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[Football] Man City launch legal action against Premier League







happypig

Staring at the rude boys
May 23, 2009
8,169
Eastbourne
When City win next week, and with the legal team they employ how can they lose, I think football as we know it will die.
Having a big, expensive legal team doesn’t mean you’ll win, it just means you’ll have the best people arguing for you and looking for loopholes making it more likely you’ll get off a flimsy-ish charge.
I was sitting in court one day and we had BT up for a (IIRC) road works offence. I had to recuse myself as I worked for them so there was a conflict of interest. They trooped in with a legal team of four people, one of whom was a barrister (this was for a minor case in a mags court) and argued the tits off of everything in mitigation.

With the Man City affair, I think the culture in some countries is a bit different whereby bribery is perfectly acceptable and wealth trumps everything, hence their attitude.
 


um bongo molongo

Well-known member
Jul 26, 2004
3,054
Battersea
There is (rightly) too much regulation that has sprung up around breakaway leagues to allow clubs to play in both a Super League and a domestic league. The problem is, when one goes, the rest will follow. This leaves domestic football with one of two paths - accept it, change the rules to allow both to play and let domestic football essentially become a considerably poorer, reserve league for the big clubs, with dwindling interest, or ban them from participating in domestic football outright and watch as the majority of big clubs follow the money instead.

I think it'd be the end of the PL and English Football (in any form we know it as) because the money will follow the big clubs, and it will happen suddenly and without warning (like the first attempt). I don't suspect those clubs will be kind to the PL or FA when they do it (like City now) and part of their aim will be to obliterate the current structures of domestic football - these clubs very clearly don't want to even have a glimmer of fair competition. So, they'll do it at a point where the domestic structure, in an already precarious financial state, will be financially obliterated.

The one glimmer of hope is that the next government finishes implementing the independent football regular and is able to legally stop teams from breaking away in the UK. It'll likely won't stop the Super League from happening (we'll see Girona become a Super League side instead of City with Haaland up top for them), but it will leave the domestic structure in tact, if not considerably poorer.
I agree with half of your post and not the other half. Personally I think the PL without the big 6 (or 7 with Newcastle) would be great. We’d have been in with a chance of winning it last year! It’d have less big name players, and a lot less money, but would be more competitive - I enjoyed the Championship more than I have the PL anyway. And m as an added bonus we’d lose all the armchair big 6 w****s from discussions about proper football. Replace the 7 breakaway teams with the top 7 of last season’s championship and let’s got on with it.
 


Beanstalk

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2017
3,029
London
I agree with half of your post and not the other half. Personally I think the PL without the big 6 (or 7 with Newcastle) would be great. We’d have been in with a chance of winning it last year! It’d have less big name players, and a lot less money, but would be more competitive - I enjoyed the Championship more than I have the PL anyway. And m as an added bonus we’d lose all the armchair big 6 w****s from discussions about proper football. Replace the 7 breakaway teams with the top 7 of last season’s championship and let’s got on with it.
I agree with you if money isn't a thing, 100% the top flight would be great - we'd also be one of the best teams in the division all of a sudden. Unfortunately, money is a thing, and there is no way the Super League will let any competing competitions thrive. They'll destroy them - it won't be fun.

Those top 6/7 sides won't disappear from Football, they'll get stronger, they'll have less regulation (probably no transfer windows, unlimited spending, insane contracts - all funded by TV money that used to go to the domestic pyramid). I think it's naïve to believe it would be better for us - the football would be worse, the infrastructure would crumble eventually, there'd be no opportunity for owners to make any profit unless they become trading grounds for the Super League. This would result in the best players leaving almost immediately. It wouldn't be a more even pyramid, it would be a feeder league for the Super League, they wouldn't let it be anything else.
 


um bongo molongo

Well-known member
Jul 26, 2004
3,054
Battersea
I agree with you if money isn't a thing, 100% the top flight would be great - we'd also be one of the best teams in the division all of a sudden. Unfortunately, money is a thing, and there is no way the Super League will let any competing competitions thrive. They'll destroy them - it won't be fun.

Those top 6/7 sides won't disappear from Football, they'll get stronger, they'll have less regulation (probably no transfer windows, unlimited spending, insane contracts - all funded by TV money that used to go to the domestic pyramid). I think it's naïve to believe it would be better for us - the football would be worse, the infrastructure would crumble eventually, there'd be no opportunity for owners to make any profit unless they become trading grounds for the Super League. This would result in the best players leaving almost immediately. It wouldn't be a more even pyramid, it would be a feeder league for the Super League, they wouldn't let it be anything else.
I’m less pessimistic than that. We have 50% of it already - we have the Champions League, which is where the big money is and where the big players want to play and the big managers want to manage. There’s an illusion of competitiveness but in practice it’s the same sides competing every year. I couldn’t give two hoots about it. I watch the odd game from QFs onwards with a passing interest.

The resulting PL would be less lucrative than the current one, but probably better off than the Championship. And with some good historic clubs with big fan bases competing to win it. TV rights would be down and players would have to be paid a bit less. That’s no bad thing. I doubt attendances would change at all. Bring it on I say.

The really damaging option would be ESL and the clubs allowed to have sides in domestic leagues as well.
 








Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,624
Might Man City win on the claim that PSR is a restraint of trade?

Has either PSR or FFP been tested as lawful in the courts? Despite the beneficial (in my view) effects, I can't deny they do both have the effect of restricting free and fair competition

OK, the circumstances were very different, but sporting bodies have lost restraint of trade cases before (Kolpak and Bosman), despite presumably taking legal advice that their position was legal.
 






Papa Lazarou

Living in a De Zerbi wonderland
Jul 7, 2003
19,358
Worthing
Might Man City win on the claim that PSR is a restraint of trade?

Has either PSR or FFP been tested as lawful in the courts? Despite the beneficial (in my view) effects, I can't deny they do both have the effect of restricting free and fair competition

OK, the circumstances were very different, but sporting bodies have lost restraint of trade cases before (Kolpak and Bosman), despite presumably taking legal advice that their position was legal.
But even of that was proven, the Premier League is a private members club to all intents and purposes. Their rules are part of the membership.
 


Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,624
But even of that was proven, the Premier League is a private members club to all intents and purposes. Their rules are part of the membership.
This was why I bought up other restraint of trade examples in sporting leagues.

Sporting leagues are obviously structures differently to ordinary businesses, but competition law has still been applied.

Got to admit I studied this stuff, but my memory is very hazy about the legal principles to be applied here.
 




dippy2449

Active member
May 24, 2004
207
Norfolk
Helped me understand a little better
 


Screaming J

He'll put a spell on you
Jul 13, 2004
2,403
Exiled from the South Country
I've come to the conclusion that a ESL might be a good thing for football, if (and only if) it's members are kicked out of domestic leagues. Let them get on with their meaningless comp where they all play each other every year, slavishly watched on TV and 'supported' by people across the globe. With any luck it'll collapse after a while through ennui, once the novelty wears off. Then the big 6 can start again in the N West County League (or equivalent) whilst the rest of us get on with something resembling an actual league competition.

Man City's current action seems to mirror the political approach taken by their owners. Add to that the approach taken by the Glazers at Utd, Boehly and that other bloke at Chelsea et al and I can't say that I'd miss any of them. Never mind 100 years plus of each of the big 6 clubs 'heritage'; they've well and truly besmirched that in recent years.
 


Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,624
. With any luck it'll collapse after a while through ennui, once the novelty wears off. Then the big 6 can start again in the N West County League (or equivalent) whilst the rest of us get on with something resembling an actual league competition.
That's obviously not how it will work
 






BBassic

I changed this.
Jul 28, 2011
13,054

Manchester City chair warns Premier League is to become less competitive

Manchester City’s chairman, Khaldoon al-Mubarak, has claimed rules introduced during the past 12 months will make the Premier League less competitive, and he has called for more “sensibility in regulating”.


Less competitive? They're claiming that a league which has been dominated by one team, a team that has won 6 of the last 7 titles, is going to be less competitive? As if its actually competitive now?
 


pigmanovich

Good Old Sausage by the Sea
Mar 16, 2024
1,548
London

Manchester City chair warns Premier League is to become less competitive

Manchester City’s chairman, Khaldoon al-Mubarak, has claimed rules introduced during the past 12 months will make the Premier League less competitive, and he has called for more “sensibility in regulating”.


Less competitive? They're claiming that a league which has been dominated by one team, a team that has won 6 of the last 7 titles, is going to be less competitive? As if its actually competitive now?
Perhaps the Guardian have misunderstood the tenor of his comments and he's celebrating how uncompetitive the league has become?
 


Baldrick

Well-known member
Aug 24, 2020
248
I agree with you if money isn't a thing, 100% the top flight would be great - we'd also be one of the best teams in the division all of a sudden. Unfortunately, money is a thing, and there is no way the Super League will let any competing competitions thrive. They'll destroy them - it won't be fun.

Those top 6/7 sides won't disappear from Football, they'll get stronger, they'll have less regulation (probably no transfer windows, unlimited spending, insane contracts - all funded by TV money that used to go to the domestic pyramid). I think it's naïve to believe it would be better for us - the football would be worse, the infrastructure would crumble eventually, there'd be no opportunity for owners to make any profit unless they become trading grounds for the Super League. This would result in the best players leaving almost immediately. It wouldn't be a more even pyramid, it would be a feeder league for the Super League, they wouldn't let it be anything else.
I partly agree with you.

The thing is, if some of the top teams in various European leagues are kicked out of their current domestic leagues and cup competitions because they want to form a Super League and make lots more money, only one team can win the Super League each year. Most years it would probably be Real Madrid, so teams like Man City, Man Utd, Chelsea, PSG, Milan, Inter, Juventus, Porto etc would rarely be winners of anything. Global fans tend to only support winning teams, so many Super League teams would probably see their fan base and marketing opportunities decrease unless the Super League is run along the lines of the NFL with no relegation and a fairly equal distribtion of income (can't see Real Madrid or Man City buying into that!).

Can't see all the top players joining a Super League if the majority of them are not going to win any medals. Maybe many top players would just join the Super League towards the end of their careers when they want to get a final pension injection.

How many teams would join a Super League if in doing so they are automatically kicked out of all of their domestic Competitions? The EPL and other domestic leagues hold a lot of cards if they want to play them and they are prepared to jetison Super League teams. I am sure most of the fans of clubs not joining a Super League would gladly say "good riddence, just go and play with yourselves". Proper competition and jeopardy is more important to match going fans and armchair TV audiences than just making mega rich owners more money .

Also, how many teams in the EPL would be prepared to annoy their own domestic fan base and join a Super League if in doing so they are kicked out of all domestic competitions. There wouldn't be that many who would try. Maybe Man City, Chelsea, Spurs and Man Utd whose (majority) owners already hold their own club's fans in contempt. I am not certain these owners could deal with the domestic fan backlash, but would they care if all of their "home matches" are played at diferent locations around the world to cater for their global fan bases? The Man Utd and Chelsea owners would also save money in not having to redevelop their delapidated stadiums.

A highly competitive EPL would still raise good TV monies from the domestic TV audience. Revenues from overseas TV deals are increasingly being hijacked by the big mega rich EPL clubs, so how much would other clubs really be losing? Less and less as deals are renegotiated.

The bottom line should be teams playing in domestic league and cup competions should abide by the democratically agreed rules. If they don't, kick them out of the competions.
 




Badger

NOT the Honey Badger
NSC Patron
May 8, 2007
13,102
Toronto
Hang on, if Man City are kicked out of the PL, does that mean their place would be filled by Leeds...?

Whoa, whoa, whoa - let's not do anything too hasty... :oops:
You could argue it should be Luton, as Man City would be taking the third relegation spot from them.

In fact, that would be hilarious. Leeds fans would be incensed. Marvellous scenes.
 


SAC

Well-known member
May 21, 2014
2,631
I agree with half of your post and not the other half. Personally I think the PL without the big 6 (or 7 with Newcastle) would be great. We’d have been in with a chance of winning it last year! It’d have less big name players, and a lot less money, but would be more competitive - I enjoyed the Championship more than I have the PL anyway. And m as an added bonus we’d lose all the armchair big 6 w****s from discussions about proper football. Replace the 7 breakaway teams with the top 7 of last season’s championship and let’s got on with it.
Take away the big 6/7 and a new big 3 would appear, soon to be joined by 3 or 4 others. These would be dominated by clubs with (owners who have) the deepest pockets. It may be fun for a few seasons but would revert back to how it has always been, just with different names at the top.
 


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