Advertisement
X

Italian Club Spezia Hit With 2-year Transfer Ban By FIFA

The case now looks to be heading for the Court of Arbitration for Sport where the club can ask for the punishment to be frozen pending a final verdict

American-owned Italian club Spezia was hit with a two-year transfer ban by FIFA on Friday because the previous owners broke transfer rules years before the sale of the team by recruiting young players from Africa. (More Football News)

FIFA said the case involved the Serie A club "bringing several Nigerian minors into Italy using a scheme aimed at circumventing (transfer of minor rules) as well as national immigration law."

Spezia said the allegations date from 2013 to 2018, and the ongoing FIFA investigation was “not properly disclosed” when the Platek family bought the club in February during its first season in the top league.

The club pledged to appeal against the ban on registering new players, which runs through the 2022-23 season, and paying FIFA a fine of 500,000 Swiss francs ($544,000).

"We are shocked by FIFA’s decision to hand our club this heavy transfer ban," club president Phil Platek said in a statement.

"The new ownership group and myself had no role in any alleged transgressions and strongly condemn every system which includes the transfer of minors," he said.

The case looks to be heading for the Court of Arbitration for Sport and the club can ask for the punishment to be frozen pending a final verdict.

That could allow Spezia to register new signings during the current transfer window that is open through August.

Spezia's previous owner Gabriele Volpi took over a bankrupt club in 2008 and oversaw promotions from the fifth tier into Serie A for the first time in the 2020-21 season.

FIFA said the Nigerian recruitment scheme involved two lower-tier clubs, USD Lavagnese 1919 and Valdivara 5 Terre, who "played an active role” and were also sanctioned Friday.

Both also were banned from registering new players for four successive transfer windows, and must pay fines of 4,000 Swiss francs ($4,400).

Spezia defied many predictions of relegation to place 15th in its debut Serie A season under coach Vincenzo Italiano, who was hired by Fiorentina last month.

Thiago Motta, the former Italy midfielder who won Champions League titles with Barcelona and Inter Milan, was appointed as coach this month.

The FIFA verdict now hugely complicates squad planning.

"I would like to reassure our fans that we will be appealing this ruling and taking measures to ensure our team remains competitive in years to come,” Platek said. (AP) 

Show comments
US @@@@@@@@@