The club is set to be affected in several ways including the inability to sell tickets, with only season ticket holders being able to attend matches. In addition, nothing related to the club will be allowed to be sold, future deals will be suspended and player contracts will not be renewed, threatening the futures of Andreas Christensen, Cesar Azpilicueta and Antonio Rudiger, whose contracts expire in the summer.
Sanctions once morest Roman Abramovich will damage the club’s transfer market and foreign participation
Under the sports licence, Chelsea can pay players and staff salaries as well as transfer fees owed. In contrast, the license prohibits Chelsea spending more than £20,000 on any trip abroad, which raises serious questions regarding Champions League logistics, starting with a meeting with French club Lille next Wednesday.
British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss announced a complete asset freeze and travel ban on six other Russian businessmen in order to “increase pressure” on Moscow. A British Foreign Office statement said that the seven businessmen are closely linked to the Kremlin, including Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, owner of Chelsea Football Club, and industrialist Oleg Deripaska. The government’s sanctions list alleges: “Abramovich is linked to a person who participated in the destabilization of Ukraine and threatens the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine, specifically Vladimir Putin, with whom he has had a close relationship for decades.”
The British government estimated Abramovich’s net worth at 9.4 billion pounds, and he led Chelsea to 19 titles, including five in the English Premier League and two in the Champions League, since 2003.