Manchester City banned from Champions League for two years

Premier League club Manchester City has been banned from Champions League for two seasons after it was found to have misled the UEFA and breaching FFP.

Published : Feb 15, 2020 00:10 IST

City has also been levied a fine of $32.5 million.

Manchester City has been banned from European competitions for the next two seasons for “serious financial fair-play breaches”, UEFA announced on Friday.

The English champion, which was also fined 30 million euros ($32.5 million), immediately announced it was appealing the suspension to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) “at the earliest opportunity”.

“Manchester City is disappointed but not surprised by today's announcement by the UEFA Adjudicatory Chamber,” the club said.

 

“The... flawed and consistently leaked UEFA process he (the UEFA chief investigator) oversaw has meant that there was little doubt in the result that he would deliver...

“Simply put, this is a case initiated by UEFA, prosecuted by UEFA and judged by UEFA.

“With this prejudicial process now over, the club will pursue an impartial judgment as quickly as possible” at CAS.

Pep Guardiola's City faces Real Madrid in this season's Champions League last 16.

Announcing the ban a UEFA statement declared: “The Adjudicatory Chamber has imposed disciplinary measures on Manchester City Football Club directing that it shall be excluded from participation in UEFA club competitions in the next two seasons (ie. the 2020/21 and 2021/22 seasons).”

RELATED | UEFA opens Financial Fair Play probe into Man City

European football's governing body said that City “failed to cooperate in the investigation”.

“The adjudicatory chamber, having considered all the evidence, has found that Manchester City Football Club committed serious breaches of the UEFA Club Licensing and Financial Fair Play Regulations by overstating its sponsorship revenue in its accounts and in the break-even information submitted to UEFA between 2012 and 2016,” European football's governing body said.

City lost a previous appeal to CAS over UEFA's original decision to refer it to its adjudicatory chamber over the alleged FFP violations.

The investigation into City was based on leaked emails published last year by German magazine Der Spiegel as part of “Football Leaks”.

Guardiola's City outfit currently sits second in the Premier League table, meaning that the fourth Champions League slot available for English teams would likely go to the fifth-placed club this term.

Sheffield United, promoted to the top flight last year, sits in fifth.

It is not the first time that Man City has fallen foul of FFP regulations, having been fined 60 million euros and seeing its Champions League squad reduced in May 2014.

Qatari-owned Paris Saint-Germain was also fined that year.

Seven-time European champion AC Milan wasbanned from this season's Europa League for FFP breaches.