Premier League CEO Richard Masters refused to be drawn on questions surrounding the apparent delay to the league’s ongoing legal case against Manchester City.
City were charged with 115 breaches of Premier League
regulations in February 2023, with the formal hearing concluding on December 6
last year. Over eight months later, the independent three-person panel has not
released any decision.
Asked at a media event on the eve of the Premier League
season whether he was disappointed with the length of the process, Masters
replied: “I really can’t comment and there are very good reasons for that. As
you know, our rules are very clear.
“I can’t talk about the process in any aspect between the
period when allegations and charges are announced until a decision is handed
down, and it would be wrong for me to speculate about when or whether there are
any frustrations in the system.”
This has been a testing process for Masters, with Premier
League clubs seemingly at loggerheads over the process, a feeling of discord
heightened by several high-profile battles over updates to the league’s profitability
and sustainability (PSR) and associated party transaction (APT) regulations.
One thing is clear: Manchester City have the very best lawyers and any adverse decisions will be contested by all means possible.
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