Paris St Germain’s appeal against UEFA’s decision to reopen an investigation into the Ligue 1 club’s finances has been upheld by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
PSG appealed to CAS in October after the chairman of the Club Financial Control Body, the independent committee which oversees UEFA’s financial fair play rules, decided to look into the French side’s books in September, despite his chief investigator closing the probe in June.
The runaway Ligue 1 leaders have been under UEFA’s microscope ever since they were bought by Qatar Sports Investments, a Doha-based fund with close links to the Qatari royal family, in 2011.
They and the Abu Dhabi-owned Manchester City were the first big clubs to test the FFP rules in 2014, with both teams being fined and forced to play with restricted squads in European competition for a season.
But questions about PSG’s compliance with Europe’s spending controls resurfaced in 2017, when they stunned football by splashing more than €400m on France teenager Kylian Mbappe and Brazil star Neymar.
That spree may have raised eyebrows but the investigation that was opened, closed, reopened and now closed again actually covers the financial year before those transfers.
In a statement, the Lausanne-based court said it was upholding PSG’s appeal because the CFCB’s adjudicatory chamber took too long to review the investigatory chamber’s original decision. According to UEFA rules, there is a 10-day limit for CFCB reviews and the PSG case took three months.
Describing the “challenged decision” as “untimely”, CAS said it must be “annulled”, which means the original decision to clear PSG is “final and binding”.
This reprieve, however, might be temporary, as the CFCB will be looking at the impact of the summer 2017 spending on PSG’s FFP calculation next and then there is the matter of the most recent set of Football Leaks revelations.
Confirmation of PSG’s appeal in November came a week after Der Spiegel published details of UEFA’s negotiations with the club the last time they were in FFP trouble.
The German magazine also revealed the extent to which UEFA’s FFP investigators believed PSG’s Qatari owners were trying to circumvent the rules by allegedly padding the club’s revenues with hugely inflated sponsorship deals.
PSG and their owners have consistently denied all claims that they have cheated.
Since their 2017 shopping spree, they have actually reined in their spending. Last summer they bought defenders Thilo Kehrer and Juan Bernat for €53m and sold Javier Pastore, Yuri Berchiche and Goncalo Guedes for €80m.
– Press Association
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