Premier League clubs to curb salaries and implement financial controls including points deduction for over-spending.
English
 Premier League clubs agreed Thursday to restrain spiralling player 
salaries and rapid spending through financial controls that will see 
rule breakers face heavy point deductions.
The move, which is designed to ensure that the
 expected $8 billion being generated by a new television rights deal 
isn't frittered away, comes days after UEFA warned that escalating 
player costs were jeopardising the future of clubs in Europe.
Teams with wage bills exceeding $82m will only
 be able to increase them by $6m per season for the next three years if 
the rise is funded through TV revenue.
And clubs will only be able to record a loss 
of $165m from 2013-16 - a rule Chelsea, Manchester City and Liverpool 
would have breached recently if it was already in place.
Points deductions
The regulations are more lax than UEFA's 
Financial Fair Play rules, which are forcing teams entering European 
competitions to eventually make teams break even on their 
football-related business.
"The clubs understand that if people break the
 105 million pounds [$165m] we will be looking for the top-end ultimate 
sanction range, a points deduction,'' Premier League chief executive 
Richard Scudamore said.
Scudamore said the regulations will prevent 
teams emulating Chelsea and Manchester City by embarking on 
turbo-charged spending sprees under new ownerships to quickly win 
silverware.
"You can still build a very decent club with 
substantial owner funding that over time can challenge anybody but ... 
it's just going to mean doing that is going to take a few years longer, 
which is not at all a bad thing,'' Scudamore said.
Scudamore believes that the spending by Chelsea and City has contributed to wages rising across the league.
Player costs at City hit $315 million last 
season as the team won the English title for the first time in 44 years 
after investment of about $1 billion since being taken over by Abu Dhabi
 owner Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan three years 
earlier.
Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich had to fork out
 $269m last season on salaries as the team won the Champions League. The
 west London club won the Premier League in 2005, two years after 
Abramovich's took over and started spending heavily to strengthen the 
squad.
Such rapid spending will be curtailed by the new regulations approved by at least 14 of the 20 Premier League clubs on Thursday.
"If a new owner or even an existing owner with
 a change in attitude or a change in fortunes ... what they aren't going
 to be doing is throwing 100s of millions at it in a very short period 
of time,'' Scudamore said.
"If that's going to be done in future, it's 
going to have to be done in a slightly longer term, slightly more 
controlled way without the huge losses being made.''
But Scudamore said it is "harder and harder to
 envisage (someone) buying a club that is not currently successful and 
making them title contenders.''
"The fact Chelsea and Man City have done what they have done makes it harder and harder for anyone else to come in,'' he added.
"Because you've got to come in and climb over far more clubs than you used to have to climb over a couple of years ago.''
The rules are designed to prevent a repeat of 
the financial meltdown at Portsmouth, which became the first Premier 
League club to enter bankruptcy protection in 2010.
British Sports Minister Hugh Robertson hopes the new rules will ensure clubs are run on a "more sustainable basis.''
"The Government has been clear that we want 
clubs to be on a secure financial footing for the long-term health of 
the game,'' Robertson said.
"This is a welcome and positive move.''

 
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