Premier League champ City tops Football Money League for 1st time
The Man City club logo decorates a corner flag before a Premier League match at the Etihad Stadium, Manchester, England, Sept. 1, 2018. (AP Photo)


Riding on a wave of success, Manchester City added another feather to its cap as the defending Premier League champion topped Deloitte's Football Money League for the first time in its history.

The Abu Dhabi-owned club, unlike many of its competitors, emerged from the coronavirus crisis in a stronger position.

It is only the fourth club to top the rankings after Real Madrid, Barcelona and Manchester United.

City's revenue of 644.9 million euros ($712 million) in the 2020/21 season – up 17% – propelled them from the sixth position to the top on the list of the 20 highest revenue-generating clubs in world football.

However, some of City's commercial deals – which account for nearly half of revenue – are a source of controversy, with a number of key partners, such as shirt and stadium sponsor Etihad, having links to the club's owners.

The club was 4.2 million euros ahead of Spanish giants Real Madrid, with German champions Bayern Munich next followed by Barcelona and Manchester United.

A total of 11 English clubs were in the top 20, with Wolves making its first-ever appearance as the Premier League continued to flex its financial muscle.

The average revenue of the 20 clubs on the list was 409 million euros – a marginal increase on the 2019-20 season thanks to broadcast deferrals due to COVID-19 disruption, but a 12% decrease on the 2018/19 season because of the absence of fans.

The clubs in the Money League have missed out on more than 2 billion euros of revenue over the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons as a result of the pandemic, the Deloitte report said.

Premier League clubs were more insulated due to the much larger television rights deals they enjoy compared with their competitors in the other top European leagues and the gap is likely to widen.

"Premier League broadcast rights values are set to pull further away from the other 'big five' European leagues from the 2022-23 season with the rollover of existing domestic arrangements on the same terms and the total value of international rights reportedly set to increase by 30% and exceed the value of domestic rights for the first time," said Dan Jones, head of Deloitte's Sports Business Group.