Catch up with the latest FIFA player loan regulations
They’re sequel to the decision
(https://fifa.fans/3nIDld7) passed by the FIFA Football Stakeholders Committee
last year and are now ready to be implemented.
They will be submitted to the
FIFA Council for approval at its next meeting with a view to their entering
into force on July 1, 2022.
The introduction of a new
regulatory framework for player loans is another important step in the context
of the wider reform of the transfer system, the process of which began in 2017.
Initially planned to start in
July 2020, the implementation of the new rules had to be delayed as a
consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
See also
FIFA steps up courtesy Arsene Wenger
FIFA report confirms football importance to global economy
FIFA swoops on Africa football crime, corruption
FIFA introduces new football language
The discussions with the
different stakeholder groups have laid the foundations for this new framework
and ensured that the new rules are firmly anchored on the following core
objectives:
Developing young players
Promoting competitive balance
Preventing the hoarding of players
To ensure that these objectives
are achieved, the new regulatory framework will include:
The requirement of a written agreement defining the terms of the loan,
in particular its duration and financial conditions
A minimum loan duration, being the interval between two registration
periods, and a maximum loan duration, being one year
A prohibition on sub-loaning a professional player who is already on
loan to a third club
A limitation on the number of loans per season between the same clubs:
at any given time during a season, a club may only have a maximum of three
professionals loaned out to a single club and a maximum of three professionals
loaned in from a single club
A limitation on a club’s total number of loans per season
To ensure that this is
implemented smoothly, there will be a transitional period as follows:
- From July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023,
a club may have a maximum of eight professionals loaned out and eight loaned in
at any given time during a season.
- From July 1, 2023 to une 30, 2024,
the same configuration applies but with a maximum of seven professionals.
- Finally, from July 1, 2024, the
same configuration will apply but limited to a maximum of six professionals.
♦
Players aged 21 and younger and club-trained players will be exempt from these
limitations.
And at domestic level, FIFA’s
member associations will be granted a period of three years to implement rules
for a loan system that is in line with the principles established at
international level.
Comments
Post a Comment