Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
FourFourTwo
FourFourTwo
Sport
Matthew Holt

PSR loopholes explained: How Premier League clubs are making a mockery of Profit and Sustainability Rulings this summer

Premier League clubs are making a mockery of the rules.

Chelsea have seemingly always wanted to buy Omari Kellyman, haven't they? I mean, that's the reason they are now paying £19million for the 18-year-old...

In modern football, beating the books and finding financial loopholes can save clubs millions, but why are the likes of Newcastle, Aston Villa, Everton and Wolves doing what appear to be dodgy deals to save face?

Ian Maatsen, Lewis Hall, Omari Kellyman, Lewis Dobbin, the key word here is pure profit, something which these clubs are using to tie up loose ends and kick the can down the road to help them when the Premier League's Profit and Sustainability Rulings knock at the door.

WATCH | Why Mauricio Pochettino Had To QUIT Chelsea

Academy players are being used to help teams in the Premier League this summer, in a trend that is growing more popular as each week passes. Maatsen's move to Villa Park was counter-acted by Kellyman heading the other way, as both Villa and Chelsea seemingly shook hands and walked away with a dodgy deal.

But it isn't the players that matter in the situation, it is their inflated transfer values that are starting to irk fellow footballing fans. Their brand-new loophole means as the June 30 deadline approaches, profit from the sale of their once blue-eyed star can be used to help PSR stay away from at least another season.

Newcastle United's squeaky-clean owners are also now getting involved, with the Magpies and Everton talking about possible deals for Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Yankuba Minteh. This book-balancing act may seem clever on the surface, but is this really what modern football has come to?

Ian Maatsen is set to move to Aston Villa from Chelsea in a deal rumoured to be worth nearly £40 million (Image credit: Getty Images)

“These are mutually beneficial transfers in the sense we have five or six clubs who ideally want to get a profit from some source before 30 June,” football finance expert Kieran Maguire recently explained via i. “Let’s say we’ve got two clubs with players worth £8m and £10m respectively, who are promising players but don’t have much experience. You could swap those two players with a cash transfer of £2m from one club to the other.

“If we assume those two players are academy players, one team books a profit of £8m and the other books £10m. What could be happening instead is both clubs are saying: ‘Well, let’s make it £18m and £20m and the cash transfer is still £2m but we’re both booking much bigger profits and it just so happens that those profits are just enough to keep you inside the PSR limit.”

More Premier League stories

Chelsea confirm signing of 'little Messi', hailed as the 'best Brazilian since Neymar'

Manchester United approach
former favourite for coaching role, but there's a problem: report

Chelsea turn
transfer focus to Ligue 1 star to solve striker issues: report

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.