According to The Times, UEFA are preparing to announce sanctions against ‘ten clubs who have breached FFP rules up to 2020-21’, including Juventus, Inter and Roma.

Inter and Roma negotiated potential sanctions with UEFA a few months ago, but according to the report, they are likely to be fined and get transfer restrictions.

Juventus, on the other hand, have refused to negotiate FFP sanctions with UEFA. They are still not part of the ECA and haven’t formally withdrawn from the Super League. Barcelona are in the same situation, while Real Madrid don’t risk any sanction.

The three European giants are still engaged in legal action with UEFA due to the breakaway European Super League.

Europe’s governing body could also punish PSG and Marseille, but differently from Inter and Roma, they may only be fined without facing transfer restrictions.

UEFA rules allow €30m losses over three years, but ‘ Covid-related losses and “healthy” spending on things such as women’s and academy football and depreciation can be written off against that,’ explains the Times.

From next season, UEFA will bring a new system with clubs limited to spending a part of their revenue on salaries, agents fees and transfers.

9 thought on “UEFA to announce sanctions against Juve, Inter and Roma over FFP”
  1. So they hurt teams from Europe that are trying to compete with the blood money English teams even though England isn’t in Europe anymore?

  2. Almost comical having these clowns in charge.

    PSG spent 400m on 2 players a few years ago. Imagine an Italian team getting away with that.

  3. Difference is, Qatar owns PSG and the French presidency. Saudi Arabia owns Newcastle and London City alongside UAE that owns Man C. Therefore they cannot be punished.
    Rules for thee but not for me.

  4. @Gino so has England been lifted up moved from Europe and placed into another continent!!!! Wow I didn’t know that was possible.

  5. What an absolute travesty, its plain to see that there are a number of clubs blatantly flaunting these rules but they insist on making a martyr out of us Italian clubs. AVETE ROTTO I C*GLI*NI!!!

  6. Gino England left the European Union they left a political/economic union. So they are still a European country.

    Not every country in Europe is a member of the EU.

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