For Everton last year and Nottingham Forest this, City are dragged into debate and conversations surrounding the Premier League's Profitability & Sustainability Rules.
Those two clubs have been sanctioned and hit with points deductions while City's case continues and likely won't conclude before the end of next season. The list of charges facing the Blues is so long and complicated and because the consequences of the hearing will be so monumental, time has to be given for everything to be done properly.
It won't stop people using City to make whatever point is being made surrounding their own club, with context or without, but it does explain the lengthy wait.
Yet with so many headlines, hearings and appeals, it's hard to keep track of just what is going on and why. So we ask experts from City, Goodison Park and the City Ground to explain just where things are up to with the three clubs.
EVERTON'S difficulties started with themselves. The rules have been in place for some time and the club has found itself the subject of questions over its finances because of a track record of poor decisions made by those at the top.
While that may be the case, the club - like every club - deserves to be subjected to a fair, consistent and transparent process when it is accused of wrongdoing. It has been anything but.
Three different independent panels have now attempted to interpret the Premier League rules and how they apply to Everton in the form of a sanction. The first found the club deserved to be punished with a 10point deduction. The second, the appeal board, ruled the club should receive a six-point penalty. The third, the Forest commission, looked at Everton and acknowledged they could only speculate at how the appeal board arrived at that six points.
Bu hikaye Manchester Evening News dergisinin March 26, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Manchester Evening News dergisinin March 26, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
DON'T PANIC
KOVACIC CONFIDENT BLUES CAN OVERCOME SLUMP
Zlatan not ruling out Vic switch
AC MILAN advisor Zlatan Ibrahimovic has refused to rule out the possibility of United centre-back Victor Lindelof joining the Italian club next summer.
Carsley gives respect to Ireland after Greece win
INTERIM boss Lee Carsley says celebrations are on ice as England look to follow up their impressive win in Greece by sealing promotion back to the Nations League top tier by beating the Republic of Ireland.
Young Heskey aims to step out of dad's shadow with Blues
\"IT'S the normal,\" says one of the latest City academy strikers catching attention in describing his upbringing.
Safety pledge for Brits going overseas for ops
THE Health Secretary has said he will work to improve safety for Britons travelling abroad for cosmetic procedures in the wake of several deaths.
£15m 'wasted' on migrant camp site
THE Home Office spent £15m buying a derelict prison contaminated with asbestos amid political pressure to stop housing migrants in hotels, according to Whitehall's spending watchdog.
Experts: Climate talks 'no longer fit for purpose'
THE process of UN climate negotiations is no longer fit for purpose and requires a comprehensive overhaul, leading experts have warned.
McCall reveals tumour diagnosis
CELEBRITIES have flocked to wish Davina McCall well after she revealed she has been diagnosed with a brain tumour, with fellow TV presenter Amanda Holden sending \"so much love\".
'Revenge' shooting teen faces years behind bars
BOY BLASTED AT CLOSE RANGE WITH SHOTGUN IN PREMEDITATED AND PRE-PLANNED' ATTACK
'It was dark, the waves were very high - it was very, very hard'
THE M.E.N. SPEAKS TO ASYLUM SEEKERS WHOSE HOUSING AT A HOTEL HAS DIVIDED A TOWN