Southampton appeal playoff expulsion as club calls punishment ‘manifestly disproportionate’
- Southampton have appealed against their removal from the Championship playoffs following the club’s spying scandal.
- The club says the punishment is unprecedented and financially devastating.
- An independent arbitration panel is set to hear the appeal later on Wednesday.
Southampton FC have launched an appeal against their expulsion from the Championship playoffs, insisting the punishment handed down by the English Football League is “manifestly disproportionate” compared to any previous sanction in English football history.
An independent disciplinary commission ruled on Tuesday evening that Southampton should be removed from the playoffs after the club admitted breaching EFL regulations relating to spying on opposition training sessions.
Middlesbrough FC were reinstated in Southampton’s place and are currently due to face Hull City AFC in Saturday’s Championship playoff final at Wembley.
Southampton were also handed a four-point deduction to be applied at the start of next season.
In a strongly-worded statement, chief executive Phil Parsons apologised to supporters and rival clubs while arguing the scale of the punishment goes far beyond any reasonable precedent.
“What happened was wrong,” Parsons admitted.
“But the club cannot accept a sanction which bears no proportion to the offence.”
Parsons apologised “to the other clubs involved, and most of all to the Southampton supporters” who he said “deserved better from the club.”
The club’s appeal will now be heard by an independent league arbitration panel later on Wednesday in a process that could yet create further uncertainty around Saturday’s final.
Southampton pointed to the case involving Leeds United in 2019, when the club were fined £200,000 following the infamous ‘Spygate’ scandal under Marcelo Bielsa after observing Derby County training sessions.
However, Southampton’s case differs significantly because EFL regulation 127 — which explicitly prohibits observing an opponent within 72 hours of a fixture — was introduced after the Leeds incident specifically to prevent similar situations from happening again.
Parsons nevertheless argued the punishment effectively destroys a financial opportunity worth more than £200 million.
“Southampton has been denied the opportunity to compete in a game worth more than £200m and one which means so much to our staff, players and supporters,” he said.
“We believe the financial consequence of yesterday’s ruling makes it, by a very considerable distance, the largest penalty ever imposed on an English football club.”
The club also referenced a number of previous disciplinary cases in its defence, including Luton Town’s historic 30-point deduction in 2008-09, along with sanctions handed to Derby County, Everton and Chelsea in recent years.
Southampton argued none of those punishments carried the same financial consequences attached to missing out on a Premier League playoff final.
“We say this not to minimise what occurred at this club, which we have accepted was wrong,” Parsons added.
“We say it because proportionality is itself a principle of natural justice.
“The Commission was entitled to impose a sanction. It was not, we will argue, entitled to impose one that is manifestly disproportionate to every previous sanction in the history of the English game.”
The appeal now threatens to extend one of the most chaotic and controversial Championship finales in recent memory, with clubs, supporters and the EFL still waiting for certainty just days before the Wembley showpiece.