Chelsea are set to learn the outcome of their FA disciplinary hearing into 74 charges that were placed on the club, with offences relating to agents, intermediaries and third-party investment coming to light under the ownership of Roman Abramovich. The Blues self-reported the situation to the governing body to cooperate with the findings.
It came to light during the takeover of the club in 2022 by BlueCo, with Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali joining forces to complete the transaction. The alleged offences include reports of undeclared payments to agents and the use of unregistered intermediaries to complete transfers.
According to The Times, the disciplinary hearing from The FA is due to be concluded this week, which should see an outcome to the charges placed against the club. The possible punishment, if Chelsea are found to have broken the rules, could result in sporting sanctions, such as a points deduction.
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However, it's understood that Chelsea would appeal any sporting sanction, and are currently expecting a fine for the charges. As for former owner Abramovich and the former sporting director Marina Granovskaia, neither is currently involved in football, so they don't fall into The FA's jurisdiction.
The Blues revealed back in September that they would be working closely with The FA to ensure that they had all the necessary facts for the investigation. The club statement reads: "Chelsea FC is pleased to confirm that its engagement with The FA concerning matters that were self-reported by the club is now reaching a conclusion.
"The Club’s ownership group completed its purchase of the club on 30 May 2022. During a thorough due diligence process prior to completion of the purchase, the ownership group became aware of potentially incomplete financial reporting concerning historical transactions and other potential breaches of FA rules.
"Immediately upon the completion of the purchase, the Club self-reported these matters to all relevant regulators, including The FA. The Club has demonstrated unprecedented transparency during this process, including by giving comprehensive access to the Club’s files and historical data.
"We will continue working collaboratively with The FA to conclude this matter as swiftly as possible. We wish to place on record our gratitude to The FA for their engagement with the Club on this complex case, the focus of which has been on matters that took place over a decade ago."
Plenty of change has occurred in nearly four years of the Boehly-Eghbali era, with a new-look Chelsea coming out of the other side of the takeover. The Blues were once known for their ruthless nature in hiring and firing managers, while transfers were focused on signing a mixture of superstars and players for the future.
The club have since moved towards building what they view as a sustainable model of transfers, with a constant churn of signings and exits over recent windows. At times, Chelsea have been criticised for this method, as many questioned whether they could really find success with such a model.
However, with plenty of time and money put into the project, the squad is starting to shape up as one that can compete regularly at the top. The Blues sit fourth in the Premier League under Enzo Maresca, who guided the team towards a return to the Champions League, as well as a Europa Conference League trophy.
At times this season, Chelsea have been in the Premier League title conversation, showing progress to reach that point. The model itself is starting to fund transfers in a way that perfected the Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR), with sales capable of generating enough revenue to push through signings.
The west London club still managed to spend a whopping £296.5m in the summer - second only to Liverpool's record-breaking window - but made sales worth £314.4m, giving them a net spend of -£17.9m. It shows a system that is starting to work and a plan that has them on track to keep competing.
It remains to be seen whether that will change with the introduction of the Squad Cost Ratio (SCR) rules that will replace PSR in the coming seasons. However, it shows Chelsea are operating in a very different way to the Abramovich era.
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