Why are you banging on about this still? You know Nearly Sane and I are right about this one.
Right about what Jeremy? And you and NS don't seem to agree - he thinks that Saracens should be stripped of their titles (in a clear breach of the rules and regulations set out by the Rugby Premiership authorities and signed up to by all the clubs). As far as I can see (see reply 19) you appear to think, as I do, that Saracens should receive a fine and points deduction as set out in the Premiership's rules, but not stripped of their titles.
Yes, the salary cap is in place for financial sustainability,
Agreed and that is the primary reason it is in place
but that doesn't mean it does not affect performance on the sports field.
Pure speculation - if you are to make that claim you need to provide some evidence - see below.
Not only that, success on the sports field leads to better financial sustainability.
Not sure that is true - pretty well all premiership clubs are only sustainable due to the deep pockets of their owners. As I indicated in my link all but one club are making a loss, Exeter being the exception. And the clubs with the biggest losses finished 1st, 3rd and 4th. The clubs with the smallest losses (Exeter excepted) finished mid table or lower. If there is any correlation it is that better performance on the sports field correlates with worse financial position (noting that correlation doesn't necessarily equate to causation).
If all clubs agree to a set of rules and one club breaks the rules and that leads to more sporting success, that club is cheating.
See the bit in emphasis - you are making a completely un-evidenced assertion. You have no evidence that the cheating, in this case greater salary spending,
leads to more sporting success. Indeed there is no evidence of association, let alone causation.
Again look at the details on financial performance for the 2017/18 season I linked to, and we can add in end of season finishing position in the table. So the team who spent the most on salary (Harlequins) finished 10th of 12th. The top team (in the table) were ranked just 5th in salary spending and Newcastle, who finished 4th were the 3rd lowest spenders. There is no correlation between finishing table position and salary spend.
Also worth noting that as the rules are very clear we can reverse engineer the level of the additional salary Saracens were fined for. The rule is £3 fine for £1 of additional spend - so their £5.36M fine, equates to £1.78M overspend on salary, over 3 years or an average of £595k per year. Add that the the £12.6M Saracens declared for the year in the link (the mid year of their fine period) and you get an actual salary spend of £13.2M, which would place them 3rd in the salary spend ranking, below Harlequins who finished 10th and Wasps who finished 3rd.
So sure there is evidence they broke the rules on salary cap and (unless they win their appeal) they should be sanctioned with fine and points deduction as per the premiership rules. However there is nothing to substantiate your claim that the additional salary spending
led to more sporting success as you imply.