Because of him Messi left Barcelona, and now criticizes PSG: They will destroy football
The first man of La Liga, Javier Tebas, sharply criticized the transfer policy of PSG after the end of the summer transfer window.
After the end of one of the craziest and most dramatic transfer deadlines for most of the European leagues, the president of La Liga, Javier Tebas, announced that he was attacking PSG.
Exactly PSG is the absolute winner in the transition period in which he brought some of the biggest football stars. In the first place is the engagement of Lionel Messi from Barcelona, who could not provide financial means for the salary of the Argentine.
According to La Liga rules that Tebas insisted on being followed, Spanish teams can spend only 70 percent of their annual salary income on footballers, while with Messi that percentage of the Catalan team was as much as 110 percent.
Besides Messi, Sergio Ramos from Real Madrid and Gianluigi Donaruma also came as free players to PSG, while they paid 110 million euros for Ashraf Hakimi from Inter and Nuno Mendes who came to Sporting Lisbon, while they also kept Killian Mbape despite Real Madrid's offer. amounted to a staggering 220 million euros.
The state-of-the-art clubs are very close to the football ecosystem like the Super League. Criticism of the Super League because it destroys European football and even similar critics with PSG. Pérdidas Covid + 300M; TV shows in France -40%; ¿Y + 500M in salarios? Insostenible.
- Javier Tebas Medrano (@Tebasjavier) August 31
"Club-states are just as dangerous to the football 'ecosystem' as the Super League. "We were critical of the Super League because it destroys European football, so now we are equally critical of PSG."wrote Tebas on his Twitter account.
To prove how absurd the situation with PSG is, Tebas compared the French team's costs of paying the players to the losses suffered by the French Ligue 1 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
"Losses from the coronavirus pandemic + 300 million euros, income from TV rights in France - 40 percent and 500 million in salaries? "It is unsustainable," Tebas wrote.