Inside the fight to comply with the Premier League's PSR rules
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작성자 Glenna Waring 댓글 0건 조회 6회 작성일 24-09-18 08:24본문
For two years now, those on the inside of Newcastle have repeatedly urged: ‘PSR is real.'
When they then spent £63million on Alexander Isak, £45million on Anthony Gordon and £52million on Sandro Tonali, you wondered if it was a phoney insistence designed to drive down asking prices and expectation.
On Saturday afternoon, Profit and Sustainability Rules at Newcastle United felt very real. There was a £60million hole in the Buy Cash App Accounts, a possible 10-point deduction looming and 24 hours to solve it all before the PSR deadline of June 30. A transfer window within a transfer window, club chiefs are calling it.
The previous day, Mail Sport was told that talks were taking place between Newcastle and Liverpool over the sale of Gordon. This was a notion so unbelievable that it was not until the following morning that we broke the story, only then certain that Newcastle were prepared to trade one of their most prized assets. It was described to us as ‘the nuclear option'.
Would it not be better keeping Gordon and just taking the points deduction? No, we were told. Newcastle were determined to comply with PSR, even if that meant reluctantly selling a player so popular with supporters that it risked mass protest.
Complying with the Premier League's Profit and Sustainability Rules has been a very real problem for Newcastle already this summer, with a £60million hole in the accounts to solve
Newcastle were forced to consider the 'nuclear option' of selling star man and fan favourite Anthony Gordon to Liverpool, with 24 hours to solve it all before the PSR deadline on June 30
Teams that fail to comply with the Premier League's PSR rules could face a 10-point deduction
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When they then spent £63million on Alexander Isak, £45million on Anthony Gordon and £52million on Sandro Tonali, you wondered if it was a phoney insistence designed to drive down asking prices and expectation.
On Saturday afternoon, Profit and Sustainability Rules at Newcastle United felt very real. There was a £60million hole in the Buy Cash App Accounts, a possible 10-point deduction looming and 24 hours to solve it all before the PSR deadline of June 30. A transfer window within a transfer window, club chiefs are calling it.
The previous day, Mail Sport was told that talks were taking place between Newcastle and Liverpool over the sale of Gordon. This was a notion so unbelievable that it was not until the following morning that we broke the story, only then certain that Newcastle were prepared to trade one of their most prized assets. It was described to us as ‘the nuclear option'.
Would it not be better keeping Gordon and just taking the points deduction? No, we were told. Newcastle were determined to comply with PSR, even if that meant reluctantly selling a player so popular with supporters that it risked mass protest.
Complying with the Premier League's Profit and Sustainability Rules has been a very real problem for Newcastle already this summer, with a £60million hole in the accounts to solve
Newcastle were forced to consider the 'nuclear option' of selling star man and fan favourite Anthony Gordon to Liverpool, with 24 hours to solve it all before the PSR deadline on June 30
Teams that fail to comply with the Premier League's PSR rules could face a 10-point deduction
Podcast All episodes
PODCAST: Are the England team buying into Southgate's style of play?
PODCAST: Is Martinez 'spineless' over Cristiano Ronaldo management?
EUROS DAILY: Do you love or loathe 'main character' Cristiano Ronaldo?
'England don't look like a team, they've got away with one again'
PODCAST: Time for England to step it up as judgement day arrives
Play on Apple Spotify
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