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Football

Premier League clubs face financial ruin, warn UEFA

4 Aug 2009


English Premier League clubs risk financial ruin if they attempt to compete with the spending power of Abu Dhabi-owned Manchester City, UEFA general secretary David Taylor said on Tuesday.

City have spent huge sums on the likes of Carlos Tevez, Roque Santa Cruz and Emmanuel Adebayor during the off-season but Taylor believes they, and Spanish giants Real Madrid, are setting a dangerous precedent.

"I would say in this financial climate, it is surprising, a little bit destabilising of the market," Taylor told BBC Radio Five.

"It is raising the ante in terms of the player costs, in terms of the general market place, which is not a thing that gives us a great deal of comfort in these difficult times.

"There is certainly disquiet in the corridors of power here (at UEFA)."

The demise of Leeds United, who were relegated from the Premier League in 2004 saddled with debts, is often used as an example of how a big club can hit the rocks and Taylor said their plight should be a warning.

"There are stories concerning some English clubs that are of significant concern," he said.

"There are a number of English clubs where the value of the club itself has fallen significantly and they are effectively on the market.

"We've seen what has happened in recent years with a number of very high-profile clubs, Leeds United for example. They fell into serious financial difficulties by over-extending themselves.

"In this current economic environment, I would never say never to anything like that.

"Clearly we do not see that as imminent but the concern is that we have to establish a stronger financial basis on which clubs can compete."

Liverpool's parent company Kop Holdings, owned by Americans Tom Hicks and George Gillett, announced a loss of 42.6 million pounds ($69.75 million) last year mainly due to interest payments to service the debt taken out to buy the club.

They recently renegotiated the club's debt with the Royal Bank of Scotland, believed to be around 290 million pounds.

Manchester United's American owner Malcolm Glazer also borrowed heavily to complete a takoever of the English champions in 2005, sparking unrest among supporters.

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The situation is now that either you try and compete financially or you can't and you find another way of surviving without breaking the bank. Arsene Wenger has shown the way to go by developing youth players, West Ham are similar because they will never compete monetarily with the big guns financially, so they use their academy.

- Paul R, London, 05/08/2009 11:02
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"City have spent huge sums on the likes of Carlos Tevez, Roque Santa Cruz and Emmanuel Adebayor during the off-season"...... but not as much as Man Utd have spent on Berbatov, Veron, Ferdinand, et al, Liverpool on Torres, Chelsea on etc etc?

- Gorshang Duvall, Stretford, UK., 04/08/2009 13:04
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