Football
Associated Press 5y

Monaco deny trying to break Financial Fair Play rules after Football Leaks claim

AS Monaco have denied accusations they tried to bypass Financial Fair Play rules through a fake multi-million euro contract with a marketing agency.

Monaco said in a statement that stories published by the Mediapart website and other media as part of a "Football Leaks" series "contain false information and many inaccuracies."

According to Mediapart, Monaco owner Dmitry Rybolovlev attempted to hide illegal funding behind a marketing contract involving an offshore structure of companies in the British Virgin Islands and Hong Kong.

Monaco said they signed a deal with the AIM agency but insisted the contract "has never been executed and as such never entered the club's account," and "It has therefore at no time been used in the context of Financial Fair Play."

Mediapart reported that Rybolovlev planned to inject millions of euros of his own money into the club's accounts -- in violation with UEFA rules -- through the marketing deal signed in June 2014.

"AIM was to ensure the club received annual revenues of €140 million for a period of 10 years," Mediapart said. "It represented an extraordinary sum -- higher than the club's then-annual spending of €125m, but also five times more than the value of the largest sponsorship deals secured by Real Madrid or FC Barcelona."

Mediapart said that Monaco had registered losses up to €170m over the three previous seasons and was at risk of being excluded from the Champions League.

"The plan was for the sum to be secretly provided by Rybolovlev, using an offshore arrangement that funneled the funds via the British Virgin Islands and Hong Kong," Mediapart said. "Thus Rybolovlev's funds would appear to come from a sponsorship deal, which would meet the requirements of UEFA's financial fair play rules."

Monaco denied any wrongdoing and said they wanted to increase its commercial resources and sponsorship through the deal, saying the contract was real and included "marketing resources, sponsoring but also all revenue related to the Champions League. The agency had to find €30m in additional resources."

According to Mediapart, the deal ultimately collapsed because of a dispute between Rybolovlev and the head of AIM, Bernard de Roos, who reportedly threatened to reveal the scam to UEFA. Monaco said they never went through because it proved to be "too ambitious and unachievable."

Placed under investigation by UEFA's Club Financial Control Body for its overspending, Monaco reached a settlement in 2015 to pay a fine of €3m, plus €10m suspended.

Mediapart said that UEFA's investigatory chamber had opened an investigation into the AIM contract but that Monaco escaped heavy sanctions through a campaign of lobbying of Andrea Traverso, the head of UEFA's financial fair play program.

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