OffsAIde
·2 aprile 2026
How new Premier League finance rules could shape Sunderland’s summer and beyond

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Yahoo sportsOffsAIde
·2 aprile 2026

Sunderland face the Premier League’s switch to Squad Cost Ratio this summer, shaping how they recruit. Florent Ghisolfi says they aim to strengthen without another overhaul, and sales are possible though there is no pressure to sell.
According to Sunderland Echo, SCR caps season-to-season first-team costs at 85% of revenue, or 70% for clubs in Europe, and factors a three-year average of net transfer profit or loss against book values.
Clubs agree projected revenue with the league in summer, setting the budget, then face a March review. Overspends under 30% bring fines and cut future headroom, while bigger breaches risk sporting sanctions.
The overhaul aims to simplify compliance and avoid legal rows. Sunderland are understood to have supported it, and a strong recruitment record plus a large fanbase could help if they establish themselves, while infrastructure and academy spending sits outside SCR.
It also strengthens the big six, whose commercial income dwarfs rivals, so establishing a foothold will be challenging. Exact SCR status is unclear because the latest accounts cover the Championship.
TV income can expect to rise by at least £100 million, probably nearer £120 million, lifting turnover from roughly £40 million to an estimated £170 million. Costs are climbing too, with wages and amortisation well beyond historic levels.
Profits from sales like Jobe Bellingham and Tommy Watson will fade from the three-year calculation. With amortisation rising, such as Chemsdine Talbi’s five-year deal at roughly £3 million a year, repeating last summer’s scale would likely require major sales.
Ghisolfi has indicated they would likely follow a modest, January-style window focused on younger players with resale value, with Xhaka and Mukiele exceptions. Stability is the aim, and though sales are not required short term, occasional departures appear inevitable to create room to invest.
Source: Sunderland Echo









































