book. I don't see any problem with the letter of the law, by the way - that's when the season runs, so it's when the accounts should run. If anything, the transfer window should be moved to fit in with that - not the other way round.The loan situation with Everton seems perfectly reasonable to me. If you can build a new stand/stadium/whatever without taking a loan, it's clearly sustainable [at the time]. If you need to take a loan, then questions have to be asked as to whether that club is operating in a sustainable way or not. Otherwise what's stopping them using loans to pay the leccy bill?
Quote from: Jockey Randall on January 18, 2024, 10:11:23 AMQuote from: Risso on January 16, 2024, 09:11:01 AMThe thing is though, most of the stuff is out there in the public domain. I mentioned before the Mancini contracts. One with Man City, an identical one with a UAE company for something like £4m for 4 days 'consultancy work'. They're guilty, and there's plenty of evidence. Find them guilty, relegate them to League 2, ban them from signing players for three years then let them appeal if they want to.I agree when you look at the evidence out there the whole thing stinks. The thing I can't get my around is exactly why the Premier League have gone so two footed on this with that amount of charges? If it turns out their case is built on similar evidence to the UEFA case that went to CAS then I'm struggling to understand how they could return a guilty verdict here? Add in the political element and it seems even less likely. Surely the Premier League are going to have to win this to save their reputation and avoid an independent regulator coming in down the line? It seems like a big gamble.UEFA has a statute of limitations, which is why they, in effect, got off with those charges. The PL doesn't.