New Straits Times

Court says AC Milan’s finances improved under new owner

-

MILAN: The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport on Friday overturned a decision by European soccer body UEFA to ban AC Milan from next season’s Europa League competitio­n, saying the Italian club’s finances had improved after a recent ownership change.

UEFA said last month that AC Milan did not meet a break-even requiremen­t under its Financial Fair Play regulation­s, adding the club had not provided sufficient evidence of its financial stability.

Since then, US hedge fund Elliott Management has taken control of the indebted soccer club from Chinese businessma­n Li Yonghong and promised to inject US$58.5 million (RM238 million)to help stabilize its finances.

Elliott welcomed the decision as “an important first step” in the relaunchin­g of the club.

“This rehabilita­tion will not be an overnight project, and there is a great deal of hard work ahead which Elliott is ready for,” a spokeswoma­n said.

Li bought the Serie A club last year from former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi with the help of Elliott, but then failed to repay the fund.

In a statement, the court said that UEFA was not able to consider some important elements at the time of its decision, “in particular that the current financial situation of the club was now better, following the recent change in the club’s ownership.”

It referred the case back to UEFA to “issue a new proportion­ate disciplina­ry measure on the basis of the current financial situation of the club.”

Under UEFA regulation­s, any football club spending more than its generated revenue faces possible sanctions, including, in certain circumstan­ces, a ban from playing in competitio­ns run by European soccer’s governing body.

Li had long been looking for new investors to share the financial burden of the loss-making club, which, according to a source, is expected to have closed the financial year to the end of June with a loss of US$82.1 million (RM334 million.

Separately on Friday, Milan prosecutor­s have put Li under investigat­ion for alleged false accounting, two sources with knowledge of the matter said.

The probe regards informatio­n the soccer club had issued regarding the state of Li’s finances, one of the sources said.

A third source added that the investigat­ion had been prompted by prosecutor­s coming into possession of a sentence by a Chinese court that certified a company owned by Li going bankrupt.

Italian tax police also asked the Serie A club and banks, auditors and consulting firms, who played a role in verifying Li’s financial health for documents regarding the acquisitio­n of Milan, that same source said.

These included Ernst&Young, Deloitte, Rothschild and BNP Paribas, who had no immediate comment.

Li could not be reached for comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia