Manchester City have secured a partial victory in their legal battle with the Premier League over commercial rules governing clubs.
The dispute centred on two large sponsorship deals that the Premier League blocked City from completing.
An independent panel ruled that the Premier League’s Associated Party Transactions (APTs) rules breach competition law in two significant ways.
However, the Premier League maintains that the tribunal endorsed the APT system’s overall objectives, framework, and decision-making. This suggests that while City won some concessions, the core of the APT system remains intact.
Manchester City land first blow on Premier League
City challenged 25 regulations in the Premier League’s rulebook related to APTs, as well as the rejection of the two sponsorship deals.
The outcome has sparked an emergency meeting among Premier League clubs next week to discuss the judgment.
The implications of this ruling are far-reaching, and the emergency meeting will likely address concerns about the APT system’s viability and potential revisions.
With City’s partial victory, the focus shifts to how the Premier League will adapt its rules to comply with competition law.