Manchester City: Pep Guardiola says club 'condemned' over alleged breaches

Manchester City have been "already sentenced" over
alleged financial rule breaches, says manager Pep Guardiola.
The Premier League charged City with more than 100 breaches
of its financial rules on Monday.
A two-year ban from European competitions for breaching
Uefa's Financial Fair Play (FFP) regulations was overturned by the Court of
Arbitration for Sport (Cas) in 2020.
"The club proved they were completely innocent,"
said Guardiola.
"What's happened since Monday is the same as what
happened with Uefa. We have already been condemned.
"You have to understand that 19 teams in the Premier
League are accusing us without us having the ability to defend.
"We are lucky we live in a marvellous country where
everyone is innocent until proven guilty.
"We didn't have this opportunity, we are already
sentenced. I am fully convinced we will be [proven] innocent."
The Premier League has referred City to an independent
commission over alleged rule breaches between 2009 and 2018, during which time
the club won three of their six Premier League titles.
It also accused City of not co-operating since the
investigation started in December 2018.
The commission can impose punishments ranging from a fine
and points deduction to expulsion from the Premier League.
City, who were bought by the Abu Dhabi United Group in 2008,
said they were "surprised" by the charges and their innocence is
supported by a "body of irrefutable evidence".
Guardiola reiterated that confidence in a defiant news
conference on Friday, during which he also said he believes the charges have
been driven by rival clubs.
When asked if he believed that was the case, he said:
"Of course - it is the Premier League. I don't know why. You have to ask
the CEOs.
"They have opened a precedent right now, what they have
done to us.
"Be careful, be careful in the future, as there's a lot
of clubs that have been accused like we have without being innocent, who knows what
will happen in the future?
"They believe that we didn't behave properly, we can
accept that, but let us defend when we believe we did it properly."
Guardiola previously said he would leave City if allegations
they broke financial rules were proven.
However, he said he had no intention of quitting on Friday,
adding: "I am not moving from this seat, I can assure you. I want to stay
more than ever."
The Spaniard said he would not be concerned even if City were
relegated by the commission.
"We have already been in the lower divisions," he
said. "We will be back there - not a problem.
"We will call Paul Dickov and Mike Summerbee and we
will do again.
"But they should wait. We are going to defend ourselves,
like we did in the Uefa situation."
Guardiola said he does not know what will happen next but
has received reassurances of City's innocence from the club's hierarchy.
"We have a good lawyer, not that Uefa had bad
lawyers," he added.
"And I think the Premier League, supported by 19 teams,
are going to take good lawyers too, to defend their position.
"I would have loved to wait and to find out what
happens but just in case we are not innocent we will accept what the judge and
the Premier League decides.
"But if the same situation with Uefa happens and we are
innocent, what happens to restore or pay back our damage?"
In a statement the Premier League said City breached rules
requiring them to provide "accurate financial information that gives a
true and fair view of the club's financial position".
This information covered club revenue, which includes
sponsorship income and operating costs.
Further alleged breaches relate to rules requiring full
details of manager remuneration - from the 2009-10 to 2012-13 seasons, when
Roberto Mancini was in charge - and player remuneration between 2010-11 and
2015-16.
The Premier League said City breached rules related to Uefa
regulations, including FFP, from 2013-14 to 2017-18, as well as Premier League
rules on profitability and sustainability from 2015-16 to 2017-18.
In 2020 European football governing body Uefa ruled that
City committed "serious breaches" of FFP regulations between 2012 and
2016.
However, a two-year ban from European competitions was
overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) later that year.
Uefa began its investigation into City after German
newspaper Der Spiegel published leaked documents in November 2018 alleging the
club had inflated the value of a sponsorship deal.
The proceedings of the commission - chaired by Murray Rosen
KC - will be confidential and heard in private.
When the Premier League investigation began, City said the allegations were "entirely false" and that allegations in Der Spiegel came from "illegal hacking and out of context publication of City emails".
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