Coventry Telegraph

Bundesliga in the spotlight

- By JAMIE GARDNER sport@coventryte­legraph.net

SALARY cap proposals will be sent to clubs in League One and Two no later than Monday, it is understood.

Clubs in the English Football League are looking at a £200m financial hole by the end of September as a consequenc­e of the suspension of the league due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to the competitio­n’s chairman Rick Parry.

Moves to implement cost controls have been led by a working group, and it is believed the group is about to distribute proposals to clubs over what the caps should be.

Parry told the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport committee last week that a salary cap and other cost control measures were “absolutely essential”.

“There is a lot of debate going on about that at the moment.

“We have an imbalance in the distributi­on, we have the parachute payments which cause immense stress within the Championsh­ip so yes I do think the distributi­on model is a problem.

“Any model where wages are 106 per cent of turnover is ridiculous,” he said.

Dale Vince, the chairman of League Two side Forest Green, is in favour of the introducti­on of a cap and mentioned fixed amounts of £3.6 million for League One clubs and £2m for teams in League Two when speaking last month.

He said: “We can all see the problems every year, there are a couple of clubs that just about make it to the end of the season – or don’t – and go into administra­tion.

“A player wage cap would be a way to control that.

“The amount of money that gets spent by some clubs would then relieve the pressure on other clubs to match it – it becomes an arms race.

“You get the odd individual who just operates on the very edge of insolvency and legality.

“With a wage cap, people like that would be more constraine­d and less able to do real harm.”

Vince said at the time that he hoped a cap could be agreed to come into effect for the 2020-21 season.

“It’s something that can be agreed now.

“We’ve got this downtime to work on the details, and put it in place ready (for the new season).”

ALL eyes will be on the Bundesliga this weekend as it becomes the first major league to return to action, with Jadon Sancho-inspired Borussia Dortmund’s clash with rivals Schalke providing a mouthwater­ing restart.

After 66 days suspended due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the top flight will return in front of empty stands and millions of extra viewers glued to television­s across the world.

For those starved of their football fix, the Bundesliga will be a welcome distractio­n at a time of unease after the German Football League (DFL) managed to end a suspension that continues elsewhere across Europe. Rigorous hygiene protocols and regular testing have provided the platform for a return to action behind closed doors.

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