Without a stadium and without a venue. After being evicted from the Bruno Nespoli stadium, which the city administration found in a state of total abandonment, prompting Mayor Settimo Nizzi to demand the return of the keys, Olbia also disappeared from the internet.

Clicking on olbiacalcio.com displays the message (translated from English): "This domain has expired. If you own it, please contact your domain registration provider for assistance." Given that the site was accessible until a few days ago, the domain must have expired in the last week of May, and evidently no one bothered to renew it, at least until this morning.

Not exactly a good sign, which, combined with the fact that they lost Nespoli without batting an eyelid for failing to honor agreements regarding the facility's maintenance, suggests that Olbia Calcio's crisis is more serious than is being admitted. Since the end of the season, which ended on May 10 with relegation to the Eccellenza league through the playouts, the only comments have been made by Olbia's technical director, Ninni Corda, who has spoken about relegation to Serie D, negotiations with potential new investors, and debt restructuring.

Since then, however, Olbia has literally disappeared from the radar, and it is unknown what intentions Prosoccer has, having committed in January to purchase the club in installments from SwissPro with a deposit of 50,000 euros.

Among other things, an initial payment of €125,000 must be made to the Swiss by June 30th. Otherwise, Prosoccer will have to pay the entire remaining €650,000 to complete the transfer of ownership within 15 days. The penalty: losing all rights to Olbia Calcio, which would revert to SwissPro.

The step from there to bankruptcy could be very short, due to the debts and lawsuits coming from former employees, members, and suppliers trying to recover their money, and the impossibility of planning the 2026/27 season, in late July.

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