Serie A: Eleven Italian clubs, including Juve and Naples, referred to sports justice

Italian football is experiencing new shocks. Eleven clubs, including Juventus, Naples and three other Serie A teams, have been referred to sports justice for accounting fraud for certain player transfers. The clubs concerned are accused of having “recorded capital gains and transfer rights for values ​​higher than those authorized” to obtain the national license, according to the statement of the Federation.

In addition to Juventus and Naples, the other three elite clubs are Sampdoria, Genoa and Empoli. The measure also targets two Serie B clubs (Parma and Pisa), two Lega Pro clubs (3rd division, Pescara and Pro Vercelli) and two that no longer exist, Novara and Chievo Verona, the FIGC said. The clubs involved are at risk of a fine. Some 60 individuals – leaders and representatives – are also being referred. They face sanctions that can lead to suspension.

A league

“Juve will be able to start a new cycle when Rabiot and Ramsey are gone”

YESTERDAY AT 1:27 PM

In addition to this investigation by the Federation’s disciplinary bodies, Juventus has been the target since November of an investigation by the Italian courts into capital gains made between 2019 and 2021. The most successful club in Italy is suspected of having communicated false information to investors and produced invoices for non-existent transactions, according to the Turin public prosecutor’s office. Several of its leaders, including President Andrea Agnelli, are directly targeted.

Rabiot’s mother heard

Many observers have been pointing out for years the abuse of a legal practice on the transfer market, aimed at carrying out “fake trades” between two clubs, i.e. cross-sales of players, sometimes overvalued. This limits the volume of money actually paid on both sides while allowing immediate recognition of any capital gains to boost financial performance.

Juve is also suspected of having concluded private salary agreements with certain footballers, which have not been communicated to investors. Several players have recently been auditioned, including Paulo Dybala or Federico Bernardeschi. On Friday, investigators heard from the mother and agent of Adrien Rabiot, according to several Italian media.

Regarding Naples, the main case examined by sports justice concerns the transfer of Nigerian Victor Osimhen from Lille in 2020, according to the daily Il Mattino. Napoli had indeed sold four unknown players to the French club at the same time, for an overall amount deemed by the press to bear little relation to the value of the interested parties.

A league

The late game between Inter and Bologna set for April 27

03/30/2022 At 4:05 PM

A league

“They break us”: Véronique Rabiot settles her accounts with the media

03/28/2022 At 07:13

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *