HomeSportsJuventus 15-point deduction reversed, now third in Serie A

Juventus 15-point deduction reversed, now third in Serie A

Date:

Related stories

Rodri’s bold comments on Messi, Ronaldo divide fans

Manchester City midfielder Rodri has sparked controversy with his...

CAF announces nominees for 2024 awards

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has unveiled the...

Roy Keane hints at wedding doubts after Harwood-Bellis nets debut goal

Former Ireland footballer Roy Keane humorously remarked that Taylor...

Jake Paul secures victory over Mike Tyson

Jake Paul emerged victorious against boxing legend Mike Tyson...

Man City suffers fourth straight defeat

Pep Guardiola's Manchester City suffered their fourth consecutive defeat...
spot_img

A panel has reversed Juventus’ 15-point deduction in the current Serie A season for inflating transfer values and lying to financial officials.

The supreme sports court of the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) accepted Juventus’ appeal against their punishment on Thursday.

The court has now ordered a new trial to take place at the sports court of the Italian football federation, FIGC.

The lifting of the points deduction means Juventus move up from seventh to third in the Serie A table, while champions AC Milan were knocked out of the Champions League places.

The FIGC sports court decided to punish Juventus in January.

According to the investigation, the financial violations saved the club some 90 million euros (98.64 million dollars) between 2018 and 2020 alone.

In addition to the point deduction, former club bosses were also punished individually.

Former president Andrea Agnelli was banned for two years from any activities in Italian football, while former vice president Pavel Nedved was banned for eight months.

Agnelli had his appeal rejected, while Nedved was successful in appealing against his ban.

Current Tottenham director Fabio Paratici was hit with a 30-month suspension and also lost his appeal.

Agnelli, Nedved, and the rest of Juve’s board resigned last November amid an investigation into alleged tax fraud. (dpa/NAN)

Subscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here