Football Today
·18 de marzo de 2026
Chelsea punishment suggests Man City have little to worry about with their 115 charges

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Yahoo sportsFootball Today
·18 de marzo de 2026

Chelsea are in the news not only for their humiliating Champions League exit to Paris Saint-Germain, but also for the Premier League’s damning verdict on their rule breaches.
They were found guilty of more than 30 breaches, amounting to at least £47 million in off-book payments tied to deals involving players such as Eden Hazard, Willian, David Luiz and Nemanja Matic.
The Premier League handed Chelsea a £10.75m fine and a suspended transfer ban.
These wrongdoings were not one-offs but calculated breaches carried out over an eight-year period under former owner Roman Abramovich.
However, the league adopted a lenient stance, largely because Chelsea’s new Clearlake ownership self-reported the issues and cooperated fully with the investigation.
The fine is little more than a minor inconvenience, especially given that the owners have already set aside £150 million to cover liabilities from the Abramovich era.
The much-talked-about transfer ban is effectively toothless, only set to be activated if Chelsea commit further breaches within the next two years.
This approach stands in stark contrast to the league’s harsher punishments for Leicester City, Nottingham Forest and Everton, who were hit with points deductions for breaches of financial rules.
Unsurprisingly, this verdict will fuel optimism within Manchester City, who are still awaiting the outcome of their case involving 115 alleged financial breaches.
City have denied any wrongdoing and are contesting the charges, a different stance from Chelsea, largely due to their unchanged ownership.
Their legal team will feel increasingly confident that financial penalties, rather than severe sporting sanctions, could be the most likely outcome even in the worst-case scenario.
This would strengthen their resolve to challenge any potential points deductions or title-stripping measures.
Such an outcome would represent a deeply troubling precedent for the game, potentially leaving many clubs feeling a sense of injustice and imbalance.
Chelsea and Man City have enjoyed immense success over the past decade. However, if that success has been aided by financial rule breaches, serious consequences shouls follow.
Football’s integrity demands that clubs cannot simply write off violations with fines that barely make a dent in their finances.
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