Cellino, Brescia, and the resurrection operation with the millions (by right) from the Tonali sale
The club led by the former Rossoblu owner has been reactivated, and he can cash in on the rich transfer operation from Newcastle to Tottenham of the player who grew up in his youth system.Sandro Tonali and Massimo Cellino
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Massimo Cellino, former president of Cagliari, is back in the news.
A month ago, the Brescia Prosecutor's Office requested the dismissal of the owner's case in connection with an investigation into alleged trading of non-existent credit and money laundering, which subsequently resulted in Brescia Calcio's penalty and relegation to Serie C, highlighting how Cellino had been defrauded. Therefore, in recent days, the Lombardy Committee of the LND reactivated the club's 114-year-old membership number , of which Cellino is still the "owner." There's a reason for this: the law firm Tonucci & Partners, which represents Brescia Calcio, of which Cellino remains the owner, recalls the implications of reactivating membership number 7810 in terms of the solidarity contributions required by FIFA.
"It means that the city's historic team is being revived and will be entitled to solidarity payments if Sandro Tonali's transfer from Newcastle to Tottenham goes through." There is, in fact, a system that awards a portion of the value of international transfers to the clubs that have nurtured the player's development between the ages of 12 and 23.
The rules stipulate that 5% of the transaction value will be split between the clubs: each season played between the ages of 12 and 15 is worth 0.25% of the transfer fee, while those between the ages of 16 and 23 are worth 0.50% each. Since Sandro Tonali wore the Brescia jersey until he was 19, the Rondinelle would receive 3.5% of the transaction value: on a transfer worth more than €100 million, that means between €3 and €4 million. The remainder—a minimum—would go to AC Milan. The owner claims that "he hasn't reactivated the registration for this reason. Time will tell."
The fact remains that Brescia Calcio has 6.5 million in debt, and that four of them would be repaid by selling Tonali, and that it could restart from the Third Category.
"The city's historic team is back to life," Cellino comments through his lawyers. And he taunts the management of the club that arose from the ashes of the historic one, his own: " This is the real Brescia, not the beloved Salò that is playing in our stadium." Will he win this time too? The football summer is long.
