In response, UEFA launched an investigation to see whether the club has broken FPP rules. Manchester City also spent heavily in the last transfer window, lavishing an estimated £221m (242m euros, $288m) on players although they offloaded several too. "PSG are laughing at the system," Tebas said at the Soccerex Global Convention in Manchester, speaking through a translator. "A Spanish journalist defined it, and I hope I am not being rude, as like they were peeing in the bed or the swimming pool." "Well Neymar has gone on to the diving board and peed into the pool, it can't be tolerated."Paris St-Germain and Manchester City have been accused of 'financial doping' by La Liga president Javier Tebas.https://t.co/ZxXkcjmYwR pic.twitter.com/yTwWRJBDri
— BBC Sport (@BBCSport) September 6, 2017
"We cannot accept this." La Liga president Javier Tebas has accused PSG & Neymar of "peeing in the swimming pool."https://t.co/d0bAacoUjx pic.twitter.com/Sh6BNkwmfD— ESPN FC (@ESPNFC) September 6, 2017"But this is not solely because of Neymar. We at La Liga have fought hard for collective TV rights. We are being destroyed and this is going to damage the industry." Tebas, who has revolutionised La Liga since taking over in 2013, engineering a collective TV football rights deal among other measures, said PSG were simply not paying market prices. "All PSG have to do is turn on the gas tap," he said, referring to Qatar's massive gas reserves. "This is what PSG have been doing for the past four years." Tebas said it was not a level playing field for clubs. "Teams that use use financial doping play for an entire year and can win their league or a European trophy, although some have lost as well."
"So it is not fair to the victims which are the teams playing by the rules. We have to get a system that is fair to the victims. "The rules are there on the books." Tebas said however he was not pushing for PSG or City to be banned from European competition. "We are not looking to kick them out, (but) if we don't do anything then now it will be PSG and Manchester City and then in the future it will be a sheikh from Bahrain, or a Malysian businessman who will 'deform' the industry."#UEFA must enforce FFP regulations to avoid discrimination among clubs — #LaLiga president Javier Tebas.https://t.co/IZQogd2jyu
— FirstpostSports (@FirstpostSports) September 4, 2017
Also Read: PSG chief says nothing to hide over Neymar, Mbappe transfers
He said he took some hope from the fact that Chelsea's Russian owner Roman Abramovich has settled down in his spending. Tebas insisted that the Spanish league dealt severely with clubs who contravened their rules regarding financing. "We have relegated teams to the second tier for some of those practices and kicked teams out of competitions," he said.
La Liga president Javier Tebas said City & PSG's "funding by state-aid distorts European competitions & harming the football industry" — SuperSport Blitz (@SuperSportBlitz) September 4, 2017Barcelona faced criticism for carrying sponsorship from the Qatar Foundation and later Qatar Airways on their shirts, but Tebas argued he was not being hypocritical in defending that deal. "They paid a market price because a non-state company, a Japanese one, then came along and paid more. "When contracts are not reflecting real market incomes, as in money not derived directly from football, then we take action."


