Everton Football Club and Nottingham Forest have been charged with breaches under the Premier League’s profitability and sustainability rules.
It comes in addition to Everton being deducted 10 points in November – the largest sanction in the history of the Premier League – for a breach of the Premier League’s profit and sustainability rules.
The club is appealing against their punishment.
In a statement, Nottingham Forest said it “acknowledges the statement from the Premier League confirming that the club has today been charged with a breach of the league’s Profitability and Sustainability Rules”.
“The club intends to continue to cooperate fully with the Premier League on this matter and are confident of a speedy and fair resolution,” they added.
Everton said the breach relates to a period which covers seasons 2019/20, 2020/21, 2021/22 and 2022/23.
“It therefore includes financial periods (2019/20, 2020/21 and 2021/22) for which the club has already received a 10-point sanction. The club is currently appealing that sanction”, Everton said.
They added: “The club must now defend another Premier League complaint which includes the very same financial periods for which it has already been sanctioned, before that appeal has even been heard. The Club takes the view that this results from a clear deficiency in the Premier League’s rules.
“Everton can assure its fans that it will continue to defend its position during the ongoing appeal and, should it be required to do so, at any future commission – and that the impact on supporters will be reflected as part of that process.”
Premier League clubs are permitted to lose a maximum of £105m over a three-year period (£35m a season).
Sky Sports News chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol explained the “Premier League has a new fast-track, streamlined profitability and sustainability process” – which is why clubs today found out if they had broken the rules.
“The reason it’s been done so quickly is that, in the past, many people have complained how long these cases drag on; clubs can potentially be deducted points for something they’ve done wrong three or four seasons ago,” he said.
“The Premier League have responded to that criticism, and that’s why we’re seeing a faster process.”
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