Manchester United and Manchester City split by proposals on Premier League
financial controlsManchester United and Manchester City are on opposite sides of a new divide in the
Premier League: whether the competition should introduce its own Uefa-style financial fair
play regulations.
By Matt Scott
8:29PM BST 22 Aug 2012
At the League’s annual meeting the idea of tighter financial controls being imposed on clubs was
advanced by Liverpool. It gained the support of a number of their rivals, including United’s chief
executive, David Gill, who had previously helped shape Uefa’s ground-breaking Financial Fair Play
rules.
The delegation from Arsenal is believed to have spoken up in favour. The club’s owner, Stan
Kroenke is, like Liverpool’s John W Henry and United’s Glazer family, familiar with restrictive
financial regulations through the US sports franchises they own. West Ham United’s joint chairman
David Gold also gave his approval.
Gold told The Daily Telegraph: “I was involved in bringing in the FFP rules in the Championship
and at the time I thought should I get to the Premier League, I’ll lobby for it. I made it abundantly
clear we shouldn’t be doing nothing. David Gill was marvellous. He made lots of sense. Even the big
clubs now are saying we have to get to grips with costs.”
But the subject was not unanimously supported. Manchester City, whose owner, Sheikh Mansour
bin Zayed al-Nahyan , subsidised spending with £43.3million in cash between June 1, 2009, and the
end of May 2011, are believed to have cautioned that they would prefer to manage their business as
they see fit.
Fulham, whose rise through the leagues was financed by ‘soft’ loans from the chairman, Mohamed
Fayed, have also historically expressed the view that they would not endorse a system that “kills the
dreams” of others. However, this time they did not push back against Liverpool’s proposal.
It all meant the Premier League executive staff have been tasked with drawing up a report on what
proposals could be introduced. One option would be to adopt wholesale the Uefa FFP regulations.
Both Chelsea and United were instrumental in developing these, which require clubs to break even
within a margin of “acceptable deviation” of €45 million (£35.5 million) over the first two years of
their formal implementation – next season and the following.
Chelsea and United are confident of meeting Uefa’s rules despite their inclusion not just of cash
expenditure but accounting charges relating to historical spending under “amortisation”. However,
City will find that particularly challenging.
Their Premier League champions’ operating loss in the 2010-11 season alone – the most recent for
which accounts are available – was £194.9 million. Even though some areas of this spending will be
discounted as allowable, the discounts are unlikely to bring operating losses under FFP to within the
£35.5 million cushion over two years.
David Gill, Manchester United’s chief executive, has told Parliament: “We were involved through the
European Club Association, as were other clubs, such as Chelsea, who were on the working group
to develop those proposals with Uefa.
“It made sense and was for the benefit of football clubs could operate within their own resources
and it would bring about a limiting effect on player cost, in terms of transfers and wages.
“We are comfortable with it. The critical issue will be around implementation and the sanctions
around that, and making sure that it is appropriately applied. But I do not think anyone can criticise
the objective of ensuring that clubs operate within their own resources.”
How to guarantee compliance would be one of the biggest challenges of a new Premier League
regulatory regime and this month Henry expressed his concerns about Uefa’s will to impose its own
FFP regulations. But that view contrasts with recent Uefa actions.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport has upheld Uefa’s expulsion under financial fair play rules of
Besiktas. The Turkish club will be banned from the next two European competitions for which it
qualifies over the next five years.
The English top flight is the only league in the country not to have its own cost-restraint framework.
Leagues One and Two have both implemented salary capping while the Championship has
introduced a financial fair play system for this season based on the Uefa model. Championship clubs
flouting Football League rules will be hit with a transfer embargo.
© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2012
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