This week, at an unspecified location in central London, the latest stage in the Premier League’s civil war will begin to unfold. Expected to last two weeks, the arbitration case brought by Manchester City against the competition of which they are champions will be dry, its verdict technical. The consequences, however, will probably be anything but.
City, who are owned by Sheikh Mansour, the vice president and deputy prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, will argue in front of a panel of three independent lawyers that the Premier League is breaking the law of the United Kingdom.
The infraction in question relates to rules around Associated Party Transactions, or APTs, and the need for clubs to make sure any deals they do with businesses who have “Material Influence over the Club or an entity in the same group of companies as the Club” are struck at fair market value. City argue this goes against competition law. That’s the dry bit.
The case will be heard in private and there will be no public acknowledgement of any outcome, nor the reasons behind it. Thanks to reporting in the Times, we do know something about the contents of City’s legal submission, however, and by all accounts it appears quite extraordinary. The action being brought against the Premier League board under the obscure Rule x.5.4 could almost be seen as a Trojan horse for a challenge to the entire existing structure of the competition.
According to reports, City are not only challenging the APT rules but seeking damages for deals that were affected or lost as a consequence. Those damages would have to be paid by the League, whose shareholders are its 20 member clubs.
City also allege that the rules were designed to stymie owners from Gulf states and members of multi-club ownership groups – something which applies to City in both instances – and were only established due to the desire of rivals to “safeguard their own commercial advantages”.
In fact, City argue that the Premier League itself has a vested interest in limiting APTs as it is a rival for sponsorship income and if the rules are not changed the newly crowned champions could be forced to limit spending on community projects and the women’s team.
Finally, City argue any competitive restraint is underwritten by the Premier League’s voting system. That no rule can be changed without 14 of its 20 clubs agreeing is, according to City, succumbing to the “tyranny of the majority”. All in all the claim runs to 165 pages.
This legal submission was made in February, immediately after the Premier League had approved new, tighter rules around APTs (City’s dissatisfaction with the rules pre-dates this amendment). In legal terms it is not linked to the 115 charges brought against City over alleged financial wrongdoing. In political terms, the calculation is very different.
What does it mean for the world’s leading football league when it is in recurring dispute with its champion of six of the previous seven seasons? At the very least it means uncertainty over the rules, which are being directly challenged, and over the league’s ability to regulate its own competition.
In this way, City’s challenge is only punching an existing bruise. Last season the rules, be they around VAR or PSR, were subject to consistent criticism and pressure. At the same time the Premier League has spent time and resource trying to fend off the arrival of an independent regulator for the game, insisting that football can look after itself. As time goes by this argument seems more and more tendentious.
Some critics of the Premier League see the APT rules as a classic example of bad governance, a mechanism put together hastily to deal with a short-term problem (a new focus on APTs began after Newcastle were bought by the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund).
They point also to the league being forced to alter plans to introduce further financial rules, the so-called Top to Bottom Anchoring proposals (ironically TBA for short), after they failed to properly consult with outside stakeholders that included the PFA, the player’s union. The critics argue that this is a trend and that City’s actions are only making the government’s case.
A more sympathetic reading, however, might find the Premier League’s position to be invidious. It faces challenges from all sides, not just from domestic regulation and traditional competitors in other leagues and sports, but from governing bodies Uefa and Fifa which are expanding their own competitions in a way that not only makes them direct rivals for broadcasting money but puts pressure on the domestic calendar.
Its shareholder clubs, meanwhile, are split into ever increasing factions, with multiple opposing outlooks; from those that form part of a multi-club ownership group, say, to those who have been acquired by investment funds with outlooks very different from those of the sovereign wealth funds.
Manchester City have the profile and the financial heft to make things very painful for the Premier League. Their recourse to legal action, whether sincerely held or simply provocative, suggests a club that is intent on changing the current order of things.
And this is perhaps the biggest concern to emerge of late. One of the key factors behind the Premier League’s success over its 32-year history has been the centring of the collective, from the way the league is marketed (“anyone can beat anyone on a given day”) to the way power and money is shared.
City’s actions suggest the champions no longer subscribe to this way of thinking and wish to change it. It may seem unlikely, but it could be a shift that brings the whole house down.