On Monday, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) removed the suspension Uefa had handed to City – and reduced their initial €30m fine to €10m (£8.96m) – after finding “most of the alleged breaches reported were either not established or time-barred”.
Uefa had accused City of breaking their Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules by overstating sponsorship revenue in their accounts and in the break-even information submitted between 2012 and 2016, as well as failing to co-operate with its investigation.
Liverpool manager Klopp said the decision to overturn the ban was not “a good day for football,” because he believes FFP rules are important to protect both teams, and the sport as a whole.
Tottenham head coach Mourinho said the ruling was “disgraceful and a “disaster”, arguing that if City were innocent they shouldn’t have been fined, and if they were guilty the suspension should have stood.
“If they want to talk, I’m here,” Guardiola told Sky Sports News.
“The sentence from the three independent judges was clear. But, if they want, they know my telephone number, they can call me and I can explain. It’s not a problem at all.
“But I think we don’t have to discuss a lot because the sentence was clear. All the suggestions that we were lying or cheating, it was not like this. We were clean, like they say are.”
With City already having sealed a second-placed Premier League finish behind champions Liverpool, the ruling means the club have qualified for next season’s Champions League. —Sky Sports