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12 minutes ago, aussiemag said:

Could we circumvent FFP by PIF companies paying personal sponsorship deals, external to the club to a player,  along with a reasonable wage that keeps us within FFP limits. 

 

Sure this is why juve are in the soup.

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6 minutes ago, Nobody said:

Hasn't that loophole already been discussed and closed? I’ve no idea really, but feel like people have mentioned Watford and Udinese already in regards to that

Not that I am aware 

 

UEFA are cutting down in terms of loans, though that doesn't apply to players U21

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4 minutes ago, Geordie Ahmed said:

Probably not as one of the accusations for City was that Mancini was getting paid by am Abu Dhabi company so doing similar would cause scrutiny 

 

Theoretically one of the PIF clubs in Saudi could buy a player and then loan him on to us, whilst covering the bulk of the wages but it would only be a matter of time before they closed that loophole, like they did with the related sponsors 

As they are PIF owned, any transaction between us and any of these Saudi clubs would likely be classed as a related party transaction.

 

So, that loan deal would already need to be assessed at fair market value and wouldn't work as a dodge. Lots of reasons why - the most basic one being that if it was a genuine third party transaction, what would be in it for the loaning club to pay someone's wages with no benefit to them?

 

Still, always interesting how FFP has been subverted from stopping clubs spending recklessly and possibly going bust, to stopping clubs spending money they actually have and want to spend, in case it threatens certain clubs who seemingly make the rules.

 

Thing with that is, Man City are already in the henhouse now and seemingly unstoppable, as were Chelsea before. Ban them both and strip their titles, or let others compete on the same basis. Watching Man City parade to the title doesn't make for a great competition either, which is the PL's main global selling point.

 

I'm actually all for us following FFP using realistic sponsorships etc, because at some point, a reckoning is coming.

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10 minutes ago, Abacus said:

I'm actually all for us following FFP using realistic sponsorships etc, because at some point, a reckoning is coming.


Same.

 

And also because we have Eddie and Amanda and Dan and Darren building us a club we can love and not just a club that has money thrown at it ala City. It should help with the plastics for a while at least and we can keep our club a bit longer. 
 

I’m just so stoked we finally have a club being run properly again. That’s been good enough for me. The star players and Champions League and all of the other stuff has just been a bonus for me. 

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48 minutes ago, Abacus said:

As they are PIF owned, any transaction between us and any of these Saudi clubs would likely be classed as a related party transaction.

 

So, that loan deal would already need to be assessed at fair market value and wouldn't work as a dodge. Lots of reasons why - the most basic one being that if it was a genuine third party transaction, what would be in it for the loaning club to pay someone's wages with no benefit to them?

 

Still, always interesting how FFP has been subverted from stopping clubs spending recklessly and possibly going bust, to stopping clubs spending money they actually have and want to spend, in case it threatens certain clubs who seemingly make the rules.

 

Thing with that is, Man City are already in the henhouse now and seemingly unstoppable, as were Chelsea before. Ban them both and strip their titles, or let others compete on the same basis. Watching Man City parade to the title doesn't make for a great competition either, which is the PL's main global selling point.

 

I'm actually all for us following FFP using realistic sponsorships etc, because at some point, a reckoning is coming.

Tbf I didn't realise the related transaction extended to transfers as well, just assumed it was sponsors but I suppose it makes sense from the point of the other clubs 

 

But completely agree with the rest of your post 

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1 hour ago, Abacus said:

 

I'm actually all for us following FFP using realistic sponsorships etc, because at some point, a reckoning is coming.

If City get away without charges/sanctions/bans then FFP is finished 

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6 minutes ago, duo said:

If City get away without charges/sanctions/bans then FFP is finished 

Hopefully you are right, it's nothing about protecting football, just protecting the elite and needs to go.

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3 hours ago, duo said:

If City get away without charges/sanctions/bans then FFP is finished 

It's not so much if they get away with it, it's partly why and how they got away with it. What's more likely to end FFP is if they get done but the punishment is so weak as to be meaningless, ie no Ban from competitions, no lengthy transfer ban, no stripping of titles, no massive points reduction. If its a fine thennits pointless.

 

 

Edited by madras

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I don't know the nuances of the Man City charges, but aren't a lot of them regarding disclosure of evidence and obstructing the investigation? Obviously that was an investigation into City and their sponsors. 

 

Everton have been referred to the same panel for breaches of FFP. Wolves are also struggling to comply and will undoubtedly need sell this summer.  

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1 minute ago, Gaztoon said:

Restriction of trade no matter how they word it.

 

Hope city take it all the way to court.

 

It depends on the particulars of the case.

 

I'd love to see the "Profit and Sustainability" as well as the third party association laws put under a legal microscope. The latter in particular would be fascinating given they're restricting how a private entity makes its income.

 

It doesn't particularly look like City are challenging that though. 

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4 hours ago, FloydianMag said:

All FFP and FMV requires is a legal challenge, its a restriction of trade!!

 

20 minutes ago, Gaztoon said:

Restriction of trade no matter how they word it.

 

Hope city take it all the way to court.

Every club is required to sign at the start of every season that they are happy with the rules, regulations and code of the Premier League inc FFP, so teams can’t take it to court if they have previously signed that season. Apparently we managed to get it in front of a judge because Ashley “forgot to sign” at the start of the season, something the PL won’t ever let happen again. 

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Just now, nufcnick said:

 

Every club is required to sign at the start of every season that they are happy with the rules, regulations and code of the Premier League inc FFP, so teams can’t take it to court if they have previously signed that season. Apparently we managed to get it in front of a judge because Ashley “forgot to sign” at the start of the season, something the PL won’t ever let happen again. 

I’d be surprised if the actual law didn’t superseed a contract mind. 

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5 hours ago, r0cafella said:

Guys, no matter what happens to city won’t impact us sadly. We still have uefa FFP which we have to contend with. 

 

You mean the UEFA FFP that Man City challenged, had overturned and were instead were only fined for not cooperating with the investigation. FFP is a joke. [emoji38]

 

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2020/jul/13/manchester-city-cas-decision-not-mean-end-of-financial-fair-play-uefa

 

 

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1 minute ago, OCK said:

 

You mean the UEFA FFP that Man City challenged, had overturned and were instead were only fined for not cooperating with the investigation. FFP is a joke. [emoji38]

 

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2020/jul/13/manchester-city-cas-decision-not-mean-end-of-financial-fair-play-uefa

 

 

I mean it’s important to remember that city basically refused to cooperate and won on a a technicality. 
 

 

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That's kinda why FFP is a joke, if you have the lawyers to nitpick at the legal wordings and charges it doesn't matter. 

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Just now, OCK said:

That's kinda why FFP is a joke, if you have the lawyers to nitpick at the legal wordings and charges it doesn't matter. 

FFP is obviously an absolute sham and is working exactly as intended. 

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11 hours ago, Abacus said:

 

Still, always interesting how FFP has been subverted from stopping clubs spending recklessly and possibly going bust, to stopping clubs spending money they actually have and want to spend, in case it threatens certain clubs who seemingly make the rules.

 

Thing with that is, Man City are already in the henhouse now and seemingly unstoppable, as were Chelsea before. Ban them both and strip their titles, or let others compete on the same basis. Watching Man City parade to the title doesn't make for a great competition either, which is the PL's main global selling point.

 

I'm actually all for us following FFP using realistic sponsorships etc, because at some point, a reckoning is coming.

 

Yeah that's really a bit sickening.

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Re the above and FFP, I've never understood why it's allowed for a club to rack up massive debts that count towards FFP that an owner can't pay off due to FFP regs but a takeover allows those debts to be written off and an FFP fresh start.

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Not sure if this was posted. Financial models broken down to categories of teams. They mention Newcastle is working toward a balanced approach of Internal vs External financing.

https://theathletic.com/4605375/2023/06/14/premier-league-finances-make-money-how/

 

"

Entirely reliant on external funding — ‘Build me a future’

Examples: Chelsea, Newcastle United

The most talked about examples here would be Newcastle United and Chelsea. Both have low EBITDA (£27million for Chelsea; negative £24m for Newcastle) signifying weak to no internal cash generation.

But both have wealthy owners flushing the clubs with money (pushing financial fair play to the limit) to rapidly strengthen on-pitch performance and create better internal cash engines for tomorrow. "

 

 

"Newcastle United, by contrast, have been relatively measured post the takeover and are seeing steady improvement. The appointment of Eddie Howe was a clever one, and the signings have significantly enhanced the team. Newcastle’s top-four finish also positions them extremely favourably for further investment and growth."

 

 

 

Edited by McDog

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