Premier League agree spending controls
Top-flight clubs will face a
points deduction if they breach
new spending controls , Premier
League chief executive Richard
Scudamore has confirmed. The 20
club chairmen agreed to two
significant controls - to limit
players' wage bills from next
season, and longer-term measures
that will restrict the amount of
losses clubs can make to £105m
over three years.
Clubs whose total wage bill is
more than £52m will only be
allowed to increase their wages
by £4m per season for the next
three years, though that cap does
not cover extra money coming in
from increases in commercial or
matchday income.
The effect of the financial
controls should prevent hugely
wealthy owners achieving the
almost-overnigh t success of
Chelsea and Manchester City. Any
club breaching the rules will
face tough sanctions - and
Scudamore said they would be
pushing for points deductions.
Scudamore told reporters: "As all
things in our rulebook you will
subject to a disciplinary
commission. The clubs understand
that if people break the £105m we
will look for the top-end
ultimate sanction range - a
points deduction. Normally we
stay silent on sanctions as the
commission has a free range but
clearly if there is a material
breach of that rule we will be
asking the commission to consider
top-end sanctions."
Scudamore said there would be an
"absolute prohibition" on clubs
reporting losses of more than
£105m over the next three years
with the first sanctions possible
in 2016. Of the 20 clubs in the
top flight, only Manchester City,
Chelsea and Liverpool have
reported losses of more than
£105m over the last three years,
according to the most up-to-date
published accounts.
Scudamore said that the measures
would mean it will take longer
for benefactor owners to achieve
success - but that it would still
be possible. "The balance we have
tried to strike is that a new
owner can still invest a decent
amount of money to improve their
club," he said. "But they are not
going to be throwing hundreds and
hundreds of millions in a very
short period of time.
"While it has worked for a couple
of clubs in the last 10 years,
and I am not critical of that, if
that's going to be done in the
future it's going to have to be
over a slightly longer term
without the huge losses being
made. I think at £105m you can
still build a very decent club
with substantial owner funding
but you have to do it over time,
you can't do it in a season."
Chelsea won the Premier League
two years after Roman
Abramovich's takeover, and
Manchester City's title success
came three years after Sheikh
Mansour's takeover. Any club
making any loss of over £5m a
year will have guarantee those
losses against the owner's
assets.
"In some ways that's the most
significant part, this is a
three-year rolling system of
secure funding - it's one year at
the moment," added Scudamore.
The ceiling when the wage
increase restrictions kick in
will be £52m next season, £56m
the following year and £60m in
2015-16. Only seven of the
current top-flight clubs would be
under that ceiling at the moment.
West Ham's co-owner David Gold
said that the proposals for
controls had received backing of
the majority of chairmen.
He said: "We have all voted and
it was overwhelmingly supported,
not by all the clubs - some are a
little concerned - but the vast
majority of the clubs voted in
favour. It's not a salary cap,
it's a restraint on over-
spending. If clubs increase their
revenues then they can increase
their spending. We have got
restraint, that's the important
thing. What's driving the whole
thing is we've got to avoid
another Portsmouth."
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