Tottenham Hotspur manager Jose Mourinho has branded the decision to overturn Manchester City's European ban "disgraceful" and a "disaster".
City's two-year expulsion was overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport on Monday, but they were fined £10million.
Mourinho said: "If Manchester City is not guilty of it, to be punished by some million is a disgrace. If you're not guilty you're not punished. In the other way, if you're guilty you should be banned. In any case, it's a disaster.
"I'm not saying Manchester City is guilty. I'm saying if you're not guilty you don't pay. Even with a pound.
"I know that money is quite easy for them but still. If you're guilty you should be banned from the competition.
"I'm nobody to know if they're guilty or not. My criticism is for the decision."
On the future of Financial Fair Play, Mourinho added: "In this moment we are speaking about Man City. But in the past, other clubs were in a similar situation, and you know the results of it.
"So I think it's better to open the circus door, and let everybody enjoy. And go inside for free, come out, go inside again, do it with freedom."
Klopp's main gripe was the impact on FFP, which the German thinks remains important in the game.

He said: "I absolutely don't wish anybody anything bad. I'm happy that City can play in the Champions League, but I don't think it was a good day for football (on Monday) to be honest.
"I think FFP is a good idea. It's there for protecting teams and protecting competition, that was the idea from the start - so that nobody overspends and clubs before the season have to make sure that the money they want to spend is based on the right sources, let me say it like that.
"I only read a little bit about the wording (of the City case) and why it was like it was, and it's not up to me to judge these things and I don't.
"I only think this FFP frame, which is for all of us, we all should stick to. It makes sense we have these kind of rules.
"I really hope FFP stays because it gives at least kind of borders where you can go to but not over. That's good for football.
"If you start doing that nobody has to care any more at all, then the richest people or countries can do whatever they want in football. That would make the competition really difficult.
"I think that would lead automatically to kind of a world super league with 10 clubs - I don't know the clubs, but it wouldn't depend on the names of the club but on the people who own the clubs."
One opposition Premier League manager who was pleased with the result was Arsenal's Mikel Arteta, having been ingrained at City during the alleged offences.
Arteta says City's actions on and off the pitch warrant their place back in Europe.
"There is no question about what happened," Pep Guardiola's former assistant said. "They completely deserved to be in the Champions League because what they have done on the pitch is unquestionable.
"The regulators have looked at it and have decided that they haven't done anything wrong so you have the two aspects that are really clear and transparent.
"They are going to be in the Champions League because they deserve it for what they have done on the pitch and what they have done outside of the pitch."