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UEFA fines Chelsea $36.5M and Barcelona $17.7M for financial monitoring rules breaches

GENEVA (AP) — Chelsea was fined a total of 31 million euros ($36.5 million) for breaking financial monitoring rules by UEFA on Friday to hit a record sum for a European club penalized in a single season.
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FILE - Chelsea owner Todd Boehly looks out from the stands before the English Premier League soccer match between Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur at Stamford Bridge Stadium in London, Sunday, Aug. 14, 2022. (AP Photo/Ian Walton, File)

GENEVA (AP) — Chelsea was fined a total of 31 million euros ($36.5 million) for breaking financial monitoring rules by UEFA on Friday to hit a record sum for a European club penalized in a single season.

Barcelona also was ordered to pay 15 million euros ($17.7 million) for making excessive losses according to UEFA's complex evaluations of club accounts if they qualify for European competitions, designed to promote stability in the industry.

Both clubs were sanctioned over their financial accounts for 2024 and must pay tens of millions of more euros (dollars) in future seasons if they miss financial targets set by UEFA.

Chelsea was fined 20 million euros ($23.6 million) for failing to approach break-even and a further 11 million euros ($13 million) for spending more than a 80% set limit of its revenue on so-called “squad cost” such as transfers and wages.

The Premier League club had been under investigation for the 76.5 million pounds ($104.4 million) sale of two hotels between subsidiaries of Chelsea’s holding company, Blueco 22 Ltd. Chelsea has been owned since 2022 by United States businessman Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital.

Chelsea has consistently spent lavishly in the transfer market in the Boehly era.

Chelsea’s biggest fine matches the record 20 million euros ($23.6 million) sanction imposed in 2014 on Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain by UEFA.

Those were the first round of penalties in the system then called Financial Fair Play.

In 2023, during the first year of Boehly's ownership, Chelsea also paid UEFA a 10 million euros ($11.8 million) fine to settle irregularities committed while the club was owned by Roman Abramovich. The oligarch was forced to sell the club after Russia's military invasion of Ukraine.

Barcelona previously paid UEFA a 500,000 euros (590,000) fine in a 2023 case for misrepresenting income.

Both Chelsea and La Liga winner Barcelona have qualified for the Champions League next season which should earn both tens of millions of euros (dollars).

In other investigations settled on Friday, UEFA ordered Aston Villa to pay a total of 11 million euros ($13 million) for excessive spending during a season it played in Europe's third-tier Conference League. Villa played in the Champions League this season.

UEFA fined financially troubled French club Lyon 12.5 million euros ($14.7 million) with future fines conditional on meeting targets.

The club owned by American businessman John Textor is fighting an appeal case next week against being demoted from Ligue 1 amid its financial turmoil, and could yet be excluded by UEFA from the Europa League next season.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Graham Dunbar, The Associated Press

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