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Spending on transfers is just ridiculous year after year. Funny how Saudis are hated these days for shaking up market. But originally, PL clubs with spanish giants were main culprits why things are like they are in these days in footballing world. F*** hypocrites

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1 hour ago, Mazzy said:

West Ham fans got it rough this summer. After winning a European Cup they are about to have £130M come in for player sales and not have spent a single penny of it. 

 

Not only that, but they also are stuck with Moyes - i know he just won them something, but that's never happening again, and the football is eye-meltingly shit to watch - and now they have stories of behind the scenes being such a shit-storm, their players are all looking at the exit.

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2 hours ago, Mazzy said:

West Ham fans got it rough this summer. After winning a European Cup they are about to have £130M come in for player sales and not have spent a single penny of it. 

 

GOOD. I hope we smash them for 5 again in their lovely nets.

 

Life comes at you fast.

 

 

0_GettyImages-1250803654.webp

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Love a triple post.

 

I'm sure I've seen someone ask similar this summer but what's with the massive spike in 'personal terms agreed, now need clubs to come to agreement'?

 

Have they just completely given up on the concept of tapping up? Or are selling clubs genuinely more frequently agreeing to it so negotiations can happen simultaneously?

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5 minutes ago, Gawalls said:

Thought that had been banned - thought they’d limited it to 5 years from this summer?

Contract can be as long as you want, but they only count for 5 years in FFP calculations to avoid minimising the finances past that. 

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6 minutes ago, Gawalls said:

Thought that had been banned - thought they’d limited it to 5 years from this summer?

“Clubs will have a maximum of five years to amortise transfer fees in their accounts regardless of a player’s contract length following amendments to UEFA regulations.

Previous regulations had stated that transfer fees had to be paid off — amortised — over the duration of a player’s contract, however long that may be.

This enabled clubs to sign players on long contracts and spread out the impact of transfer spending over a longer time period.

The UEFA executive committee on Wednesday endorsed amendments to the organisation’s rules to “ensure equal treatment of all clubs and improve financial sustainability”.

The amendments will come into force from July 1 and will not be backdated to include transfers that have already taken place and contracts already signed.

The changes will therefore not impact Chelsea’s Financial Fair Play calculations following their extraordinary January transfer window. Mykhailo Mudryk’s €70million (£62m) fixed transfer fee will continue to be spread out over an eight-and-a-half-year period after the Ukraine international signed the longest contract in Premier Leaguehistory in January. The £106million paid for Enzo Fernandez has also is also being paid in instalments over an eight-year period after he signed a deal with the west London club until 2031.

Transfer fees will be able to be spread over an increased period as the result of a contract extension, but again this is limited to the maximum five-year period.

The UEFA executive committee has also endorsed amendments to regulations for player swap deals.

Under the amended regulation, clubs’ auditors will be responsible for confirming that requirements are being correctly applied and reporting any discrepancies. This aims to prevent swap deals being undertaken to artificially inflate transfer profits.”

 

https://theathletic.com/4647825/2023/06/28/uefa-amortisation-ffp-transfers/?amp=1

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7 minutes ago, Manxst said:

“Clubs will have a maximum of five years to amortise transfer fees in their accounts regardless of a player’s contract length following amendments to UEFA regulations.

Previous regulations had stated that transfer fees had to be paid off — amortised — over the duration of a player’s contract, however long that may be.

This enabled clubs to sign players on long contracts and spread out the impact of transfer spending over a longer time period.

The UEFA executive committee on Wednesday endorsed amendments to the organisation’s rules to “ensure equal treatment of all clubs and improve financial sustainability”.

The amendments will come into force from July 1 and will not be backdated to include transfers that have already taken place and contracts already signed.

The changes will therefore not impact Chelsea’s Financial Fair Play calculations following their extraordinary January transfer window. Mykhailo Mudryk’s €70million (£62m) fixed transfer fee will continue to be spread out over an eight-and-a-half-year period after the Ukraine international signed the longest contract in Premier Leaguehistory in January. The £106million paid for Enzo Fernandez has also is also being paid in instalments over an eight-year period after he signed a deal with the west London club until 2031.

Transfer fees will be able to be spread over an increased period as the result of a contract extension, but again this is limited to the maximum five-year period.

The UEFA executive committee has also endorsed amendments to regulations for player swap deals.

Under the amended regulation, clubs’ auditors will be responsible for confirming that requirements are being correctly applied and reporting any discrepancies. This aims to prevent swap deals being undertaken to artificially inflate transfer profits.”

 

https://theathletic.com/4647825/2023/06/28/uefa-amortisation-ffp-transfers/?amp=1

Thanks for the info

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