Chelsea are one of three Premier League clubs who could face scrutiny over the legality of their summer transfer business, with all 20 clubs having received a warning over what are described as âfraudulentâ deals.
The Telegraph reports that Chelsea, along with Aston Villa and Everton, are set to feel the heat over their recent activity in the transfer market.
The Premier League, it is stated, has sent an email to all clubs reminding them of their responsibilities and says it is looking for âissues of concernâ as to whether transfers are good faith âarmâs lengthâ deals over ÂŁ1 million.
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This comes about after claims that clubs have âswappedâ young players for extravagant sums in order to comply with the Premier Leagueâs Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR).
Chelsea, Villa and Everton, meanwhile, have been active in transferring players between one another.
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The Blues, for example, have signed Omari Kellyman from Aston Villa for ÂŁ19 million but sold Unai Emeryâs club Ian Maatsen for ÂŁ37.5m in a deal that was stressed as a separate transaction.
Similarly, Everton signed Villaâs Tim Iroegbunam for ÂŁ9m but sold the Birmingham side Lewis Dobbin for ÂŁ10m.
Such deals could theoretically help teams massage their financial figures because in football it is standard practise to put down the whole value of the sale in one financial year but to amortise any expense for the duration of the playerâs contract.
Fee vs Estimated Transfer Value (ETV)
Name | To | From | Fee (âŹm) | ETV (âŹm) |
Ian Maatsen | Aston Villa | Chelsea | 44.3 | 32.1 |
Omari Kellyman | Chelsea | Aston Villa | 22.5 | 0.8 |
Lewis Dobbin | Everton | Aston Villa | 11.8 | 2.6 |
Tim Iroegbunam | Aston Villa | Everton | 10.6 | 3.5 |
For example, signing one player for ÂŁ10m on a five-year deal goes down in a clubâs accounts as a ÂŁ2m investment in each of the next five years. But sell a player for ÂŁ10m and that is pure profit in the books. So one player going out at that value and another coming in instantly offers an ÂŁ8m profit.
This is important when it comes to PSR because Premier League clubs cannot make more than ÂŁ105m in losses over a rolling three-year period. Breach that and you get a penalty, as Everton and Nottingham Forest did last season as they were docked points.
What punishment could Chelsea, Villa and Everton receive?
The Premier League now appears to be investigating whether Chelsea, Aston Villa and Everton breached its section B.15, which requires clubs to act in âutmost good faithâ towards one another and the league.
It could be decided that these deals do not represent âfair market value (FMV)â, which is based on 18 factors, including the playerâs age, position, playing statistics, honours and injury history.
The Telegraph also states: âThe Premier League will assess the âfinancial state and relative bargaining positionâ of the clubs involved and âany urgent need for liquidityâ in the selling clubâ.
The Premier League has the capacity to demand a club returns a transfer fee, in full or partially, if it judges a fee has been inflated.