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Could history be rewritten? Guardiola, Man City and the 115 charges

If, as expected, Pep Guardiola leaves Manchester City at the end of this season, he will do so as one of the most successful and influential managers in Premier League history. The club has been the d

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ManyPress Editorial Team

ManyPress Editorial

May 19, 2026 · 10:29 AM3 min readSource: BBC Sport
Could history be rewritten? Guardiola, Man City and the 115 charges

If, as expected, Pep Guardiola leaves Manchester City at the end of this season, he will do so as one of the most successful and influential managers in Premier League history. The club has been the dominant force in the English game during his 10 seasons in charge, a tenure in which City won the Premier League six times (including a record four in a row), as well as the Champions League and a historic Treble. But to what extent does the unprecedented catalogue of more than 100 charges of allege

With City having always denied wrongdoing, the answer will only become clear when the outcome of the case is finally revealed. An independent commission is yet to publish a ruling almost a year-and-a half after a disciplinary hearing concluded. Whether the saga has played a role in the timing of Guardiola's expected departure, and whether he wanted to leave City before the result was known, is unclear. But until that time, it is inevitable that questions will be asked about how exactly City achieved the trophy-laden era it has enjoyed since the takeover of the club by billionaire Abu Dhabi royal Sheikh Mansour - the deputy Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates - in 2008. The 115 charges relate largely to a range of alleged financial rule breaches by City between 2009 and 2018. While there is no suggestion that Guardiola was aware of any alleged wrongdoing, there is a two-year overlap with his tenure at Etihad Stadium, which began in the summer of 2016. alleged failure to provide accurate financial information, including details for player and manager payments, from 2009-10 to 2017-18 seasons alleged failure to comply with Uefa's financial fair play (FFP) rules from 2013-14 to 2017-18 alleged breaches of Premier League's profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) from 2015-16 to 2017-18 City also face multiple charges that they failed to co-operate with the Premier League's investigation between December 2018 and February 2023. As manager, Guardiola has not been involved with the legal process. But he has not been able to claim that these charges only apply to a period before his arrival. The charges are thought to relate to allegations first made in 2018 by German media outlet Der Spiegel, which published leaked internal City emails. It claimed that the documents showed the club had inflated sponsorship revenue from state-owned airline Etihad and state-controlled telecoms firm Etisalat, by disguising direct investment from its holding company - Mansour's Abu Dhabi United Group (ADUG) - as sponsorship income, by channelling money through the companies' accounts. This, it was alleged, was a means of getting FFP rules introduced by Uefa in 2011, and PSR brought in by the Premier League in 2012, two similar systems of spending control designed to limit clubs' losses.

Key points

  • With City having always denied wrongdoing, the answer will only become clear when the outcome of the case is finally revealed.
  • An independent commission is yet to publish a ruling almost a year-and-a half after a disciplinary hearing concluded.
  • Whether the saga has played a role in the timing of Guardiola's expected departure, and whether he wanted to leave City before the result was known, is unclear.
  • But until that time, it is inevitable that questions will be asked about how exactly City achieved the trophy-laden era it has enjoyed since the takeover of the club by billionaire Abu Dhabi royal…
  • The 115 charges relate largely to a range of alleged financial rule breaches by City between 2009 and 2018.

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This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by BBC Sport.

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