UEFA announces financial equity Review Results 8 clubs failed to pass
UEFA announced the results of the financial equity review, and eight clubs failed to pass
Paris were fined 65 million euros
UEFA officially announced the results of its financial equity review yesterday, A total of 19 clubs passed the examination, and another 8 clubs were fined for failing to pass the examination. The total fine was 0.172 billion euros.
UEFA said, including Dortmund, Chelsea, Barcelona, Basel, Berlin Union, Fenerbahce, Feyenoord, Leicester, Manchester City, Lyon, Rangers, Royal Betis, Antwerp, Seville, Lazio, Naples, in Trabzonspor, Wolfsburg and West Ham United had 19 clubs, which had passed the review of the first branch of the club’s financial control agency (hereinafter referred to as CFCB).
However, UEFA reminded these clubs that they could meet the requirements of balance of payments technically through review because they took emergency measures for the new championship or benefited from the positive revenue and expenditure in balance in history.
Since 2023, these factors will no longer be considered. These clubs are further required to provide additional financial information and will be closely watched by UEFA for a period of time thereafter.
The eight clubs that failed to pass Uefa’s financial fairness review are: AC Milan, Inter Milan, Juventus, Rome, Paris Saint Germain, Monaco, Marseille and Besiktas. The top four are all from Serie A, the last one is the tuchao club, and the remaining three are the French club. It can be seen that Serie A and French club are the “hardest hit areas”.
Among them, Greater Paris was fined the most, 65 million euros; Rome, Inter Milan, Juventus and AC Milan were fined 35 million euros, 26 million euros, 23 million euros and 15 million euros respectively; the remaining three fines are between 4 million euros and 2 million euros.
UEFA said that the above eight clubs did not meet the financial break-even requirements, and 15% of their fines would be paid directly, the remaining 85 percent will be deducted from the club’s participation in UEFA club competitions or any other payments directly paid by Uefa.
Reporter Xu Yangyang