Irish Daily Mail

NANTES DEMAND FEE FOR SALA

- By ADAM CRAFTON, MATT LAWTON and IAN HERBERT

CARDIFF CITY have been left stunned after Nantes demanded payment for the £15million transfer of Emiliano Sala, who is missing and presumed dead after his flight crashed in the English Channel on a journey from France to Wales. The Premier League club received a formal letter from Nantes on Tuesday asking for payment within 10 days. Cardiff’s first payment would ordinarily be due within seven days of the player signing, but the club do not intend to make any payments until investigat­ions into Sala’s disappeara­nce are concluded. However, Nantes made an email request last Thursday and followed it up with a formal written request. There is bewilderme­nt from those close to Sala that a legal dispute can be taking place while he is still missing. Yesterday, his mother, sister and brother were in Nantes awaiting news. A body has been located in the aircraft carrying Sala and pilot David Ibbotson, which went offradar on January 21, but the two families were still to be informed of the identity yesterday. The Air Accidents Investigat­ion Branch have been searching the English Channel for wreckage. An official investigat­ion into the crash, focusing on the pilot’s qualificat­ions and the condition of the plane, is likely to follow. The situation is complicate­d by Bordeaux being due 50 per cent of the £15m transfer under an agreement made when Sala joined Nantes in 2015. Last week, Bordeaux denied that they had invoiced Nantes for their share. When contacted by

Sportsmail to establish whether they intend to pursue their fee, Bordeaux did not respond. Cardiff are understood to be insured for up to £16m but the club may incur costs when it comes to covering the salary for the duration of Sala’s three-anda-half-year contract and the lost revenue. This would take the overall value of the transfer to around £25m. Nantes are responsibl­e for paying any intermedia­ries. In November, the club enlisted the services of Mercato Ltd, the business run by Mark McKay and his father Willie, who helped organise the doomed flight. Agents Bakari Sanogo and Baba Drame are also due cuts from the Nantes side of the deal. If the air investigat­ion is followed by involvemen­t from the police, it could be years before the disputes are resolved. In the fortnight following Sala’s disappeara­nce, much of the support for the family has come from his personal agent Meissa N’Diaye, who has worked with the French equivalent of the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n to raise money for the private search that located part of the aircraft on the seabed. When asked to detail what the club are doing to support the family, Nantes did not respond. The Argentine is understood to have been unhappy at Nantes for the past 18 months. His contract was due to expire next year and, despite public suggestion­s he would be offered a renewal, no offer was forthcomin­g. Attempts were made to sell Sala to Italy last summer and, in November, Nantes gave Mark McKay a mandate to secure a transfer by the end of the January transfer window. Sala was not keen on the transfer to Wales but feeling forced out at Nantes, the striker warmed to the move over the course of January.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Signing on: Sala and Cardiff CEO Ken Choo last month
GETTY IMAGES Signing on: Sala and Cardiff CEO Ken Choo last month

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