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La Liga rejects Neymar payment over PSG move

August 03, 2017
French President Emmanuel Macron greets while PSG President Nasser Al-Khelaifi, left, stands behind him as he attends at a charity holiday program event in Moisson, east of Paris, France, Thursday. Macron is welcoming the likely arrival of Brazilian soccer star Neymar at Paris-Saint Germain in a record $262 million deal. — AP
French President Emmanuel Macron greets while PSG President Nasser Al-Khelaifi, left, stands behind him as he attends at a charity holiday program event in Moisson, east of Paris, France, Thursday. Macron is welcoming the likely arrival of Brazilian soccer star Neymar at Paris-Saint Germain in a record $262 million deal. — AP

MADRID — Spain's La Liga on Thursday rejected payment of a record-breaking release clause that would allow Neymar to leave Barcelona for Paris St Germain, a source from the national soccer league said.

A group of lawyers representing Brazilian Neymar visited La Liga in Madrid on Thursday to try to settle the transfer and pay the 222 million-euro ($263 million) break fee. It was not immediately clear whether La Liga's refusal to accept payment would put the brakes on the transfer.

PSG's president Nasser Al-Khelaifi declined to comment when asked about the latest development during a visit to a children's holiday camp outside Paris where France president Emmanuel Macron was also in attendance.

"I'm here today on behalf of PSG's foundation," Qatari businessman Al-Khelaifi said. Spain's Marca newspaper reported that Neymar and his advisers would turn to FIFA, world soccer's governing body, requesting a provisional transfer to PSG.

The striker's agent Wagner Ribeiro had said on Wednesday that the French club was ready to foot the bill so that Neymar could be presented at PSG at the weekend.

La Liga president, Javier Tebas, had already warned in an interview that Spain's league would not accept payment by PSG to trigger the release clause, saying it was potentially in breach of UEFA Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules.

Under those rules, a club's wage bill must not exceed 70 percent of its revenue. UEFA, European football's governing body, told Reuters on Wednesday that had been no complaint received so far about PSG in this respect, adding that it would not block any potential deal in advance.

The league's refusal does not stop Neymar's exit from Barcelona as the money can be paid directly to the club. The payment of the clause would shatter the previous world record transfer of 105 million euros (then $116 million) that Manchester United paid for France midfielder Paul Pogba last year.

The Spanish league official said that Juan de Dios Crespo, a Spanish lawyer representing Neymar, arrived at the league offices accompanied by three Brazilians with the intention of depositing the buyout clause. Television images showed Neymar's representatives remaining tightlipped as they worked their way through a crowd of journalists upon entering and leaving the league offices in Madrid.

Last year, Neymar signed a new contract with Barcelona that tied him to the Catalan club through 2021. Tebas told Spanish sports daily AS on Wednesday that he believes PSG breaks UEFA's FFP rules. "We won't accept the money from a club like PSG which doesn't belong to la Liga ... and especially when it is breaking laws and rules," Tebas told AS, claiming "the case of PSG is a clear example of financial doping by a state-supported club."

Macron, meanwhile, took the opportunity to tell PSG's boss "congratulations, I understand there's been some good news" regarding Neymar's imminent arrival. France's budget minister also had reason to celebrate. Gerald Darmanin told France-Inter radio "It's better that this football player pays his taxes in France than elsewhere."

Also, Jose Mourinho and Juergen Klopp's conflicting views on Neymar's imminent move from Barcelona to Paris St Germain offer an insight into how the 222 million euro ($263 million) deal has divided opinion across football.

Mourinho, who sanctioned Paul Pogba's world record 105 million euro move from Juventus to Manchester United last year, said PSG were not paying over the odds given Neymar's quality, but he is concerned by the financial "consequences".

"When we paid that amount for Paul, I said that it was not expensive," United manager Mourinho told British media. "Expensive are the ones who get into a certain level without a certain quality... For 200 million pounds ($264.46 million), I don't think (Neymar) is expensive.

"I think he's expensive in the fact that now you are going to have more players at 100 million pounds, you are going have more players at 80 million and more players at 60 million. And I think that's the problem. Neymar is one of the best players in the world, commercially he is very strong and for sure PSG thought about it. So I think the problem is not Neymar, I think the problem is the consequences of Neymar."

Liverpool manager Klopp criticized the deal and questioned the effectiveness of UEFA's Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules, which stipulate that a club's wage bill must not exceed 70 percent of its revenue. "There are clubs that can pay fees like that — Manchester City and PSG. Everyone knows that," Klopp told reporters in Munich on Wednesday.

"I thought fair play was made so that situations like that can't happen. That's more of a suggestion than a real rule. I don't understand that. I don't know how it happens," Klopp added. — Agencies


August 03, 2017
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