When Man City’s hearing over 115 FFP charges could take place

Everton and Nottingham Forest have both been charged with breaching the Premier League’s profit and sustainability rules (PSR).

They have both exceeded the allotted £105m of losses over a three-year period and have been told they will be punished within a maximum of three months.

Manchester City were charged with 115 alleged breaches in February 2023, dating from 2009 to 2018, but their case will not be heard for some time.

How can that be the case, when will the case be heard and what could Everton and Forest’s charges mean for City?

What are Man City’s 115 charges for?

City’s alleged breaches start in the 2009-10 campaign and finish in 2017-18.

They largely centre on either artificially inflated or undersold financial figures, related to general revenue, sponsor revenue and manager remuneration, particularly under Roberto Mancini.

Yet there are also breaches of Uefa’s Financial Fair Play regulations (FFP) between 2013-18 and PSR between 2015-18, as well as breaches of rules which require clubs to co-operate and assist the Premier League with its investigations.

Why Forest and Everton have been punished before Man City

City’s alleged offences are far more varied and serious than what Forest and Everton have been punished for, but it is that complexity and significance which is causing the delay.

Under new regulations put in place by the Premier League, any club charged with a standard financial rule breach must have their case and any potential appeals heard within 12 weeks of the charges being brought.

This means any punishment given to Forest or Everton always had to be enforced within the season in which the breach has taken place.

But as City’s charges are not considered “standard”, there is no set timeframe in which they will be punished. They have also hired an extensive and highly capably superteam of lawyers, who will ensure the process runs as inefficiently and slowly as possible.

As football finance expert Dr Rob Wilson told i: “It’s the fact that it’s one year times 115. P&S calculations effectively punish clubs for one season’s breach. The document from the Everton charges was 190 pages, but it’s significantly less than what City’s will be.

“There’s just a huge amount of paperwork and litigation to get through. It’s just very, very complicated with lots of people. For a contemporary example, it’s like the Post Office scandal. What we’ll probably do is look back in 10 years, as we are with the Post Office now, and realise these failings that go right the way from the Premier League and the club to Uefa and up into government as well.”

“It demonstrates the lack of robustness that the Premier League and Uefa have had over the last 15/20 years in European football. I did some work with Der Spiegel back in 2017, and the evidence I’ve seen – you think, why hasn’t that been dealt with? That was seven years ago now.”

When will Man City’s FFP hearing take place?

Premier League CEO Richard Masters has confirmed that the Man City case “will resolve itself in the near future”, having previously said a date has been set.

Masters, speaking at the European Leagues general assembly, added: “Obviously we can’t comment on the case, the date has been set and the case will resolve itself at some point in the near future, and I cannot make any further comment on it.”

An independent commission is set to hear the case later this year, but certainly not before the current campaign ends. Given the extent of the charges, a decision in the case may not come until next year.

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