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While FC Barcelona is on the brink, Chelsea hack to avoid UEFA and buy Enzo Fernandez

What Chelsea FC is doing to avoid UEFA sanctions and spend millions on transfers

By Hector Garcia

What Chelsea FC is doing to avoid UEFA sanctions and spend millions on transfers
What Chelsea FC is doing to avoid UEFA sanctions and spend millions on transfers
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Chelsea FC have been in a particularly unique situation in the current transfer market. It is that the English team has thrown the house out the window and spent more than 200 million dollars and it seems that they want to add 120 more for the signing of another young soccer star.

Mykhaylo Mudryk, Benoît Badiashile, Noni Madueke, Andrey Santos, David Datro Fofana, the loan of João Félix and Malo Gusto have been the players who have arrived this winter market, a transfer window in which more than 200 million euros have been spent euro. Now, according to Fabrizio Romano, the club is close to closing Enzo Fernandez from Benfica for 120 million euros.

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Clubs currently split the fees they pay for transfers between the contract years in which the relevant footballers are signed and split the transfer fee between each signing year. Example: If a club pays a soccer player $50 million and signs a contract for 5 seasons, the player's impact will be $10 million per year (marginal salary, which must also be added). That's how much Chelsea spend, so the financial "even game" doesn't stop them from spending as much. The players' contracts are proof of this since Burley became the owner of the club. Mudrik, who received 100 million euros, signed a contract for eight and a half seasons.

Will UEFA penalize Chelsea FC for spending so much?

The hack made by Chelsea has not pleased other teams, who have protested to UEFA about the actions of the English team. The European organization approved modifying the regulation so that amortizations of more than five years cannot be made, thus putting an end to Chelsea's 'trick', although this new normal will not come into force until next season. That is to say, Chelsea has a free hand in the current transfer market.

 


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