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By Dan Roan
BBC sports editor
UEFA investigators want Manchester City to be banned from
the Champions League for a season if they are found guilty of breaking
financial rules.
However, according to one well-placed source, a final
decision is yet to be made by chief investigator Yves Leterme.
The former Belgian prime minister, chairman of the investigatory
panel of Uefa's independent financial control board, is set to make a
recommendation this week.
With no vote in such cases, the final say lies with him but
several of his colleagues are understood to have firmly expressed the view at a
recent meeting that a season-long ban would be a suitable punishment if City
are found guilty.
Manchester City lost to Tottenham in the Champions League
quarter-finals this season and have never got past the semi-finals.
What are City alleged to have done?
Leterme and his team have been looking at evidence first
uncovered in a series of leaks published by the German newspaper Der Spiegel
last year.
The reports alleged that Manchester City had broken
Financial Fair Play regulations by inflating the value of a multimillion-pound
sponsorship deal. City were fined £49m in 2014 for a previous breach of
regulations.
The Premier League champions denied any wrongdoing, and Uefa
said it could not comment on an ongoing investigation, but according to the New
York Times, investigators now want rules upheld and City punished with a ban.
Uefa's adjudicatory chamber would have to decide whether it
agreed with any recommendation from Leterme - expected in the next 48 hours -
although it is unlikely to apply to next season's competition because City
could appeal, and even take their case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
But it would still be a major blow for a club desperate to
win Europe's most prestigious club competition for the first time, and who
could also soon face a transfer ban, with the FA, Premier League and Fifa also
currently investigating City over their signing of youth players.
A statement from Manchester City said: "Manchester City
FC is fully cooperating in good faith with the CFCB IC's [Club Financial
Control Body Investigatory Chamber] ongoing investigation.
"In doing so the club is reliant on both the CFCB IC's
independence and commitment to due process; and on Uefa's commitment of the 7
March that it 'will make no further comment on the matter while the investigation
is ongoing'.
"The New York Times report citing 'people familiar with
the case' is therefore extremely concerning.
"The implications are that either Manchester City's
good faith in the CFCB IC is misplaced or the CFCB IC process is being
misrepresented by individuals intent on damaging the club's reputation and its
commercial interests. Or both.
"Manchester City's published accounts are full and
complete and a matter of legal and regulatory record. The accusation of
financial irregularities are entirely false, and comprehensive proof of this
fact has been provided to the CFCB IC."
What are the FFP rules?
Financial Fair Play was introduced by Uefa to prevent clubs
in its competitions from spending beyond their means and stamp out what its
then president Michel Platini called "financial doping" within
football.
Under the rules, financial losses are limited and clubs are
also obliged to meet all their transfer and employee payment commitments at all
times.
Clubs need to balance football-related expenditure -
transfers and wages - with television and ticket income, plus revenues raised
by their commercial departments. Money spent on stadiums, training facilities,
youth development or community projects is exempt.
The Club Financial Control Body, set up by Uefa, has the
ultimate sanction of banning clubs from Uefa competitions, with other potential
punishments including warnings, fines, withholding prize money, transfer bans,
points deductions, a ban on registration of new players and a restriction on
the number of players who can be registered for Uefa competitions.
Has anyone been punished before?
In 2014, Qatar-owned Paris St-Germain received a similar
financial punishment to the one City received.
PSG were deemed to have breached FFP rules when the CFCB
decided their back-dated £167m sponsorship contract with the Qatar Tourism
Authority, which wiped out their losses, had an unfair value.
That meant the French side exceeded allowed financial losses
by a wide margin when, under FFP rules, clubs were limited to losses of £37m
over the previous two years.
They received a fine, a spending cap and were only allowed
to register 21 players for the Champions League for a season.
PSG also remain under investigation for their 2017-18
finances when they signed Neymar from Barcelona for a world record £222m euros
(£200m) and Kylian Mbappe from Monaco, initially on loan, for 180m euros (£165.7m).
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