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UEFA will apply strict rules on clubs

Friday, September 9, 2011

European soccer's governing body, UEFA will hold the championship prize money and imposed a ban on transfers if there is a ball club that did not meet the new financial regulations.

The main sanctions are ban to play in European tournaments but UEFA said the European Club Association (ECA) that the organization wanted the other penalties.

UEFA President Michel Platini has set financial regulations are worried that because of the amount of the debts of some big European clubs and that only 20% of the clubs that benefit.

The new regulations, the Financial Fair Play, is intended to football clubs using club budgets based on their income in a period of three years.


Clubs are allowed to have a loan in the maximum and club owners are permitted to lend funds to the club but not in the form of investment.

The new regulations will apply in full in the season 2013-2014.

"Good for UEFA to consider sanctions a better than usual punishment," said the director of Inter Milan Ernetsto Paolillo.

Irrational
"The clubs understand soccer rules, so we want to hear more about the application of sanctions," said Paolillo.

ECA chairman Karl Heinz Rummenigge said the organization's 201 members supported the proposal.

"Always buy, buying and buying is not rational," said Rummenigge, who is also director of the German club Bayern Munich.

"We signed an agreement FPP in 2009 and we are ready now. ECA clubs will help meet that criterion. This obligation," he said.

English club Manchester City who spend a lot of money to buy players spark a debate about the transfer of players among the panel of FPP.

Since purchased by the Abu Dhabi royal family members, three years ago, the City issued a large fund to buy players and many observers questioning how it can meet the expenditure for the financial regulations set out.

Manchester City recorded a huge loss since taken over by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan in 2008 with the figure £ 93 million in 2008-2009 and £ 121 million in 2009-2010.


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