Manchester City scored what appeared to be a huge legal victory this month when their latest legal challenge to Associated Party Transaction (APT) rules was upheld. Deemed as ‘void and unenforceable’ in the latest ruling, the re-drawing of the Premier League’s legal framework will significantly undermine their fight against financial doping in England.

The APT rules were first introduced in 2021, largely in response to Newcastle’s acquisition by the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund (PIF), in order to ensure commercial deals linked to a club’s ownership were agreed at fair market value. State level ownership has the potential to threaten the credibility of existing Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules, with clubs able to circumvent losses through inflated commercial deals with sister businesses and affiliates. Manchester City’s commercial relationship with Etihad Airways is just one example of an affiliated business to the Abu Dhabi Royal Family, investing significant sums of money into the club. Those that seek to defend these deals would argue that all clubs leverage their business relationships to score commercial deals, yet for other clubs the market drives the valuation of the deal.

In the case of Manchester City, many would argue that their commercial agreements are inflated. When Manchester City signed their most recent deal with Etihad at the beginning of this season, it represented the most lucrative shirt sponsorship deal in British history, worth an estimated £70m a year. Manchester City have been the dominant force in English football for a number of years now, and have reaped the commercial rewards to go alongside it. Yet in popularity, they lag quite significantly behind the likes of rivals Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal. Whether it is through global shirt sales, season ticket waiting lists, social media followings – there are plenty of measures to suggest that Manchester City at a fair market value shouldn’t be achieving some of the largest deals in the league.

Why does it matter?

Manchester City’s dominance might be great for the blue half of Manchester, but it does little to benefit anyone else. Not only does it degrade the interest and value of the league as a whole, but it is plainly unfair when one team is able to invest significantly more than their rivals over a consistent period of time. Revenue driven through ticket sales and merchandising are an organic means of investing in the playing squad, but the loss-averse sugar daddies of Blackburn Rovers, Chelsea, Manchester City and now Newcastle United are something that we should be seeking to restrict.

City are playing a different game to most other clubs, and their 2024/25 wage bill illustrates how significant their advantage actually is (based on FBREF estimates):

RankClubAnnual Wage Bill
1Manchester City£201,864,000
2Manchester United£180,640,000
3Arsenal£172,146,000
4Chelsea£169,390,000
5Liverpool£128,804,000
6Aston Villa£107,536,000
7Tottenham Hotspur£104,806,000

The case also illustrates how easy it is to argue legal semantics, rather than focusing on what is actually right or wrong. The spirit of the rules is defensible, and clearly moves to protect the integrity of the league as a whole. However, what is becoming clear is that their previous iteration wasn’t enforceable in the eyes of the law. The tribunal found that three aspects of the old rules (that have since been changed and approved), are not lawful:

“The tribunal’s decision has found that the three narrow aspects of the old APT rules, previously found to be unlawful, cannot be separated from the rest of the previous rules as a matter of law. The result, the Tribunal has determined, is that the previous APT rules, as a whole, are unenforceable.”

“However, the previous APT rules are no longer in place, as clubs voted new APT rules into force in November 2024. This decision expressly does not impact the valid operation of the new rules.”

In effect, City (and other clubs) will be off the hook here because of how the rules were written rather than because they are innocent victims operating in a reasonable way. Money talks, and the legal weight that City was able to throw behind this case only underlines the struggle that the Premier league’s regulatory arm will have in ensuring equitability and sustainability in England’s top flight going forward. Even more laughable is the new threat that clubs will move to litigate against the Premier League in  response to this most recent legal judgement. Several clubs are poised to claim a loss of earnings under the previous APT rules having been supposedly forced to agree deflated commercial deals.

With so much at stake, clubs that benefit from the current system will fight to ensure it remains. It is therefore crucial that the Premier League continues to fight for financial equitability and competitiveness, or risk the popularity of the league collapsing.

9 responses to “Why Manchester City’s ‘win’ is a defeat for football”

  1. Ken Avatar
    Ken

    ‘but it is plainly unfair when one team is able to invest significantly more than their rivals over a consistent period of time’

    It wasn’t a problem years before premier league when other team like M Utd, spurs Arsenal, Liverpool etc could all spend what they wanted without question, usually it was received with a comment like ‘Wow if they (team) buy player so and so it would be great, they will become a fantastic team. This article just underlines those that want MCFC to suffer just because they are becoming better. Plain jealousy !!.

  2. Andrew Turnbull Avatar
    Andrew Turnbull

    no mention of interest free loans from owners! This was one of the reasons City took the EPL to tribunal. It isn’t a fair system and breaks competition law in the UK.

    A slightly biased article without all the facts.

    1. Alan Avatar
      Alan

      Simply a bitter article written by a frustrated Red! How dare City have the league’s biggest revenue at £719m being the most successful club over the past ten years qualifying for the Champions League for the last 11!

  3. Billy Goater Avatar
    Billy Goater

    Wolves, Villa, Forest and plenty of other clubs have money to spend, but are not allowed to. Similarly, Everton will be restricted. Utd are half a billion in debt yet were still allowed to sign players.

  4. Pete D Avatar
    Pete D

    lol…. a club standiong up for its rights is bad for football, what you mean is its bad for the red cartel (Richardss Masters) and the conflicted Premier League.

    Stop whining, and try and write a balance and unbiased article

  5. Pete D Avatar
    Pete D

    ps. Your wage bill figures are incorrect, and again are manipulated to help your story. Look at the true amounts of wages, and the spends of all the big clubs, City’s 6th largest net spend over 5 years. But NEVER let the truth spoil a biased article

  6. Alan Gee Avatar
    Alan Gee

    Couple of issues your own narrative and its a very poor narrative

    (1 Manchester City scored what appeared to be a huge legal victory last month when their latest legal challenge to Associated Party Transaction (APT) rules was upheld. Deemed as ‘void and unenforceable’) (1Answer. NOT appeared they did otherwise this article is dead That was this month friday 14th when it was deemed void and unenforceable FACTS MATTER)

    (2 In the case of Manchester City, many would argue that their commercial agreements are inflated.) (2 Answer these all went through the Premier league due to their APT and signed off by the premier league) if your talking before APT UEFA tried and lost its in the CAS report. READ IT

    (3 Yet in popularity, they lag quite significantly behind the likes of rivals Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal. Whether it is through global shirt sales, season ticket waiting lists, social media followings – there are plenty of measures to suggest that Manchester City at a fair market value shouldn’t be achieving some of the largest deals in the league.) (3 Answer your arguement is soooo floored No we are not the biggest but teams do not make that much money from merch and season tickets they money is from revenue because in the past 10 years we are the most succesful english team adn big companies what to sponsor us)

    (4 Manchester City’s dominance might be great for the blue half of Manchester, but it does little to benefit anyone else. Not only does it degrade the interest and value of the league as a whole,) (4 Answer And yet its still pulling in more and more viewers and bigger revenues. not prem but city v madrid biggest ever streaming figures in the world for a match.)

    (5 Manchester City’s dominance might be great for the blue half of Manchester, but it does little to benefit anyone else. Not only does it degrade the interest and value of the league as a whole, but it is plainly unfair when one team is able to invest significantly more than their rivals over a consistent period of time. )(5 Answer another dead arguement past 5 years city net spend is 7th in the prem these past 5 years most succesful for man city treble 4 peat thats just 2. We got over £300m from the treble season in prize money. This season our net spend £80m yes we spent in january £180m but made £100m in summer thats not in your narritive)

    Finally wages our sucess is our wages different on other sites but we go with yours

    City are playing a different game to most other clubs, and their 2024/25 wage bill illustrates how significant their advantage actually is:

    Where are city in the league 4th

    Arsenal 2nd

    UTD 15th

    Chelsea 5th

    Liverpool 1ST

  7. Alan Williamson Avatar
    Alan Williamson

    Why do people write such rubbish….City are a club with everything working perfectly..Everything is above board and managed better than anyone else..Success follows…All the shxts that complain need to ask them selves If Sheik had gone to their club and brought this success would they have complained? Or would they even give a damn about people like them complaining? Not a chance Biased and hypercritical..Im sure the majority are little children Including MArk what’s his name from Utd Stand..PATHETIC >>>GROW UP !!

  8. […] La Liga President Javier Tebas is a long term critic of the City regime, and revealed this week at the FT Business of Football Summit that he had reported the club to authorities back in 2023. His complaints were made to the European Commission and largely centred around Associated Party Transactions (APT) within the City Football Group, something we have covered in detail as well. […]

Leave a Reply

Discover more from The Football Faculty

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading