May 5, 2024
LaLiga chief Javier Tebas calls for Barcelona president Joan Laporta to QUIT over corruption scandal

LaLiga chief Javier Tebas calls for Barcelona president Joan Laporta to QUIT over corruption scandal

LaLiga chief Javier Tebas is calling for Barcelona president Joan Laporta to resign, if he fails to explains the club’s corruption scandal.

The Catalan giants have been accused of paying more than £1million across three seasons to the former vice president of LaLiga referees in a major corruption scandal.

A report, which was first released on Cadena SER radio program Que t’hi jugues, alleges that Barcelona paid Jose Maria Enriquez Negreira, through his company DASNIL 95, €1.4m (£1.2m) during Josep Bartomeu’s presidency.

It is alleged that Negreira, who would go on to become the vice president of the Technical Committee of Referees after retiring, was paid €532,728 (£473,340) in 2016, €541,752 (£481,358) in 2017, and then a further €318,200 (£282,915) in 2018.

All those payments are alleged by the prosecutor’s office to have been made by Barcelona to DASNIL 95, with a report by Spain’s Tax Agency, which is investigating Negreira’s company, and seen by Diario AS, claiming they wanted ‘to make sure that no refereeing decisions were made against, that is, ‘that everything was neutral’.

Barcelona have been accused of paying more than £1million across three seasons to the former vice president of LaLiga referees in a major corruption scandal

Barcelona have been accused of paying more than £1million across three seasons to the former vice president of LaLiga referees in a major corruption scandal

Barcelona have been accused of paying more than £1million across three seasons to the former vice president of LaLiga referees in a major corruption scandal

LaLiga chief Javier Tebas (pictured) is calling for Barcelona president Joan Laporta to resign

LaLiga chief Javier Tebas (pictured) is calling for Barcelona president Joan Laporta to resign

LaLiga chief Javier Tebas (pictured) is calling for Barcelona president Joan Laporta to resign

Tebas has since publicly insisted that Laporta must provide some answers to the club’s 33 payments to Negreira or resign from his role at the Spanish giants, if he fails to do so.

He told Spanish news outlet Sport.es: ‘If [Laporta] doesn’t explain why it was paid, I think he would have to resign.’ 

The chief also speculated that the Barcelona scandal could be seen as worse than the financial wrongdoings at Serie A giants Juventus, which saw them deducted 15 points for their actions. 

‘For now I would say that Juventus is more serious for being sentenced, but I see the indications as more serious in Barca. 

‘A vice-president of the Technical Committee of Referees appears here.’

Having already testified, Negreira and his son Javier Enríquez Romero have reportedly denied that Barcelona ever received any preferential treatment from referees. 

In his testimony, according to Cadena SER, Negreira claimed that his alleged agreement with Barcelona was to see him recommend how their players should behave in game with referees. 

It is claimed he tailored his advice depending on the referee they were assigned for upcoming matches. 

That is, what they could and should not do depending on the referee designated for the matches 

One issue that has arisen is that the Tax Agency has attested that there is no documentation currently in their possession which details any such relationship of consultancy between Negreira and Barcelona.

The timing is disastrous for Barcelona having spent recent years mired in controversy – but they came out fighting in their own statement on Wednesday.

‘Faced with the information broadcast today on the program Quê t’hi jugues de Ser Catalunya, FC Barcelona, ​​aware of the facts being investigated by the Prosecutor’s Office regarding payments made to external companies, wants to make it clear:

  • That Barcelona hired in the past the services of an external technical consultant, who supplied, in video format, technical reports referring to players in lower categories of the Spanish State for the Club’s technical secretariat.
  • Additionally, the relationship with the same external supplier was extended with technical reports related to professional refereeing in order to complement information required by the coaching staff of the first team and the subsidiary, a common practice in professional football clubs.
  • Currently, this type of outsourced service falls to a professional attached to the Football Area.
  • Barcelona regrets that this information appears precisely at the best sporting moment of the season.
  • Barcelona will take legal action against anyone who damages the image of the Club with possible insinuations contrary to the reputation of the entity that may arise as a result of this information.

Barcelona president Joan Laporta has vowed to defend the club’s name during the process

Furthermore, president Joan Laporta vowed to ‘defend’ the club’s name amid the ongoing investigation.   

‘The recent report that Barca paid a referee for an investigation? It’s not a coincidence that this information comes out now, when Barca are doing well,’ he said. ‘We reserve all the necessary actions to defend our club.’

If found to have acted illicitly Barcelona, who are currently at loggerheads with LaLiga president Javier Tebas over their continued support for a European Super League, could face stringent penalties.

Both Barcelona and Negreira deny wrongdoing. The investigation continues. 

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