By Simon Evans
MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) – Paris St Germain have hit back strongly at Spanish league chief Javier Tebas after he mocked the age of their players and the spending of the French club, saying he should deal with the debt and “mismanagement” in LaLiga.
Tebas, a long standing critic of Qatar-backed PSG’s spending, told a news conference that PSG’s spending was dangerous for football after they signed 35-year-old Sergio Ramos from Real Madrid and 34-year-old Lionel Messi from Barcelona during the recent transfer window.
“PSG looks like the league of legends given the age of some players. LaLiga has young players like Vinicius (Junior). The problem of PSG, we will solve it. What PSG are doing is as dangerous as the Super League,” Tebas said.
“We will continue to grow despite the departure of Messi. We will work against the club states. These clubs are as much enemies as the Super League.”
A letter from PSG General Secretary Victoriano Melero, seen by Reuters, said Tebas was engaged in “diversion” from Spanish football’s own problems and that he should also deal with rebel clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona who remain committed to a breakaway European Super League project.
Tebas, who also taken aim at Abu Dhabi-backed Premier League club Manchester City’s spending, has frequently questioned how PSG, who are owned by Qatari Sports Investments, are able to comply with UEFA’s Financial Fair Play regulations.
“Time after time, you allow yourself to publicly attack the French League, our club, our players – together with players of other clubs – and the fans of French football; while constantly posting insulting and defamatory statements insinuating that we do not conform to the football financial regulations, amongst other unsubstantiated statements,” Melero wrote in a letter on Wednesday.
FINANCIAL RESTRICTIONS
Melero said PSG did comply with UEFA and French domestic regulations and that LaLiga had been slow to impose its own financial restrictions.
“The French League did not, like your League, wait until recent years to take actions and put in place strong financial regulations,” he said.
“It is now publicly-known that certain Spanish clubs and your League are facing unsustainable levels of debt after gross mismanagement, not to mention the way Spanish football has been financed over the past decade – including by the State,” he added.
Real Madrid and Barcelona have said they are battling huge levels of debt and have struggled to compete in recent transfer windows.
Melero said Tebas was “disrespectfully attacking the players, simply because they decided to leave your competition”, after enjoying the benefits of top players for many years.
“Your remarkable comments on the age of these players not only insults their past and current roles in defining how our great game is played, but also the millions of fans around the world who idolise them,” added the PSG official.
“I am quite surprised you are not focusing more of your attention on the two clubs in your League that remain steadfast focused on breaking up your League, and European football as a whole,” Melero said.
“We invite you to focus on solving your domestic issues, which you are responsible, and to stop your transparent and repeated diversion attempts.”
A LaLiga spokesman declined to comment on the letter but said Tebas had long made clear his views on Financial Fair Play.
(Reporting by Simon Evans, editing by Ed Osmond)