Premier League approve tougher ownership rules


Premier League approve tougher ownership rules

The 20 chairmen voted unanimously to support tougher rules relating to the takeover of top-flight clubs.


Premier League bosses have backed changes to club ownership rules that will make it easier to block potentially unscrupulous investors in the wake of controversies surrounding takeovers at Hull City and Southampton.

The move will have the effect of enhancing the League's ability to block new owners in a bid to preserve the integrity of the competition, which is watched by billions of people globally every season.

New "disqualifying events" in relation to the ownership test would include a failure to provide all relevant information, or the provision of false, misleading or inaccurate information about a prospective new owner's finances, according to the source.

For the first time, the Premier League's rules will also allow it to block a new owner where they have "engaged in conduct outside the UK that would constitute an offence… if such conduct had taken place in the UK, whether or not such conduct resulted in a conviction".

The changes to the Owners and Directors Test follow growing unease - both in football and in Westminster - about the influx of club owners who have often sought to keep details of their financial affairs beyond the scrutiny of the Premier League.

There have also been growing objections to the number of clubs being bought by Chinese backers amid suggestions that there is a degree of opacity surrounding the ultimate ownership of some of those investors.

Roughly three-quarters of the 20 Premier League clubs are foreign-owned, including new champions Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester United.

Aston Villa, Reading, Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Bromwich Albion are among the prominent English clubs now owned by Chinese shareholders.

Controversy erupted over an attempt by Dai Yongge and Hawken Xiu Li, his sister, to buy Hull City after a third party involved in the transaction insisted that he controlled the relevant funds necessary to undertake the deal.

It subsequently transpired that the finances were actually under the control of Mr Dai, with the Financial Times reporting earlier this year that a Premier League investigation into him had raised several "red flags" over his commercial background.

Mr Dai has since acquired Reading, who missed out on promotion to the Premier League in the Championship Play-Off Final when they lost to Huddersfield Town.

The Premier League's rules already permitted close scrutiny of the finances of club-owners whose business plans are deemed to be unsustainable by the Premier League.

Clubs are permitted to overspend their budgets by £105m over a three-year period, providing they can demonstrate the viability of their financial forecasts, or that directors and financiers are prepared to write off their debts.

The Premier League had previously made incremental changes to what was known as the 'Fit and Proper Person Test' in the decade since Alexandre Gaydamak's tenure at Portsmouth led to the club's financial ruin.


This is a converted blog, not a website, no video streaming or broadcasting is done from this server or location
copyright White Rat TV 2007-2019
Attention: Third parties may advertise their products and/or services on our website,we does not warrant the accuracy, adequacy or completeness of their contents.
Your dealings with such third parties are solely between you and such third parties and we shall not be liable
in any way for any loss or damage of any sort incurred by you.