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🔴 LIVE: Man City lead against Bournemouth; Palace host Wolves

🔴 LIVE: Man City lead against Bournemouth; Palace host Wolves

Yahoo20-05-2025
2025-05-20T19:41:14Z
CITY GET THEIR SECOND!
Bernardo Silva doubles the hosts' lead after Bournemouth fail to clear their lines.
Champions League qualification is in sight!
Man City 2-0 Bournemouth
2025-05-20T19:38:40Z
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A frantic eight minutes at Selhurst Park!
2025-05-20T19:35:00Z
PALACE LEAD!
Just like that, Nketiah gets another to put Palace in front!
Crystal Palace 2-1 Wolves
2025-05-20T19:29:56Z
INSTANT REPLY!
Palace are back on level terms as Nketiah finds an equaliser.
Crystal Palace 1-1 Wolves
2025-05-20T19:28:47Z
How did he miss?!
De Bruyne has an open goal in front of him to put City 2-0 up but his effort clatters off the bar.
Still 1-0!
2025-05-20T19:27:34Z
GOAL! Wolves now lead at Selhurst Park!
Agbadou puts the visitors ahead.
Crystal Palace 0-1 Wolves
2025-05-20T19:23:27Z
A sensational strike from Marmoush...
The effort from the Egyptian to put City 1-0 up against Bournemouth may be a goal of the season contender! He had a go from 30-yards out and picked out the top corner perfectly!
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No goalkeeper was saving that.
2025-05-20T19:21:38Z
On target!
Crystal Palace are the first to produce an attempt on target in the other game. Chilwell has a go but it's saved by Bentley and Wolves clear the follow-up.
Crystal Palace 0-0 Wolves
2025-05-20T19:15:51Z
GOAL!
Manchester City lead! Omar Marmoush breaks the deadlock with a fantastic strike.
Man City 1-0 Bournemouth
2025-05-20T19:08:54Z
Manchester City fans honour De Bruyne on his final home game for the club...
2025-05-20T19:08:00Z
End-to-end at the Etihad!
Moments after the opening for Bournemouth, City carve out an opportunity for themselves. Silva's effort is cleared.
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2025-05-20T19:05:41Z
Chance!
The first chance of the evening falls to Bournemouth as Kluivert gets a shot away, but his effort is easily held by Ederson.
2025-05-20T19:00:43Z
🚨 KICK OFF!
Both of this evening's Premier League games are underway
2025-05-20T18:52:14Z
A reminder of the team news between Crystal Palace and Wolves…
Crystal Palace (3-4-2-1): Henderson; Richards, Lacroix, Ward; Muñoz, Hughes, Lerma, Chilwell; Sarr, Esse; Nketiah
Subs: Mitchell, Eze, França, Mateta, Clyne, Kamada, Turner, Devenny, Kporha
Wolves (3-4-2-1): Bentley; Djiga, Agbadou, T. Gomes; Aït-Nouri, André, Bellegarde, R. Gomes; Sarabia, Guedes; Strand Larsen
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Subs: Doherty, Bueno, Munetsi, J. Gomes, Cunha, Hwang, Semedo, Pedro Lima, King
2025-05-20T18:48:54Z
A reminder of the team news ahead of Man City vs Bournemouth…
Man City (4-2-3-1): Ederson; Nunes, Dias, Akanji, Gvardiol; Gündoğan, Kovačić; Silva, De Bruyne, Marmoush; Haaland
Subs: Aké, Grealish, Doku, González, Rodri, Ortega, Foden, Bobb, O'Reilly
Bournemouth (4-2-3-1): Arrizabalaga; Araujo, Zabarnyi, Huijsen, Kerkez; Adams, Cook; Tavernier, Kluivert, Semenyo; Evanilson
Subs: Senesi, Brooks, Smith, Soler, Jebbison, Dennis, Silcott-Duberry, Akinmboni, Winterburn
2025-05-20T18:47:04Z
Hello and welcome to live coverage of tonight's Premier League clashes!
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Manchester City host Bournemouth at the Etihad Stadium, while FA Cup winners Crystal Palace will be in action against Wolves at Selhurst Park.
Stay tuned!
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Luis Diaz heads for Anfield exit: What it means for his legacy and Liverpool's transfer plans
Luis Diaz heads for Anfield exit: What it means for his legacy and Liverpool's transfer plans

New York Times

time21 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Luis Diaz heads for Anfield exit: What it means for his legacy and Liverpool's transfer plans

When Luis Diaz's then girlfriend Gera Ponce posted a tribute to Liverpool supporters on social media at the end of last season, it felt like a goodbye. The words were accompanied by photographs and videos of them celebrating in front of the Kop with their young daughters Roma and Charlotte following the Premier League trophy lift in May. Diaz had the Colombian flag wrapped around his waist as his song boomed around Anfield. Advertisement 'From the first day we arrived, we felt first hand what it means to be a part of this club,' she wrote. 'What you have made my boyfriend and our entire family feel is something we carry in our souls. Thank-you for so much love, for so much dedication and for making us feel at home. This is a real bond, deep and strong, that reaffirms that we'll never walk alone.' Two months on, that farewell has been confirmed with Diaz set to complete a €75 million (£65.6m; $88.1m) move to Bayern Munich. It brings the curtain down on a three-and-a-half-year Anfield career which yielded 41 goals in 148 appearances. His impact was instant following his arrival from Porto in January 2022. With his ability to bamboozle defenders, he created a goal for Takumi Minamino just 10 minutes into his debut against Cardiff City. Jurgen Klopp said he had never met a player who smiled so much in training. With Sadio Mane moved into the centre to accommodate Diaz on the left, he quickly became a fans' favourite. They loved his direct approach with the ball at his feet and his tenacity out of possession. Diaz, who was affectionately known as Lucho by team-mates and staff, started all three finals in 2021-22 as Liverpool won a domestic cup double but suffered an agonising defeat to Real Madrid in the Champions League showpiece in Paris and finished a point behind Manchester City in the Premier League. He was hampered by a knee injury the following season but in 2023-24 he was massively influential as Klopp's side lifted the League Cup again before their title challenge faded. There was the relief of his father Luis Manuel Diaz being released after being held hostage for 12 days by the National Liberation Army in Colombia. On the field, one complaint was that for all the dazzling approach play, there was a lack of end product at times. Arne Slot set about improving that last summer by getting Diaz on the ball in more central areas. Advertisement There was a first hat-trick of his professional career against Bayer Leverkusen in the Champions League last November when he was employed in a false nine role. It was a tactic Slot persisted with when they lined up without Darwin Nunez or Diogo Jota. Diaz scored twice in the 6-3 demolition of Tottenham having done likewise against Manchester United at Old Trafford earlier in the season. He also cancelled out Tottenham's early opener at Anfield on the day the title was won in April. His overall return of 17 goals in all competitions was the best of his Liverpool career and only Mohamed Salah scored more than his 13 league goals for the club in 2024-25. On the face of it, agreeing to sanction the exit of such a popular figure who is at his peak is questionable, but when you dig deeper, it makes more sense. For a start, Diaz was determined to leave having twice turned down attempts by Liverpool to get him to sign a new contract. There was just too big a gap between what he wanted and what the club was willing to offer. He had initially signalled his desire to pursue a new challenge 12 months ago when he had Barcelona pursuing him, but Liverpool made it clear then that he wasn't for sale. That stance remained in place at the start of this summer, but with Diaz still unwilling to sign an extension and Bayern prepared to increase their initial offer of €67.5m, the ground started to shift. Liverpool reluctantly did business, knowing that if they kept hold of him for another season then next summer his value would have been considerably lower with him down to the final 12 months of his contract. Ultimately, sporting director Richard Hughes ensured they pocketed €75m for a 28-year-old who cost them €49m from Porto and gave them great service for three and a half years. The parting of the ways has been respectful with Diaz not missing a training session during the tour of Asia before being granted permission to fly to Munich to complete the formalities. In terms of filling the void, Liverpool believe they have sufficient left-sided cover already in place. Cody Gakpo, who scored 18 goals last season, is expected to kick on and play an even bigger part. New signing Hugo Ekitike can operate off that flank as well as through the middle, while the emergence of teenager Rio Nguhoma is another factor. It would be wrong to expect too much from Nguhoma given he doesn't even turn 17 for another month, but he's a massive talent. He has lit up pre-season so far and you don't want to block his pathway. Advertisement Diaz is highly unlikely to be the last senior Liverpool attacker to leave in this window. There's ongoing interest from the Saudi Pro League in Darwin Nunez, while Federico Chiesa continues to be linked with a return to Italy. On the right side, Liverpool have Jeremie Frimpong who can deputise for Salah. Harvey Elliott and Ben Doak are also options, although they could both depart in the coming weeks if suitable offers are forthcoming. The real intrigue surrounds what happens centrally. Nunez being replaced by Alexander Isak is the dream scenario. 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He will be missed in the Liverpool dressing room, especially among the close-knit South American contingent. He leaves behind some special memories and is guaranteed the warmest of receptions at Anfield if he returns with Bayern.

VT MARKETS CHAMPIONS GROWTH IN ASIA THROUGH PARTNERSHIP WITH NEWCASTLE UNITED AS CSR INITIATIVES ARE LAUNCHED
VT MARKETS CHAMPIONS GROWTH IN ASIA THROUGH PARTNERSHIP WITH NEWCASTLE UNITED AS CSR INITIATIVES ARE LAUNCHED

Yahoo

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VT MARKETS CHAMPIONS GROWTH IN ASIA THROUGH PARTNERSHIP WITH NEWCASTLE UNITED AS CSR INITIATIVES ARE LAUNCHED

SYDNEY, July 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- VT Markets is using the 'power of football' to make a positive impact in communities across Asia, supported by a partnership with Premier League club Newcastle United. Celebrating its 10th anniversary, VT Markets committed to donating 1,000 Newcastle United branded footballs to schools across Southeast Asia. The initiative aims to deepen the brand's presence in Asia while creating opportunities for future generations to enjoy the sport. Additionally, VT Markets proudly donated £20,000 to the Newcastle United Foundation, commemorating the club's Carabao Cup victory and return to the UEFA Champions League. This contribution celebrates the club's incredible achievement while supporting its official charity partner's mission to harness the unifying power of football to connect, motivate, and inspire people through community, education, health, and sports programmes. VT Markets' Corporate Social Responsibility initiatives have been designed to champion growth through strategic partnerships and investments, with the aim of expanding the brand's footprint in Asia, while helping to nurture economic development in the region. By driving growth through impactful collaborations, VT Markets is not only deepening its regional presence but also helping to build a stronger, more resilient future for these communities. With plans already underway to bring similar initiatives to Latin America, the brand is looking to replicate this positive impact across even more global markets. As Newcastle United's Official Financial Trading Partner, first-team players including Sandro Tonali, Jacob Murphy, Dan Burn, and William Osula, kicked off the initiatives during an exclusive Meet and Greet session hosted by VT Markets. Also in attendance was club legend Shola Ameobi, who brought his trademark charisma to connect with fans at the event. The Magpies were based in Singapore ahead of their first fixture in the nation since 1996, taking on fellow Premier League side Arsenal as part of the Singapore Festival of Football. Speaking as the CSR initiatives were launched at an exclusive client engagement event in Singapore, hosted by VT Markets, Newcastle United player and Newcastle United Foundation ambassador Dan Burn shared: "Our fans are the soul of this club, wherever we go in the world. The support we've felt from everyone in Singapore has been unbelievable and that's a big reason why projects like this mean so much. "As players, football has helped to transform our lives so it's really special to see VT Markets use their position to support young people and give back to these amazing communities - both in Newcastle and across Asia. We see the fantastic work that Newcastle United Foundation do back home and this donation will make a great contribution to changing their lives of many people in our community." VT Markets recently marked a thrilling debut year as Official Financial Trading Partner of Newcastle United by visiting St. James' Park for the final match of the 2024/25 Premier League season. A history-making campaign saw Eddie Howe's side win the club's first domestic trophy in 70 years, which was quickly followed up with qualification for the UEFA Champions League. This year also coincides with a significant milestone for VT Markets, celebrating a decade of innovation in the global financial markets. Over the past 10 years, the company has driven growth through collaborations, expanding its presence and making a lasting impact within the industry by helping to build a stronger, more resilient future. "At VT Markets, we believe that true growth goes beyond numbers. Through our CSR initiatives, we aim to inspire, empower, and contribute meaningfully to the region's development, laying the foundation for long-term opportunity and success. Our partnership with Newcastle United is about driving positive change both on and off the field, and we look forward to deepening our impact as we continue this exciting journey in Asia together," Dandelyn Koh, Global Brand and PR Lead at VT Markets shared. As Newcastle United prepare for a return to the UEFA Champions League, VT Markets remains a steadfast partner, supporting ambitions on the pitch while helping to drive positive social change off the pitch. The event in Singapore served as an opportunity to highlight shared values and the vision of both organisations, centred around growth, community, and giving back. For media enquiries and sponsorship opportunities, please email media@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE VT Markets Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Crystal Palace at CAS: What could club argue as they try to win back Europa League spot?
Crystal Palace at CAS: What could club argue as they try to win back Europa League spot?

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

Crystal Palace at CAS: What could club argue as they try to win back Europa League spot?

Common sense would suggest that confirmation of John Textor's exit from Crystal Palace should resolve the issues around the Premier League club's connection to French side Lyon. After all, the American investor has now both sold his Palace stake and left all positions of authority at Lyon. Unfortunately, one person's common sense is another's opinion — fun to debate, but not the best foundations for a cross-border sports competition involving huge prizes. Advertisement To do that, you are better off with a set of written rules which are fair, proportionate, transparent and well-drafted. If they are not, well, that's why we invented lawyers. This is where Palace find themselves: denied entrance to the Europa League, the competition they qualified for by winning last season's FA Cup, and effectively demoted to the third-tier Conference League for breaching European football governing body UEFA's multi-club ownership (MCO) rules. And so Palace are taking their case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), asking the so-called 'supreme court' of worldwide athletic endeavour to overturn UEFA's decision. Palace have also named Nottingham Forest and Lyon in their appeal, as their fellow Premier League side have been elevated from the Conference League to the second-tier Europa League at their expense, while their disputed stablemates from Ligue 1 have been left in the Europa League, as their higher domestic league finish of the two sides trumps winning the FA Cup. Steve Parish, Palace's chairman, will not mind which of those clubs CAS demotes, as long as what he views as the 'terrible injustice' of his team being removed from the Europa League is reversed. He believes he must take this fight on for Palace's players, staff and fans, as well as others who might find themselves in this position one day. And he clearly thinks this would not happen to a bigger, established side, so there is an 'us versus them' element to his crusade. Having said all that, how could Palace go about persuading CAS? It was then International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Juan Antonio Samaranch who first realised global sport needed an in-house method for washing dirty linen, as the regular courts are expensive, potentially embarrassing and painfully slow. With the IOC willing to pay for it all, housing it in Lausanne, the Olympic Movement's Swiss home, made sense. Advertisement CAS opened in 1984 and, initially, three-person panels picked from a small pool of experts nominated by the IOC, its president and Olympic federations made decisions about commercial and disciplinary arguments. The system worked pretty well until 1992, when the International Equestrian Federation found a German rider named Elmar Gundel guilty of doping his horse and banned him. When CAS rejected his appeal, Gundel took his fight to Switzerland's Federal Supreme Court. He did not get much joy there either, but the court did agree that the link between CAS and the IOC was too cosy. The result was the 1994 creation of the International Council of Arbitration for Sport (ICAS), an arms-length body that would run and finance CAS for all Olympic and Paralympic sports. When the World Anti-Doping Agency was created in 1999, CAS was also formally established as the last stop for doping cases. Its workload has increased each year. In 2024, more than 900 cases were submitted to CAS, with about 300 progressing to full-blown hearings. It now has 45 permanent staff, plus around 400 experts serving as visiting arbitrators, who are housed in a purpose-built office in Lausanne's poshest convention centre. The basic proposition has not changed much. Each side in a dispute chooses a member of the panel, with those two usually picking a third expert from the pool to be the panel's chair. If they can't decide, ICAS will select one. Hearings are private, with costs kept low. Verdicts typically come within six to 12 months but expedited hearings are held for matters in need of quick answers, such as doping cases during an ongoing Olympics and over Palace's predicament. The draw for the final round of Conference League qualifying is a week today (August 4), with those two-legged ties then scheduled for August 21 and 28. Palace, Forest and Lyon need to know ASAP which competition they're in. In terms of results, sports federations still tend to win the day, as Gundel discovered, but Manchester City famously beat UEFA at CAS in 2020, while Paul Pogba's doping ban was reduced from four years to 18 months last year, saving his career. Palace's starting point is likely to be that Textor, whose Eagle Football Group still contains his controlling stakes at Brazilian side Botafogo, Belgian's RWDM Brussels (rebranded from Molenbeek earlier this year) and Lyon, did not have what UEFA calls 'decisive influence' at Selhurst Park, and that they have never been part of his multi-club group. Advertisement This, you would think, is supported by the fact he has just sold his 43 per cent stake in Palace to Woody Johnson, the billionaire owner of the NFL's New York Jets and former U.S. ambassador to the UK. Furthermore, that 43 per cent stake only gave Textor one of four voting shares at Palace, with Parish and two other American investors, David Blitzer and Josh Harris, also holding one each. As Textor has previously explained to The Athletic, decisions at Palace very rarely, if ever, went to a vote, as Blitzer and Harris are silent partners who trust Parish to run things. So, Parish would always have 75 per cent of the votes, and he had no interest in Textor's plan to integrate the Londoners into the Eagle multi-club universe. Blitzer, Harris, Parish and Textor all went to UEFA's headquarters in the Swiss city of Nyon last month to make this point but the Club Financial Control Body (CFCB), the arms-length unit that decides which teams can and cannot be licensed to play in the three European competitions, wasn't buying it. Instead, it ruled that Textor's influence was decisive at Palace because he has injected more than £100million ($134m at the current rate) into the club since 2022, money that helped them finish their new-look academy facilities and sign players, and was the largest single shareholder which meant he must, at the very least, have had a say in what they could and could not do. A decisive say? Well, that is why CAS exists. Dr Antoine Duval is the head of Asser International Sports Law Centre in the Netherlands and a seasoned watcher of CAS's decision-making. He believes it's possible the CAS panel will disagree with the CFCB assessment but says the 'quality of the evidence provided by Palace about its internal management structure and the role, or lack of it, of Textor/Eagle will be crucial'. Textor's voting rights will be a key consideration for CAS, but so will his financial contributions and influence on recruitment and commercial strategy. For example, he was a strong advocate of appointing Oliver Glasner, the Austrian head coach who led Palace to their FA Cup triumph, in February last year, although he recently insisted on UK radio station Talksport that the notion he 'made the hire (at Palace) happen… that's not true at all. I tried to get him at Lyon — if he spoke French, he'd be there. I told UEFA that a suggestion is not decisive influence. Nobody tells Steve (Parish) what to do, he's as stubborn as anybody.' Palace, no doubt, will say the only player to be transferred between them and Lyon was centre-back Jake O'Brien in 2023: beyond some young players going on loan to Molenbeek (including O'Brien, earlier in his career), they had no other transactions with an Eagle Football Group club, despite Textor's frequent suggestions. Advertisement But Dr Gregory Ioannidis, an experienced campaigner at CAS and an associate professor at Sheffield Hallam University, is not sure this will be enough to sway the panel. He believes Palace will try to argue that a 'more flexible and purposeful interpretation of the regulations' should be applied, with the club's lawyers asking the panel to think about what UEFA is trying to achieve with its MCO rules, fair competition, and whether the English side pose any threat to that legitimate aim. 'But if the panel decides the rules are clear, and therefore a strict and literal approach needs to be applied, the chances for a successful appeal will be minimised,' explains Ioannidis. While each case is considered on its own merits, precedents can be helpful, and two CAS panels have recently made very quick decisions on MCO cases involving Slovakian team FC DAC 1904 and Drogheda United from the Republic of Ireland. Both were blocked from playing in the Conference League by the CFCB and then lost their appeals, DAC unanimously and Drogheda on a majority verdict. The two cases were different but both argued they simply did not have enough time to create the separation UEFA requires between them and their MCO sister clubs. As MCO groups have proliferated across Europe, UEFA has given owners two options: reduce your stake in one of the clubs that want to compete in the same competition to less than 30 per cent, step down as a director and halt whatever player-trading strategy you are pursuing with the two teams, or put one of into a blind trust, so you have no influence over day-to-day operations. Crucially, UEFA moved the deadline for doing one or the other of these workarounds from early June to March 1. DAC, Drogheda and Palace all missed this memo. However, in both the DAC and Drogheda cases, the CAS panels backed UEFA. Advertisement 'What is of immense importance here is the panels' findings that the current regulations do not require evidence of actual influence, but rather only the possibility of such influence,' says Ioannidis. 'This, in conjunction with the finding on the procedural aspect of submitting the changes in the club's ownership structure on time (or not), may cause serious difficulties for those arguing Palace's case.' Parish has explained in recent interviews that Palace were too busy playing Championship neighbours Millwall in the last 16 of the FA Cup on March 1 to be thinking about what might happen if they were to win the whole thing and play in Europe for the first time in their history, but Duval says the deadline argument is doomed. 'It seems to me that a possible argument about the new deadline has already been rejected, thus the main focus will probably be on whether Textor had decisive influence,' he says. And while Palace will come armed with evidence that shows Textor was routinely ignored, UEFA's lawyers will no doubt point to the letter CFCB chair Sunil Gulati sent to the club licensing managers at UEFA's 55 member associations last May which spells out what 'decisive influence' means. A literal reading of that document — the 30 per cent shareholding threshold, significant financial support, being a director, the ability to influence recruitment decisions and so on — would suggest Palace's legal team are going to have their work cut out. Given all that, it might make sense for Palace to make a more general argument that a strict application of the rules in this case simply make no sense, as there is obviously no threat to the integrity of the competition, which is the entire point of article 5.01 in UEFA's rulebook, the regulation that deals with MCO clubs. And there is some encouragement here, in that the concepts of fairness, integrity and sporting justice are all enshrined in Swiss law. But there are risks attached to this approach, too. 'Swiss law does protect such principles and both CAS and the Swiss Federal Tribunal (where any appeals over a CAS verdict are heard but rarely upheld) have ruled accordingly,' says Ioannidis. 'However, I wouldn't run this argument, because the panel may take the view that it is precisely for these principles that UEFA's decision may be upheld, as the other clubs in the competition acted promptly and ensured they followed the rules and deadlines.' Advertisement That said, the Drogheda case shows that one of the panel disagreed with his colleagues. The written judgment has not been published, so we do not know why they disagreed but it is possible the Irish club's plea for a more common-sense-based assessment of the rules was persuasive. Palace may think that if they can do the same, they are halfway there. 'Not everything is negative for Palace,' says Ioannidis. 'I would argue that the intention of the regulator is to ensure fair competition. As such, the fact that Palace may have realised their mistake and acted in compliance with the rules, albeit late, shows a genuine and honest approach to the legitimate aim pursued by UEFA. 'In this instance, it would be fair, just and reasonable for UEFA to allow Palace to be admitted to the Europa League.' Another possible line of attack for Palace is the apparent inconsistencies in the application of UEFA's rules — and this is where the decision to make Forest a party in this appeal is intriguing. The argument, presumably, would be that Evangelos Marinakis, owner of both Forest and Greece's Olympiacos, did not place the former in a blind trust until the end of April, a move he reversed when they eventually failed to join their cousins from Athens in next season's Champions League. It is a moot point now but Marinakis seemed to miss the UEFA deadline, too, and, if literal readings are important, you either meet it or you don't. If Palace wanted to be really mischievous, they could ask what Marinakis was doing on the pitch at the end of Forest's home draw against Leicester City on May 11. While he may well have been checking on the health of an injured Forest player, the episode suggested the Greek billionaire still exerted some influence at the City Ground despite that blind-trust move. And, just to add some further spice to the pot, Parish has suggested that Forest played a part in Palace's demotion to the Conference League. But an argument that effectively depends on the panel accepting that it is OK for a club to be confused about the regulations is unlikely to pan out. 'The rules and deadlines have always been there, and Palace had to act promptly, irrespective of what other clubs did,' says Ioannidis. 'The panel might say that a professional club, with an army of expert lawyers, ought to be more diligent and proactive. If confused, they could have asked UEFA for clarification.' And with that sensible advice, we should probably wrap this up and wait for CAS to make sense of it all. Hopefully.

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