Man City and PSG accused of being "as dangerous" to football as European Super League
Josie Gibson Suffers Live Blunder As She Lands New This Morning Job
McIlroy takes aim at LIV Golf defectors ahead of U.S. Open
Peter Moores reflects on his 40 years involved in cricket
Erling Haaland's first Man City interview!
Eddie Jones names England squad for Barbarians clash
Love Island's Finn explains why bizarre first date with Paige was filmed in silence
Key Premier League Fixtures 2022/23
Frank Lampard on Paul Pogba in 2018
Javier Tebas has claimed “State owned clubs” like Manchester City are as big a danger to football as the European Super League.
La Liga president Tebas has launched a new tirade against City and Paris Saint Germain over their Middle East ownership as he revealed why Spain’s top league had reported them to UEFA. La Liga have written to UEFA alleging Financial Fair Play breaches by both City and PSG whose ownership stems from Abu Dhabi and Qatar respectively.
Tebas insists that La Liga have made the complaint to protect “football’s eco system” rather than any self interest as La Liga were accused of sour grapes because Real Madrid missed out on signing Erling Haaland and Kylian Mbappe this summer. Talking at the Club Advisory Platform in Amsterdam, Tebas said: “The European Super League is as dangerous as State owned clubs.
“The clubs owned by States, and it’s not a problem to be owned by a State, are hard to control and they are endangering football’s ecosystem. It’s inflating the wages system and are inflating UEFA’s control and the FFP system which is why it is important to report it. We are not doing this for Real Madrid, we are doing it to defend football’s ecosystem.”
City signed Haaland for £51m after Real Madrid turned their attentions to Mbappe but missed out on the France star who