Sheffield Wednesday hit with ban on transfer spending until January 2027

TruthLens AI Suggested Headline:

"Sheffield Wednesday Faces Transfer Ban Until January 2027 Due to Wage Payment Failures"

View Raw Article Source (External Link)
Raw Article Publish Date:
AI Analysis Average Score: 8.0
These scores (0-10 scale) are generated by Truthlens AI's analysis, assessing the article's objectivity, accuracy, and transparency. Higher scores indicate better alignment with journalistic standards. Hover over chart points for metric details.

TruthLens AI Summary

Sheffield Wednesday has been imposed with a transfer spending ban until January 2027 due to repeated failures to pay player wages, as announced by the English Football League (EFL). The club has exceeded 30 days of late payments within the past year, prompting the EFL to implement a 'fee restriction' that will affect the next three transfer windows, including the current summer window. The club intends to appeal this decision. Additionally, the EFL has brought separate disciplinary charges against the club's owner, Dejphon Chansiri, related to non-payment of player wages in March and May 2025, which are set to be reviewed by an Independent Disciplinary Commission. The fee restriction prohibits the club from paying or committing to any transfer fees, but it can still sign players on loan without incurring fees or acquire players not registered with other clubs.

Reports indicate that some players at Sheffield Wednesday are still awaiting their wages for June, highlighting ongoing financial issues. Under FIFA regulations, players who experience two months of unpaid wages in a calendar year can terminate their contracts with just cause. Chansiri, who has led the club for a decade, has faced increasing scrutiny and controversy, including a six-point deduction in 2020 for breaching EFL profitability rules and public backlash against his management decisions. Recently, Clive Betts, the Labour MP for Sheffield South East, accused Chansiri of 'holding the club hostage' after he rejected takeover bids from an American consortium, asserting that he lacks the necessary resources to adequately fund and invest in Sheffield Wednesday. The club has acknowledged the EFL's statement on its website but has refrained from providing further comments at this time.

TruthLens AI Analysis

You need to be a member to generate the AI analysis for this article.

Log In to Generate Analysis

Not a member yet? Register for free.

Unanalyzed Article Content

Sheffield Wednesday have been banned from spending money on transfers until January 2027 following the repeated failure of the Championship club to pay players’ wages.

The EFL has levied what it calls a “fee restriction” on Wednesday, which will run for the next three transfer windows, including this summer one, after the club “[exceeded] 30 days of late payments” during the past 12 months. Wednesday are to appeal the decision.

Separate disciplinary charges have also been brought against Wednesday’s owner, Dejphon Chansiri, “in respect of non-payment of player wages in March 2025 and May 2025,” the EFL said. The charges will be heard by an Independent Disciplinary Commission.

A fee restriction means a club cannot pay or commit to pay any transfer fee, compensation fee or loan fee in the transfer market. Under EFL rules a club can still “staff up” while under restriction but can only sign players on loan without paying a fee or “players not registered with another Club”.

According to reports, some Wednesday players were still waiting this week for their wages for the month of June to be paid. Under Fifa regulations, players who have not received their agreed compensation on two separate months in a calendar year are able to serve notice of their intention to terminate their contract with just cause.

Chansiri took control at Wednesday a decade ago and the Thai businessman’s leadership of the club has been increasingly controversial. There has previously been late payment of tax bills, a six-point deduction in 2020 for breaching the EFL’s profitability and sustainability rules anda threat last Augustto ban anyone who attended Hillsborough in a fake shirt. In 2023 Chansiri also said he wouldstop funding the clubfollowing criticism from supporters, but he is understood to have been injecting £3.5m into the club on a monthly basis in recent times.

The Labour MP for Sheffield South East, Clive Betts, recently accused Chansiri of “holding the club hostage” after he rejected bids to buy the club from an American consortium. “It is clear that Chansiri does not have the ability or resources to fund and invest in Sheffield Wednesday,” Betts said.

Sign up toFootball Daily

Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football

after newsletter promotion

The clubposted the EFL’s statement on its website on Wednesday, adding that it was “unable to make any further comments at this time”.

Back to Home
Source: The Guardian