Futbol Premier League 2024/25 Thread - v4: Isak wants OUT of Newcastle Edition ⚽️💫

Will we have a new thread before the end of the season?

  • Yes

    Votes: 6 24.0%
  • No

    Votes: 20 80.0%

  • Total voters
    25
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you are better off blowing that on those midget hookers you like and some beer
Dont you worry, going to buy a private jet or maybe a mega yacht with the cash from that bet. Travel all over the world while banging midget hookers.
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I bet they're proper rough, have a pork pie and a half a lager at half time :p
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Chelsea and Aston Villa are both set to receive penalties for breaching UEFA's financial rules - but La Liga giants Barcelona are facing tougher sanctions. The pair of Premier League clubs are expected to be fined by European football's governing body over first-time breaches.

Chelsea are said to have exceeded UEFA's limits on financial losses for last season, as they wouldn't allow the Blues to declare the income which came selling their women's team. It was sold to sister company Blueco 22 Midco Limited for a world-record £200million in a move which raised eyebrows.

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Unlike the Premier League however, UEFA don't let clubs declare income from selling assets to sister companies. Chelsea said in April that they'd 'entered into discussions regarding mitigating factors affecting their regulatory submissions'.

Villa too are understood to have breached the limits, according to the Times. UEFA allows teams to lose a maximum of €200m (£170m) over a three-year period. Deductions can be made by the club for spending on youth and women's teams as well as on their stadium and facilities.

Last year Villa were fined £52,000 for submitting their accounts late. It serves as another blow after Unai Emery's side narrowly missed out on qualifying for the Champions League.

Barcelona appear to be in deeper trouble though. Back in October the newly-crowned champions of Spain lost an appeal in the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), over a €500,000 (£420,000) fine from UEFA which was due to wrongly reporting profits. The panel concluded that the sanction was 'actually relatively mild'.

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The CAS ruling also revealed a warning that Barca are facing 'harsher' sanctions for another breach. 'The CFCB... highlights that a similar breach by the club in the 2023-24 monitoring process would constitute a case of recidivism, and would be addressed by the imposition of a harsher disciplinary measure on FC Barcelona,' the ruling stated.

 
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