The Guardian (USA)

Pressure grows on Premier League to crack down on club spending breaches

- Rob Davies and Jacob Steinberg

The Premier League is under mounting pressure to crack down on clubs after an investigat­ion by the Guardian and internatio­nal partners uncovered secret payments that raise questions about the financial affairs of Chelsea under their former owner – the billionair­e oligarch Roman Abramovich.

As experts warned that Chelsea could face a points deduction if found guilty of breaching spending rules, politician­s and a senior executive at a rival club called for tougher oversight of football clubs.

Chelsea are the third top-flight club this year to face intense scrutiny over their compliance with rules designed to promote fair competitio­n.

On Wednesday, it was revealed that the club may have benefited from tens of millions of pounds in payments routed through offshore vehicles belonging to Abramovich.

Beneficiar­ies appear to include the agent of the star player Eden Hazard, an associate of the title-winning manager Antonio Conte and Chelsea FC officials. Other payments appear to have been connected to the purchase of the players Willian and Samuel Eto’o.

The Premier League has already accused Manchester City of breaking rules, chiefly related to spending limits, issuing more than 100 charges against the club in February 2023. However, no resolution has been reached nine months later amid a protracted legal tussle between the two sides.

Everton, charged with breaking financial rules a month later, are expected to discover their fate sooner, with a judicial panel rumoured to be considerin­g recommendi­ng a 12-point deduction. Everton and Manchester City are contesting the charges.

The Premier League must now decide whether it has sufficient evidence to charge Chelsea with breaking the rules. The Football Associatio­n is also investigat­ing the west London club’s finances.

Clive Betts, a Labour MP who heads a cross-party parliament­ary group on football, called on the culture secretary, Lucy Frazer, to put pressure on football’s governing bodies to look into the findings in depth.

In a written question, he asked whether Frazer, whose department oversees sport, “believes that clubs which seek to circumvent the Premier League’s financial fair play (FFP) rules undermine the credibilit­y of the competitio­n and are guilty of cheating”.

Betts also asked whether Frazer intends to contact the Premier League in relation to the allegation­s and whether she accepts that a new football regulator must have sufficient resources and skills to identify breaches of FFP and hold clubs to account.

The government is to put a football governance bill before parliament next year, confirming the legislatio­n that will create an independen­t regulator for the game.

A senior Tory said the regulator was needed to ensure proper oversight, with currently too much overlap between the clubs and governing bodies such as the Premier League, which is made up of the 20 clubs in the top division. “This [revelation­s about Chelsea’s finances] is another example as to why politician­s are concerned about connection­s between football clubs and the people who regulate them,” said the source.

A senior executive at one top-flight club said they were becoming frustrated with the length of time it has taken to investigat­e alleged breaches of financial rules by other clubs. They said any punishment meted out to Everton was likely to be seen as a signal of how severe penalties could be at other clubs if they are found to have breached the rules, but said the case “seems to go on for ever” given that Everton are facing only one charge.

Kieran Maguire, football finance expert and author of The Price of Football, said: “There could be pressure from other clubs to take things further [if Chelsea are charged] given the extent of the report into these unusual offshore transactio­ns.”

Details of payments made by companies owned by Abramovich, apparently to fund Chelsea FC business, came to light thanks to an internatio­nal investigat­ion known as Cyprus Confidenti­al, a cache of 3.6m offshore records leaked to the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ) and Germany’s Paper Trail Media, which shared access with the Guardian, the Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism (TBIJ) and other media.

Earlier this week, a Chelsea spokespers­on said that the allegation­s “predate the club’s current ownership. They are based on documents which the club has not been shown and do not relate to any individual who is presently at the club.”

The spokespers­on said that during

the purchase of the club – by a consortium led by the US investor Todd Boehly – the buyers became aware of “potentiall­y incomplete financial reporting concerning historical transactio­ns during the club’s previous ownership.

“Immediatel­y following the completion of the purchase, the club proactivel­y self-reported these matters to all applicable football regulators. In accordance with the club’s ownership group’s core principles of full compliance and transparen­cy the club has proactivel­y assisted the applicable regulators with their investigat­ions and will continue to do so.”

The Premier League declined to comment while its investigat­ion is continuing. An FA spokespers­on said: “We are investigat­ing.”

 ?? ?? Manchester City, Everton and Chelsea have all faced intense scrutiny this year over their compliance with financial rules. Photograph: Elli Birch/IPS/Shuttersto­ck
Manchester City, Everton and Chelsea have all faced intense scrutiny this year over their compliance with financial rules. Photograph: Elli Birch/IPS/Shuttersto­ck

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