The Borneo Post (Sabah)

PSG to fall foul of UEFA’s FFP investigat­ion — report

-

PARIS, France: Freespendi­ng French giants Paris Saint-Germain are set to face UEFA sanctions for breaches of Financial Fair Play (FFP), according to a report by the British Financial Times on Wednesday that claims PSG “overstated” sponsorshi­p contracts to the tune of 200 million euros.

Bankrolled by Qatari owners, PSG smashed the world transfer record by signing Brazilian star Neymar for 222 million euros ($264 million) in August and committed to completing another 180 million-euro deal for French teenage sensation Kylian Mbappe this summer when agreeing a one-year loan deal from Monaco a few weeks later.

Introduced by European football’s governing body in 2010, FFP limits clubs to making losses of no more than 30 million euros over three seasons.

“Preliminar­y investigat­ions show that sponsorshi­p contracts worth about 200 million euros have been ‘overstated’ at the Qatari-owned football club,” said the Financial Times report.

“Unless UEFA can be persuaded to assign a higher value to the sponsorshi­p deals, the French club is on course to breach FFP rules, according to people familiar with the process.”

PSG issued a response to the report in a statement on Wednesday evening in which they hit out at “erroneous informatio­n... directed against the club in the British media”.

The statement added: “The procedure is ongoing. Paris Saint-Germain are in permanent contact with representa­tives from UEFA and will appear with complete equanimity before European football’s governing body on April 20.”

UEFA opened an investigat­ion into PSG’s compliance with FFP just weeks after the deals for Neymar and Mbappe were completed.

“The investigat­ion will focus on the compliance of the club with the break-even requiremen­t, particular­ly in light of its recent transfer activity,” said a UEFA statement in September.

PSG have already fallen foul of FFP. The club were fined 60 million euros in prize money earned from playing in the Champions League in 2014.

Back then UEFA deemed PSG had artificial­ly inflated their income using a sponsorshi­p deal with another Qatari state-owned enterprise, the Qatar Tourism Authority.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia