October 5, 2024

Premier League ‘desire to crush Everton’ slammed as Manchester City and big six should go down – Martin Samuel

The clubs who tried to break away to form the European Super League should have been relegated rather than Everton, according to Martin Samuel.

The Times journalist wrote in his column on the paper’s website on 28 October that the Premier League had developed a “taste for blood” and linked their “desire to crush Everton” to trying to ward off an independent regulator.everton

But he pointed out that plans for a regulator only came about in the wake of the failed attempt of Manchester City, Arsenal, Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and Tottenham to leave the top flight altogether, for which they have only had to pay a combined £22million in punishment.

Samuel calls the breakaway attempt a “betrayal so heinous” that it brought politicians into the fray, and yet “they got away with it”.

He claims that those clubs should have instead been sent out of the division in the way that Everton would be if they are hit with the 12-point penalty, reportedly what the Premier League wants in punishment if a profit and sustainability breach is proven [Telegraph, 25 October], while suggesting that if they had been it would be clubs such as the Toffees who would arguably have benefitted the most.everton

Samuel makes a valid point when the league appears to be cracking down on Everton in a way that they simply haven’t elsewhere.

It remains to be seen what comes of Manchester City’s 100-plus FFP charges, denied as Everton’s is, when the Toffees are at risk of oblivion over one.

But when the rules are supposed to uphold the integrity of the top flight it is completely undercut if clubs that tried to abandon the competition completely are welcomed back in with what barely amounts to a slap on the wrist.

Everton

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