How blind trusts are helping address integrity concerns in multi-club ownership structures (Man City & Man Utd cases)

In two multi-club ownership related cases[1] last year, the First Chamber of the UEFA Club Financial Control Body (CFCB) ultimately accepted the admission of:
- Girona FC and Manchester City FC to the 2024/25 UEFA Champions League, and
- Manchester United FC and OGC Nice to the 2024/25 UEFA Europa League.
The decision was arrived at after the clubs - which are part of the same corporate structure -implemented measures to prevent potential conflicts of interest under the multi-club ownership rules provided for in Article 5 of the UEFA club competitions regulations.
This article examines the steps that the clubs took to bring them into compliance with UEFA’s regulations. It then examines the “blind trust” structure that formed the basis of the mechanism to mitigate potential conflicts of interest.
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- Tags: Champions League | Dispute Resolution | Europa League | Football | Governance | Integrity | Regulation | UEFA | United Kingdom (UK)
Written by
Veronica Rozenfeld
Veronica Rozenfeld is a sports lawyer with a strong interest in internal legal strategy and structuring within professional football clubs. She holds a law degree from the All-Russian State University of Justice and explores how international trust mechanisms and compliance models can be applied within club operations. Veronica is the author of several internationally published studies on football club business models and is based in Baku, Azerbaijan.