Jamie Holmes

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Jamie Holmes

Jamie Holmes

@jimoosk

dog lover, coffee lover, mood 100% determined by football results.

Colne, England Katılım Ağustos 2017
457 Takip Edilen57 Takipçiler
Jamie Holmes retweetledi
Suhail Chowdhary
Suhail Chowdhary@SuhailChowdhary·
Sir Jim Ratcliffe hired people who have tried to change Manchester United Football Club. It took Michael Carrick to demonstrate the United Way against Manchester City. It took one of our own. Stop disrespecting this football club. Youth. Courage. Success.
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Jamie Holmes retweetledi
Adam
Adam@AdamJoseph·
🧵 THREAD: Manchester City, the charges, the evidence, & how justice was delayed. Manchester City weren’t charged because rivals complained or because they 'spent big'. They were charged because evidence shows a decade-long system designed to hide owner funding, inflate revenue & deceive & obstruct investigations. The Premier League’s case didn’t appear overnight. It began in late 2018, triggered by Football Leaks documents - internal emails, invoices, contracts - that contradicted what City had been telling UEFA & the Premier League for years. Those emails are the backbone of everything that followed. At the centre of the case is a simple allegation: Manchester City repeatedly disguised owner funding as commercial revenue. FFP rules require sponsorship income to be real, independent, and market value. What the emails suggest is that City’s biggest 'sponsors' weren’t paying what City claimed - Abu Dhabi was. Take Etihad as an example. Leaked emails show City executives discussing Etihad paying only a fraction of headline sponsorship deals, with the shortfall quietly topped up by Abu Dhabi government-linked entities. One email explicitly references ensuring funds 'come through the correct channels' so they are not detected as separate sources of funding. That is the definition of disguised equity. This wasn’t a one-off. Emails show Etihad deals where shirt sponsorship, stadium, training kit & campus naming rights were all inflated wildly out of line with the market at the time - later confirmed in the actual contracts, not just drafts. The numbers in the leaks weren’t hypothetical. They were real. UEFA auditors suspected this as early as 2013–14. They found £47m of 'intellectual property' sales boosting income, a £5m 'win bonus' paid for an FA Cup final City lost & sponsorships from Aabar and Etisalat above market value. City were fined & restricted - but crucially, UEFA never saw the full records. Why? Because City refused to provide them. This becomes a pattern. When UEFA charged City again in 2020, they imposed a two-year Champions League ban. City appealed to CAS & had it overturned. City fans shout 'INNOCENT', shared out of context screenshots. They're wrong. CAS did not rule that City were innocent. CAS ruled that UEFA could not meet the burden of proof - largely because City did not co-operate. City were fined €10m specifically for obstructing the investigation. Even City's own expert witness was denied access to key information that could have disproved disguised funding. 'No evidence' doesn’t mean nothing happened. It means the evidence was withheld. CAS explicitly stated that disguised equity funding could not be excluded - only that neither side could conclusively prove their case. That vagueness was entirely engineered. After CAS, new emails emerged suggesting Simon Pearce, a senior City executive & Sheikh Mansour adviser, had given misleading testimony under oath. City declined to comment. Again. While all this was happening, the Premier League had already been investigating City for years. City’s response? Delay. Delay. Delay. Obstruct. Litigate. Court filings later revealed City challenged the legality of the investigation itself, filed repeated procedural applications, refused to hand over documents, forced arbitration, then challenged arbitration & tried to keep the entire process secret. A High Court judge called it out in 2021. “It is surprising, and a matter of legitimate public concern, that so little progress has been made.” That’s legal spiel for stonewalling. This obstruction accounts for 35 of the 115 charges alone & that’s before we get to the secret payments. City declared Roberto Mancini's salary as £1.45m per year. On the same day he signed with City, he also signed a “consultancy” deal with Al Jazira - a club owned by the same man who owns City - worth £1.75m per year. That deal was explicitly marked confidential. Emails show City executives arranging the payments. Same signatures. Same people. Same day. The allegation is obvious: City paid Mancini off the books. Leaked documents allege undeclared payments for Yaya Touré, including via third parties. These aren’t rumours. They’re contracts, emails, invoices. This is why there are 14 charges relating to manager and player remuneration. Then there’s image rights. City told UEFA they sold player image rights for a £24.5m lump sum to comply with FFP. Later, they quietly resumed earning millions from image rights again. The buyer? A company whose directors included City’s own senior legal officer. Independent journalists couldn’t even establish its genuine commercial purpose. All of this feeds into the core allegation across 54 charges: City failed to provide accurate financial information in good faith. Not once. Not twice. But repeatedly, over nearly a decade. Now add politics. UK government departments discussed City’s charges with the British embassy in Abu Dhabi. Those communications are sealed - because releasing them could 'damage relations with the UAE'. City insist they are not state-backed. Then why is the state involved? Yet still, the delays continue. A 12-week closed-door hearing. Half a million documents. Years of silence. City remain 'innocent' - not because the evidence disappeared, but because the verdict hasn’t landed. This is why the case matters. If City walk away with a fine, it tells every club to cheat cleverly, obstruct endlessly, spend on lawyers, not compliance.. & the rules collapse. This isn’t about jealousy. It isn’t about success. It’s about whether financial regulation in English football is real - or optional for the richest club in the league. The evidence exists. The emails exist. The delays are documented. Now only one question remains, do the rules apply to City or not?
No Question About That@nqatpod

We still haven't had a verdict in the 115 charges against City for (alleged) financial malfeasance. City are spending more money this winter, chasing another title. Ed and Adam pick up the story. @AdamJoseph Patreon: buff.ly/hvz9uxW Apple: buff.ly/2pedwZA

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Ronny
Ronny@ronaldobrown_98·
Top 4 is probably more accurate.
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Ronny
Ronny@ronaldobrown_98·
Baleba, Mbeumo, Cunha, Sesko… ONE game a week with no Europe. No hiding place for Amorim uno - top 5/6 “MINIMUM” would be acceptable in all honesty.
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Jamie Holmes retweetledi
UF
UF@UtdFaithfuls·
Never forget when Ole Gunnar Solskjaer got a standing ovation for a straight red card in the 89th minute that earned United a point against Newcastle.
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Jamie Holmes
Jamie Holmes@jimoosk·
Shame on arsenal football club
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UnitedMuppetiers
UnitedMuppetiers@Muppetiers·
Once again the kid has better chances and more shots than Hojlund in 20 minutes.
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Jamie Holmes
Jamie Holmes@jimoosk·
Arsenal are disgraceful and so is this ref.
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Jamie Holmes
Jamie Holmes@jimoosk·
Arsenal are so embarrassing.
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Jamie Holmes
Jamie Holmes@jimoosk·
Couldn't happen to a better football club. The players all know they are fucked 😆
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Jamie Holmes retweetledi
Wayne Barton
Wayne Barton@WayneSBarton·
A lot of talk about Ruben Amorim and Sporting’s big win last night yet nobody is mentioning how City have stretched their unbeaten run in the Champions League to an amazing 27 matches, with only two defeats!
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Housby
Housby@CpHousby·
@elonmusk This is more likely to damage her campaign than anything. Obama did something similar during the Brexit campaign, the majority of the British public either didn't care what he had to say, or thought he over stepped his boundaries. We shouldn't be involved in US elections.
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Jamie Holmes retweetledi
Isiah Madrigal
Isiah Madrigal@Realisiah1·
Don’t say anything. Just like and retweet.
Isiah Madrigal tweet media
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Jamie Holmes
Jamie Holmes@jimoosk·
If anybody still doesn't understand the city situation and has an hour, then this is worth reading. Fair to say they are FUCKED.
Magic hat 🎩@themagic_tophat

“𝗪𝗵𝘆 𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝘆𝗼𝘂 𝗵𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗼𝗻 𝗖𝗶𝘁𝘆 𝘀𝗼 𝗺𝘂𝗰𝗵?” I’ve had many people ask me about this after I posted this thread: x.com/themagic_topha… I’ve tried to explain in my posts why I write what I do but maybe it hasn’t been clear. 𝙒𝙝𝙮 𝙙𝙤 𝙮𝙤𝙪 𝙨𝙖𝙮 𝙈𝙖𝙣 𝘾𝙞𝙩𝙮 𝙨𝙝𝙤𝙪𝙡𝙙 𝙗𝙚 𝙥𝙚𝙧𝙢𝙖𝙣𝙚𝙣𝙩𝙡𝙮 𝙚𝙭𝙥𝙚𝙡𝙡𝙚𝙙 𝙛𝙧𝙤𝙢 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙡𝙚𝙖𝙜𝙪𝙚? Well, I’ve read the leaked emails in which they outline precisely how they were covertly breaking the rules to gain an absurd competitive advantage. We’re talking about many hundreds of millions of pounds unfair, additional spending over a period where transfer fees and wages were 30-50% less than they are now. That’s huge. But that’s actually not the reason why I believe they should be expelled from the PL. Other teams have breached FFP to a significant degree, such as PSG, but I see Man City’s situation as different for two reasons… 1. It was hidden. Most other clubs have been brazen when they break FFP and expect sanctions (at least from what we’re aware of). They flirt with the rules or even ignore them altogether but they do so in a way that allows the authorities to see it and address it. Man City orchestrated a complex, covert operation to hide what they did so that they could have the appearance of playing by the rules. For me, this is worthy of a heavier sanction than had they done it in the open… but maybe not permenant expulsion. For example, when Uefa discovered what they had done, they only sought a 2-year ban from the Champions League. I believe everyone deserves a second chance - to have the opportunity to learn from their wrongs and seek to make amends. Maybe, if Man City had accepted what they did was wrong when it was discovered and expressed remorse, then a punishment such as relegation would have sufficiced (with heavy ongoing monitoring). However, that’s not the path they chose… 2. Instead, they refused to accept they did anything wrong and have fought tooth and nail to avoid any justice for their actions. During the Uefa investigation it is widely reported that Man City’s Chairman told the President of Uefa that “he would rather spend 30 million on the 50 best lawyers in the world to sue [Uefa] for the next 10 years” rather than to submit to sanctions. That’s basically what has happened with the Premier League (albeit they couldn’t avoid justice for 10 years, only 6) They had their second chance, and their third, and their fourth and so on… and they batted them away every time. They have shown no desire to learn from what they did, make amends or change behaviour. This shows me that there is a pervasive culture within the hierarchy of the club that is dismissive about the need to follow rules. But sport is all about rules. If a game has no rules, it’s not a game. It’s those rules, whatever you think of them, that create the opportunity to excel in spite of them and win. Football has a rule that you can’t handle the ball unless you’re the goalkeeper. If an outfield player decided to ignore this and pick up the ball to run it into the opposition’s net then I don’t think anyone watching, on either side, would want that given as a goal. It’s not sport. And for me, it’s the same here. If you don’t follow the rules, it’s no longer sport. Now, I have many misgivings about FFP and PSR rules - how they have been constructed and applied. Their implications. Who they benefit and who they do not. I have not spent the time but I would bet they could be constructed far more fairly. However, you don’t get to individually pick which rules you follow and which you don’t if you want to compete in sport. Campaign to change them if you don’t like them… but until that day comes, if you want to compete, you have to follow them…

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Jamie Holmes
Jamie Holmes@jimoosk·
Day before the cup final... this fucking club man
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