PSG could be hit by UEFA sanctions for Financial Fair Play breaches

Updated 11 April 2018
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PSG could be hit by UEFA sanctions for Financial Fair Play breaches

  • Qatar-owned club accused of "overstating" sponsorship contracts by €200 million
  • Sanctions could include being barred from the Champions League

Free-spending French giants Paris St.Germain are set to face UEFA sanctions for breaches of Financial Fair Play (FFP), according to a report by the Financial Times that claims the French capital club “overstated” sponsorship contracts to the tune of €200 million ($247 million).


Bankrolled by Qatari owners, PSG smashed the world transfer record by signing Brazilian star Neymar for €222 million last August and committed to completing another €180-million- deal for French teenage sensation Kylian Mbappe this summer when agreeing a one-year loan deal from Monaco a few weeks later.


Introduced by European football’s governing body in 2010, FFP limits clubs to making losses of no more than €30m over three seasons.


“Preliminary investigations show that sponsorship contracts worth about €200 million have been ‘overstated’ at the Qatari-owned football club,” said the Financial Times report.


“Unless UEFA can be persuaded to assign a higher value to the sponsorship deals, the French club is on course to breach FFP rules, according to people familiar with the process.”
UEFA opened an investigation into PSG’s compliance with FFP just weeks after the deals for Neymar and Mbappe were completed.


“The investigation will focus on the compliance of the club with the break-even requirement, particularly in light of its recent transfer activity,” said a UEFA statement in September.
PSG have already fallen foul of FFP. The club was fined €60 million in prize money earned from playing in the Champions League in 2014.


Back then UEFA deemed PSG had artificially inflated their income using a sponsorship deal with another Qatari state-owned enterprise, the Qatar Tourism Authority.


“The contract between PSG and the Qatar Tourism Authority has been carefully considered and a fair value, significantly below that submitted by the club, has been assigned,” UEFA ruled at the time.


The sanctions could be far tougher for a second offense, with the possibility that PSG could even be excluded from competing in the Champions League unless they balance their accounts by the end of the club’s financial year in June.


With Neymar sidelined by injury, PSG’s attempts to win the Champions League for a first time fell flat again last month as they were dumped out 5-2 on aggregate by reigning champions Real Madrid in the last 16.


Johnson, Castle shine as Spurs rout Thunder 130-110

Updated 13 sec ago
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Johnson, Castle shine as Spurs rout Thunder 130-110

  • The Thunder fell to 26-4 after the loss, while the Spurs improved to 22-7 to stay in second place in the West
  • Anthony Edwards rattled in 38 points as the Minnesota Timberwolves took down the New York Knicks 115-104 in Minneapolis

LOS ANGELES: Keldon Johnson and Stephon Castle combined for 49 points as the San Antonio Spurs produced a second-half scoring blitz to rout the NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder 130-110 on Tuesday.

Ten days after eliminating the Thunder from the NBA Cup semifinals, the Spurs once again proved too strong for the Western Conference leaders as they powered to their seventh straight victory in San Antonio.

Starting shooting guard Castle finished with 24 points including four three-pointers but the key contribution came from Johnson, who added 25 off the bench including five threes.

The Thunder fell to 26-4 after the loss, while the Spurs improved to 22-7 to stay in second place in the West.

San Antonio’s Victor Wembanyama finished with 12 points while reigning NBA Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led the Thunder scoring with 33 points.

“It shows how serious we are — we’ve got the same aspirations that they have, we just want to come out and compete every time we play them,” said Castle, who poured in 10 of his 24 points during the fourth quarter in which the Spurs outscored the Thunder 43-28.

The Denver Nuggets meanwhile missed the chance to close the gap on Oklahoma City after losing a thrilling duel 131-130 against the Dallas Mavericks on the road in Texas.

Mavericks prodigy Cooper Flagg once again stole the show, with the gifted 19-year-old No.1 draft pick scoring a game high 33 points with nine rebounds and nine assists.

Flagg’s performance was backed by 31 points from Anthony Davis as Dallas outdueled Nuggets duo Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray, who accounted for 60 Denver points.

The Nuggets almost snatched victory at the buzzer, but Peyton Watson’s wide open three-point attempt bounced out after hitting the rim.

“We’re just coming together, trying to have each other’s backs,” Flagg said. “Obviously Jamal and (Jokic) had it going — so we were just trying to take those guys away and make somebody else beat us.”

Dallas improved to 12-19 while the Nuggets slipped to 21-8 in the West.

Flagg, meanwhile, took encouragement from another hard-fought win by the Mavs, who last week took down the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons.

“We’re learning from all of these experiences,” Flagg said. “You know we’ve been in a lot of really close games, so just trying to take stuff from those games and learn from it and get better.”

Elsewhere on Tuesday, Anthony Edwards rattled in 38 points as the Minnesota Timberwolves took down the New York Knicks 115-104 in Minneapolis.

Edwards knocked down four three-pointers while teammate Julius Randle added 25 points as the Wolves eclipsed a 40-point performance from Karl-Anthony Towns.

Knicks star Jalen Brunson, who scored 47 points in Sunday’s win over Miami, missed the game with a right ankle problem.