By Daily Sports Nigeria on April 8, 2022
UEFA on Thursday approved new licensing and “sustainability” regulations to replace its existing Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules, allowing European clubs to make bigger losses than before while bringing in caps on spending on wages and transfers.
As expected, European football’s governing body decided to overhaul the FFP rules that were introduced in 2010 in order to reduce spiralling club debts across the continent.
FFP’s limitations had been exposed by the emergence of state-held superpowers like Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain, while huge losses incurred by the coronavirus pandemic left poorer clubs with little room for manoeuvre.
“The biggest innovation will be the introduction of a squad cost rule to bring better cost control in relation to player wages and transfer costs,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin announced following a meeting of the body’s executive committee.
UEFA will now allow clubs to report losses of 60 million euros ($65.5m) over three years rather than 30 million euros previously, and the permitted figure will even reach 90 million euros for a club “in good financial health”.
However, that relaxation of the rules is combined with the new ceilings on wage spending.
There was never any possibility of bringing in a specific salary cap like in North American sports because UEFA has 55 member countries and must contend with European Union and national labour and competition laws.
Yet under UEFA’s new regulations clubs will be forced to limit spending on player and staff wages, transfers and agents fees to 70 percent of total revenues by 2025/26.
The ceiling will drop as current contracts expire: 90 percent of club income in 2023/24, followed by 80 percent the season after and then 70 percent.
“Before the pandemic, the average ratio was under 70 percent,” said Andrea Traverso, UEFA’s director of financial sustainability.
Then the health crisis led to losses over two seasons of about seven billion euros, causing that ratio to rise.
Financial and sporting penalties
Ceferin said breaches of the new rules “will result in predefined financial penalties and sporting measures”.
The size of the fines will depend on the extent to which clubs have crossed the threshold, with that money then redistributed among the well-behaved — in line with the idea of a “luxury tax” championed in the past by Ceferin.
Serious or repeated breaches will lead to sporting punishments, with Traverso saying these could range from bans on using certain players and limits on squad sizes, to points deductions in the new-look Champions League group phase to be introduced from 2024.
He added that discussions are ongoing about the possibility of teams being demoted from one European competition to another, for example from the Champions League to the Europa League.
The fate of FFP in its existing guise was sealed when Manchester City successfully appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in 2020 to have a two-year ban from European competition overturned.
Abu Dhabi-owned City had been accused of deliberately inflating the value of income from Emirati sponsors Etisalat and Etihad Airways to meet FFP regulations.
State-owned clubs such as City and Qatar-backed PSG may still find themselves in a position to spend far more than their rivals, despite the new 70 percent rule.
Meanwhile, traditional giants like Barcelona and Juventus — two of the main backers of the failed European Super League project — could see their ambitions still restricted by the need to reduce debts.
The new regulations come in at a time when elite-level football is dominated by a smaller and more select group of clubs than ever, but Traverso said improving competitive balance required more than just financial measures.
Now that UEFA has announced its new budgetary rules after months of consultations, he said the body was “going to open a new chapter and move on to other measures”.
Source The Guardian Nigeria
Posted April 8, 2022
You may also like...
Tiger Roars Into Contention For Record 83rd US...
Liverpool Beat Wolves To Return To Revive Top...
Adesanya sends cryptic message to Boniface
Nigerian born Kayode hopeful to play for Sierra...
Ribery grabs brace as Bayern Munich beat Eintracht...
We’ll Never Forget You, Hoeness Says As Bayern...

GroupE THOP appoints three Distinguished Non-executive Directors to strengthen Governance and strategic ambition
Super Eagles Camp Opens Nov. 10 in Rabat Ahead of 2026 World Cup Playoffs
Real Madrid, Super League seek over $4bn in damages from UEFA
Juventus appoint former Italy manager Spalletti
Barca track Osimhen to replace Lewandowski
Do Liverpool fans think Slot is under pressure?
Norrie loses to Vacherot after shocking Alcaraz
Maresca slams Delap’s ‘foolish’ red card in Chelsea EFL Cup win
Brentford’s Kayode sparks Eagles call-up
Team Nigeria gear up for Saudi Boxing Games
World Athletics grants label to Abuja Half Marathon
Lookman opens 2025/26 goal account
Rangers International going, going . . . (63,293 views)
Amaju Pinnick: A cat with nine lives (54,502 views)
Second Term: Amaju Pinnick, Other NFF Heavyweights Home to Roost •How Pinnick Broke the Jinx (52,456 views)
Current issues in Nigerian sports: Matters arising (52,083 views)
Sports Development: Zenith Bank on the zenith (52,074 views)
Missing $150,000 IAAF Grant: Solomon Dalung’s Hide and Seek game (52,009 views)
Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje’s solid footprints, commitment to sports development in Kano State (51,840 views)
NFF Presidency: Pinnick, Maigari, Ogunjobi, Okoye in Battle for Supremacy (51,424 views)
Olopade, BET9A wave of revolution in NNL (50,537 views)
Commonwealth Games 2018: Shame of Muhammadu Buhari, Solomon Dalung (49,105 views)
Ibrahimovic’s Man U exit: Whose decision is it? And in whose interest? (47,513 views)
John Mikel Obi: Segun Odegbami’s Outrageous Call! (46,989 views)