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Premier League 'cannot relegate' Man City in shock charges twist for Arsenal, Chelsea and Tottenham

General view outside the Etihad stadium
-Credit:Getty Images


Manchester City have been told by a finance expert that they cannot be relegated from the Premier League if they are found guilty of the most serious of their 115 alleged breaches of financial rules.

Arsenal, Chelsea and Tottenham's top flight rivals, City, were charged in February 2023 over alleged breaches from 2009 until 2018 of violating the league's financial regulations. The reigning champions deny all charges with a hearing into the case concluding last month.

If found guilty of violating the English top-flight's financial regulations between 2009 and 2018, City could face severe repercussions, such as relegation, a significant points deduction, hefty fines, or even the stripping of titles.

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But football finance expert Kieran Maguire has claimed that the Premier League are unlikely to be able to expel City from the league and relegate them to the Championship.

"In the case of City, there's actually three charges," he said on the Overlap Fan Debate. "It's not 115. Has money come in from the owners which they pretend to be from the sponsors? If that is the case, then that is fraud. That is about as serious as it gets.

"And, if found guilty of those charges, then the book will be thrown at Manchester City and it's going to be a massive points deduction.

"You can't relegate [expel] them because the Premier League and the EFL are independent bodies, so the EFL doesn't have to accept them. Given the Everton and the Nottingham Forest points deductions, they were both described by the commission of being 'minor breaches'. Well, what Manchester City are being accused of is major breaches over a nine to ten year period. So, you would be looking at somewhere between 60 and 100 points if you go through on a charge by charge basis. So, it would relegate them."

And Maguire also raised doubts over how successful an appeal would be, suggesting any decision is unlikely to be overturned.

He added: "I think there are very narrow grounds for appeal. It's only if the conduct of the committee itself was unprofessional in some way that one of the parties can potentially make an appeal.

"If Manchester City are found guilty then the whole board of directors has to resign because they will have been found guilty of misrepresentation, effectively lying to a commission."