The 23 clubs that face losing Champions League and Europa
League prize money for breaking UEFA's financial fair play standards will learn
their fate early next month.
The clubs, including defending
Europa League champion Atletico Madrid and Champions League contender Malaga,
have until October 15 to convince UEFA they have plans to pay a combined €30
million ($39 million) in unpaid players' wages, transfer fees and social taxes
for the period ending September 30.
UEFA's director of club licensing
Andrea Traverso told The Associated Press on Thursday that his
department will then refer cases of the clubs that are still behind to an
independent judicial body chaired by former Belgian Prime Minister Jean-Luc
Dehaene, which will meet in early November.
Traverso was in Rome for a workshop
with national federations. Since July 2011, UEFA has monitored the accounts of
all clubs that qualified for the Champions League and Europa League. Clubs are
required to aim toward breaking even on their football-related business, and
the worst offenders face being barred from the competitions from the 2014-15
season onward.
However, clubs face immediate
penalties for breaking rules relating to "overdue payables."
"It's not just a project
anymore, we're into the application phase now and it has the support of the
entire football family," Traverso said.
European club debts were down 47 per
cent in the 2011-12 season compared to the year before.
"That means the clubs are
taking this seriously," Traverso said.
Atletico and Malaga headlined the
names of those who fell behind making payments at a June 30 deadline to enter
the competitions. Sporting Lisbon and Fenerbahce are also being investigated.
Last season, UEFA paid Atletico
€10.5 million ($13.6 million) in prize money funded by Europa League television
rights and sponsorship deals. Malaga can expect to earn at least €20 million
($25.9 million) from the Champions League even if it fails to advance to the
last-16 knockout round.
After two matches, Malaga leads
Group C of the Champions League with a full six points, two points ahead of AC
Milan, which sold €63 million ($82 million) worth of players in the offseason —
headlined by the moves of Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Thiago Motta to Paris
Saint-Germain.
UEFA had already excluded AEK Athens
of Greece, Gyor of Hungary and Besiktas of Turkey from this season's Europa
League. Other sanctions UEFA can apply to its competitions include ruling newly
signed players ineligible and restricting a club's squad size.
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