Yes, as does any team that qualifies for Europe.
The Premier League permits losses of £105m over a 3-year period. Clubs who qualify for Europe can only lose up to £68.5m over a 2-year period. UEFA also limit player amortization to five years. This means that Chelsea would be, on paper, worse...
For UEFA they have a statute of limitations of five years. For the Premier League none at all.
In 2019, Man City were found guilty of having "overstated sponsorship payments" from 2012/13 but that they couldn't be punished for it as the cut off date had well passed. They also couldn't be...
To be boring (and I completely understand why it seems this isn't the way), one club is not being punished when other (worse - yes) culprits are not. The reality is there are currently quite a few ongoing investigations going on by the PL that are likely to result in breaches. Investigations and...
Everton's (and Forest's) case relates to one Premier League rule that is clearly defined, whereas City have been accused of committing 115 alleged breaches of different rules across nine years, including falsified accounting and a failure to fully disclose financial remunerations to staff. Owing...