Clubs who violate UEFA’s new Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules should be thrown out of the Champions League, according to Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger.
Paris St Germain and Manchester City face fines of 60 million euros ($83.3 million) and caps on the size of their Champions League squads for breaches of the rules.
UEFA has the power to ban teams from European competition if their losses exceed the limits allowed, but is expected to shy away from imposing that ultimate punishment when it hands out the sanctions.
Wenger, a known advocate of balanced accounting, prefers the more straightforward punishment.
“You would think you accept the rules and you’re in the competition or you don’t accept the rules and you’re not in the competition - then everybody would understand it,” the Frenchman told the British media.
“There are rules. You respect them or you don’t respect them. If you don’t respect them you have to be punished.
“When Uefa doesn’t want to kick the clubs out of the Champions League they have to find a more subtle punishment. To me, and from all of us on the outside, it looks a complicated punishment.”
Nine unnamed clubs faced punishment under new rules, which are designed to force teams to limit their financial losses and make soccer more economically stable.
PSG have spent more than 200 million euros ($278.5 million) on players since Qatari investors QTI completed their takeover of the club in 2012 and won the French title on Wednesday.


