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UEFA Shares Debt Concern

 

ZURICH - UEFA shares the growing concern about spiralling debt in football and has set up a working party to investigate ways of controlling it, according to general secretary David Taylor.
Taylor was speaking a day after FA chairman David Triesman said that English clubs had amassed debts of around £3 billion, that transparency in the game “lies in an unmarked grave” and that even the biggest clubs were not immune from collapse.


“I was very pleased to see the statements from Lord Triesman and we also believe that the European Union shares many of our ideals about the self-regulation of sport in a free market,” Taylor said.
He told the Leaders in Football conference at Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge ground that a working party would meet for the first time next week to begin investigating the issue.


“This is an attempt to find greater financial stability, especially at a time when banks are failing. Governments might bail out banks but they are not going to bail out a football club,” he said.
“The current system needs to be looked at, it needs more transparency. We need to look at which areas we regulate to ensure the long-term stability of the clubs.


“It is not something that will happen overnight, we are still at the stage of investigating and developing solutions, but we are concerned about the longer term.”


Taylor said that UEFA was a long way from coming up with any concrete proposals but was likely to favour an extension or revision of its current licensing system whereby clubs have to satisfy various off-field criteria before being allowed to take part in Europe’s club competitions.

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