Le Parisien: UEFA considering creating FFP 2.0, which limits net transfer spending to €100m/season

Melbourne City FC buy the next big thing for €100m. Sell him to Manchester City for free.

Manchester City sell one of their duds for €100m to Melbourne City FC.

Manchester City have a €100m profit and can spend €200m after getting the next big thing for free.

Yup. Seems like a good plan.

Exactly. Add to that City's owners own 3 or 4 teams. Ditto for Leipzig
 
:lol: I thought the scousers had a victim complex, turns out the massives do too.
 
"... It's an attempt by the established elite to place restrictions on new money..."

I thought it's all about Pep :confused:
 
Real Madrid want to cap the amount clubs can spend?

Is this the same Real Madrid that wants to spend £150 million on Eden Hazard and £200 million on Harry Kane?
Maybe they think the market dynamics it will bring will allow them to acquire stars with lowball offers. All their Ffp suggestions will be aimed at making their upcoming rebuild cheaper.

Also hope no one helps them reach their net spend target by overpaying for the likes of Bale and Ronaldo
 
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Of course it's the rival European sides looking out for themselves. .
Its why English sides weren't too fussed changing the CL regulations but rival leagues fought for it.
Its why UEFA want to hold CL matches on a saturday at 12:45 so they can take over the prime timeslot for Asian countries that the EPL has established and its why they're implementating FFP 2.0
 
Not sure about that. They have signed 6 players to our 4. I think the fees will be similar overall.
I am pretty sure than Sanchez commission alone would account for all those transfers.
Agent fees and transfer fees or transfers do not always correspond with each other.
 
City and PSG are pretty much established now anyway

City earned between 400 and 500 million last season so that's top territory

They have a young enough team as well so don't need to go mad on transfers if that cap does hit they are sorted back to front for the next 5 years with only needing 1 or 2 signings a year
 
I am pretty sure than Sanchez commission alone would account for all those transfers.
Agent fees and transfer fees or transfers do not always correspond with each other.

The agent fee for Sanchez has been reported between £10 - £15m. City spent £26m on agent fees last year. I think our spend will be around that this season and there’s will be around £20 - 25m
 
David Conn lambasts agents...without mentioning Manchester City (shock):

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2018/feb/01/agents-gravy-train-curb-excessive-fees

It's an article on the January transfer window, during which City only signed Laporte and that was by activating his release clause, hence no real need for an agent to broker a move like with Coutinho or Sanchez, and Pogba is the only non-January transfer mentioned which is understandable given the unprecedented fee Raiola received. Does it need to shoehorn in something about City's spending in the summer to satisfy United fans who seem to have become obsessed with the idea of a media agenda against them? I'm sure if we'd signed Mahrez that would have been mentioned in the article.
 
The agent fee for Sanchez has been reported between £10 - £15m. City spent £26m on agent fees last year.
Exactly that's around a half. Plus Lukaku commission will be huge, plus Matic and Lindelof. Sure City also made big signings, but for example that spanish-french guy, they activated his buy-out, so commission to an agent would be quite small if there would be a commission at all.
The way i see it, probably Walker is going to generate like 50% of their agent expenditure, everyone else - the rest. I think it will come just under 20m threshold, while we probably will comfortably be over 20m.
 
Exactly that's around a half. Plus Lukaku commission will be huge, plus Matic and Lindelof. Sure City also made big signings, but for example that spanish-french guy, they activated his buy-out, so commission to an agent would be quite small if there would be a commission at all.
The way i see it, probably Walker is going to generate like 50% of their agent expenditure, everyone else - the rest. I think it will come just under 20m threshold, while we probably will comfortably be over 20m.

I think they will be within £5m of each other.
 
It's an article on the January transfer window, during which City only signed Laporte and that was by activating his release clause, hence no real need for an agent to broker a move like with Coutinho or Sanchez, and Pogba is the only non-January transfer mentioned which is understandable given the unprecedented fee Raiola received. Does it need to shoehorn in something about City's spending in the summer to satisfy United fans who seem to have become obsessed with the idea of a media agenda against them? I'm sure if we'd signed Mahrez that would have been mentioned in the article.

Why would stating concern at City doubling their agent fees to a Premier League record in Pep’s first season be ‘shoe horning’ it in.

It is very relevant in the discussion about escalating agent fees, no?
 
Why would stating concern at City doubling their agent fees to a Premier League record in Pep’s first season be ‘shoe horning’ it in.

It is very relevant in the discussion about escalating agent fees, no?

It's not a particularly long piece of journalism. The focus is on the January window just gone. It mentions one transfer outside of that, which is Pogba's, whose agent received almost as much as City and Chelsea paid in agent fees combined last season. I presume that's why he went with that example. The journalist isn't writing to satisfy needy fans who feel City's spending simply has to be condemned in every single article about finances, and that if they fail to do so they must be part of some agenda.
 
I thought United wasn’t the highest agent commission paying club last year because they were paying Raiola 17-19M in a few installments?
 
I'd just ban the whole tranfer thing - enough's enough. Short term contracts and an American style draft.
 
I thought United wasn’t the highest agent commission paying club last year because they were paying Raiola 17-19M in a few installments?

Not according to the figures submitted to the football league.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39526917

Edit: sorry I misread. Even if United were paying in instalments then you can bet your bottom dollar City will be using similar accounting practices.
 
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It's an article on the January transfer window, during which City only signed Laporte and that was by activating his release clause, hence no real need for an agent to broker a move like with Coutinho or Sanchez, and Pogba is the only non-January transfer mentioned which is understandable given the unprecedented fee Raiola received. Does it need to shoehorn in something about City's spending in the summer to satisfy United fans who seem to have become obsessed with the idea of a media agenda against them? I'm sure if we'd signed Mahrez that would have been mentioned in the article.
With that post, all I'm hinting at is Conn's longstanding habit of avoiding scrutiny of Manchester City in his investigative journalism. Aside from some lip-service pieces - necessary given City's impact on domestic football financing - his bias on this matter appears obvious. For such a notable & thorough journalist, the omission is curious to say the least.
 
Well that’s what I am saying. They didnt pay the most last year because they didnt pay Raiola’s fees in full. I read they were paying in 4 or 5 installments. Otherwise, I cant imagine United paying just 2M in fees for Zlatan, Mkhi, and Bailly combined.
 
Well that’s what I am saying. They didnt pay the most last year because they didnt pay Raiola’s fees in full. I read they were paying in 4 or 5 installments.

It may well be the case but it seems that it would make sense for all clubs to operate in that way to amortise the cost over the length of the contract. Although some agents might demand a single sum.
 
It may well be the case but it seems that it would make sense for all clubs to operate in that way to amortise the cost over the length of the contract. Although some agents might demand a single sum.

Whatever the case is, I think we should agree no agent should earn 15-20M for transferring a player to any club!
 
With that post, all I'm hinting at is Conn's longstanding habit of avoiding scrutiny of Manchester City in his investigative journalism. Aside from some lip-service pieces - necessary given City's impact on domestic football financing - his bias on this matter appears obvious. For such a notable & thorough journalist, the omission is curious to say the least.

Fair enough if so, I can't say I've ever paid any attention to his writing. Nevertheless, I really don't believe that article in isolation is particularly telling. It's a short article which seems to just be a pretty generic piece he's probably been asked to do about agent fees in the January window. Given we only signed Laporte, via a release clause, understandable there was no pressing need to refer to City.
 
Whatever the case is, I think we should agree no agent should earn 15-20M for transferring a player to any club!

Agree on that. Fee should be capped. Thing is though, Raiola is brilliant for his clients. He gets them big moves on big wages. Aruba and Mahrez have been desperate to move for over a season now. One ended up at a Europa League club on a small pay rise and Mahrez is left looking a mug again.

Raiola would have done miles better for their careers.
 
Agree on that. Fee should be capped. Thing is though, Raiola is brilliant for his clients. He gets them big moves on big wages. Aruba and Mahrez have been desperate to move for over a season now. One ended up at a Europa League club on a small pay rise and Mahrez is left looking a mug again.

Raiola would have done miles better for their careers.

From Aruba to London, that's a bad deal.