‘Complete carnage’ looms for Premier League after Man City’s financial rules win
- FIy999 2025/02/17 09:56
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Premier League clubs are pushing for the government to offer more support for football on competition law amid fears its latest defeat to Manchester City could eventually lead to “complete carnage”.
Man City’s case against the Premier League has caused chaos due to the "doctrinal" adherence as the sport strives to be run fairly. In the latest move to a case that threatens “half the clubs” in the league, the independent football regulator could be toothless in its lack of power.
One senior Premier League executive highlighted the main issue: “We have to be able to run a sport fairly and not be sued”.
There is now new urgency surrounding the issue since Friday, after the outcome of an arbitration tribunal from Manchester City’s legal challenge of the Premier League’s previous Associated Party Transaction (APT) rules.
The very mention of terms like this reflects the complicated place where football resides in 2025, and involves a lot more layers than the binary declarations of victory and defeat.
City did score a significant win here, both in real legal terms and in PR.
The panel decided that the three narrow aspects of the old APT rules previously found to be unlawful could not be separated from the rest of the rules as a matter of law.
That doesn’t have much real consequence right now, other than potential claims by clubs for compensation from the Premier League for denying them the opportunity to make deals with associated parties, due to the fact clubs voted new rules into place in November 2024. It does nevertheless amp up the stakes for City’s legal challenge to those. The same panel will look at that.
City can now point to vindication for their legal stance.
The decision caused surprise and debate in football’s ever-growing legal circles. One common view was that the outcome represents an “extremist” approach to competition law, that undermines any legal certainty, especially when only a small part of the rules were initially declared unlawful.
It can mean any minor breach of competition laws renders rules void and unenforceable, even though the original decision argued the rules didn’t go far enough and were fully endorsed in principles. This is what the Premier League executives are getting at about “very doctrinal competition law” that can be “devoid of practical reality”. One view is that the panel lost sight of the purpose of the rules to prevent unfair competition.
This is where there is considerable divergence in opinion, though. Some in the game - even those critical of City - felt a decision like this was inevitable due to paragraph 250 of the original decision.
In assessing the exclusion of shareholder loans, that read: “There does not appear to have been any discussion or analysis as to how such an exclusion would affect the effectiveness of the PSR, and the principle of sustainability of club finance which underlies the PSR or the competitive balance between the clubs.”
Paragraph 50 of Friday’s outcome even criticised the Premier League for “sleight of hand”.
The failure to include interest-free loans is considered far more than a technical breach, especially when they were in excess of £1bn. City’s argument could be that the Premier League enforced rules against them for a three-year period when they did not enforce rules against clubs with shareholder loans. As such, the club suffered a loss or the other clubs derived a benefit.
This is nevertheless where there is another layer to the entire discussion.
As many in football have been very keen to point out, City had no complaint about the shareholder loan issue when the rules were originally drafted. The objection arose when, as one Premier League source put it, “they threw the kitchen sink at everything”.
In other words, all of the expensive legal might they can muster.
Through that, two things can be true at once. The Premier League can have been very sloppy in its regulation and also right.
The entire story also shows the immense difficulty of trying to regulate powers that are far greater than you, and specifically states. Football, and especially the Premier League, is paying the price - literally, in terms of legal fees - for the powers it has allowed into its league.
One increasingly repeated view is that sporting regulation was never intended to be as robust as state law, because it didn’t need to be. Competitions just had to put on fair games. Nobody ever expected the power of the wealthiest states in the world to come to bear.
Some in the Premier League have been left aghast at the idea of people cheerleading “a foreign state potentially blowing up an English institution”.
The difficulty is shown in the very notion of APT rules themselves, which some executives find absurd. That isn’t because they agree with City. It’s because they see this as impossible to police in autocracies where the lines between companies and states are blurred.
Looming over everything is “the City case”, as it’s now called, with an initial outcome expected in the coming weeks. City insist they are innocence. This decision does not pre-judge that case.
At the same time, some in the Premier League are viewing such legal challenges in that context. Legal defeats like this start to erode credibility.
If the executive are eventually forced to resign, as one source maintained, then you can start to say all attempts at regulation under their leadership lack legitimacy.
“This is how you kill the golden goose, cause football to eat itself, whatever phrase you want to use,” as one source put it.
It is one point that should never be lost. Fair sporting competition - and the very business of selling sporting fixtures as a product - is fundamentally dependent on strong regulation.
A significant reason why the Premier League became the world’s most popular in the first place, and why senior royals like Sheikh Mansour wanted to buy in, was because it had much greater redistribution rules than Spain or Italy; the competitiveness was more intense.
We are still some way from all that being exploded, not least with Uefa’s own stronger regulation serving as a bulwark, but developments will be instructive. City would of course say this is all about the letter of the law.
Some now believe the Premier League should change its arbitration system, and ensure proper judicial review of decisions since “the limitations are becoming clear”.
The panel will next assess City’s new legal challenge, and that is seen as much more significant. If they win there, in the words of one executive: “There will be complete carnage”.
It is why some clubs now say a regulator doesn’t go anywhere near far enough.
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