There are two important points to consider when trying to understand how the palace has come to lose its place in the Europe League.
The first palace argues that John Text, who owns the bet in him and in Leon, does not hold decisive control in the Cellharst Park.
In his behavior with the UEFA, Palace stressed that Texter has not made any significant impact in the club, despite his company – eagle football holdings – despite having a 43% stake.
Talking to TalkSport earlier this week, Texter said: “I don’t have a decisive effect. I don’t do it and I did not.”
The texter is at the center of the case. The UEFA has admitted that both Leon and Palace cannot play both in the next season’s Europea League due to part-ownership. And so as the French club ended up in its league, they find a place.
The other important point to consider is that the Palace recalled the UEFA’s March 1 time limit to ensure compliance with the multi-club ownership rules of the governing body.
In short, this is why South London Clubs are in this prediction.
The forest, also, missed the cut-off, but demonstrated the UEFA that they were in the process of following their rules. The issue for him was that Evengelos Marincis also owns Olympiacos, who were in line to qualify for the next season’s Champions League. So Marincis placed his forest stake in a blind trust, and closed as a “important control person” of the company owned by the club. Finally, Olympiakos did not worthy, forest.
If the Palace successfully assured the UEFA that Texter had no decisive control, the March 1 time limit would have been irrelevant.
But the UEFA has not accepted the palace’s argument – and the club has collapsed by remembering the deadline.