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Chelsea take incredible swipe at Man City and FIFA after they have two-window transfer ban reduced on appeal

CHELSEA have slammed FIFA for “choosing to treat Manchester City entirely differently” amid the successful appeal of their transfer ban.

After the Court of Arbitration for Sport reduced their two-window punishment for breaching rules on signing underage players, the Blues were given the green light to enter the January market.

Chelsea were angry with how City escaped a ban for their own misdemeanours

However the club released a statement on Friday questioning how they were dealt with compared to Premier League rivals City.

It read: “Chelsea is grateful to the CAS for the diligent approach that it gave this matter. The club has not yet received the written reasons for CASs decision but wishes to make the following clear:

“The approach taken by FIFA to this case has been deeply unsatisfactory, not least as FIFA chose to treat Chelsea entirely differently to Manchester City for reasons that make absolutely no sense to Chelsea.”

Earlier in the year, the Eastlands club dodged a ban while being fined 315,000 for admitting a number of breaches regarding the international transfers of youth players.

Reports at the time suggested City committed fewer individual offences than Chelsea, who had experienced harsher sentences along with the likes of Atletico Madrid and Barcelona.

Chelsea’s statement does not make clear exactly which alleged discrepancy they feel FIFA dealt with poorly.

‘PERVERSE’

The Blues also attacked a charge relating to 16 players – who they state were registered to the satisfaction of the Premier League and FA – as “perverse”.

In outling how the 27 youngsters involved in the case were signed, they say: “Of those, 16 players were registered by Chelsea in exactly the same way as other Premier League clubs registered players at the time.

“Furthermore, Chelsea sought clarification from the Premier League in 2009 about whether it needed to apply for permission to register players in this category.

“The FA subsequently liaised with FIFA and it was confirmed to Chelsea that players in this category were entitled to register and that no special application was required (and in fact no special application process existed).

“Accordingly, the fact that FIFA brought charges against Chelsea for this category of player was perverse. We are grateful that this appears to have been corrected by the CAS.”

The club add that the other 11 players included six who “qualified for one of the exceptions set out in the FIFA regulations”.

The statement continued: “With respect to the remaining five players, FIFAs position was that it ‘deemed’ these players to have registered prior to any application for registration being made. Chelsea maintains, as was held by CAS in the Real Madrid case, that the FIFA regulations do not cover a concept of ‘deemed registrations’ and accordingly it is not open to FIFA to deem that registrations were made before they were in fact made.”

Now unleashed from the suspension, Chelsea are preparing to enter the January market with a vengeance.

Jadon Sancho, Callum Wilson and Ben Chilwell are all reportedly on Frank Lampard’s radar.

And although a number of ageing first-teamers, such as Olivier Giroud and Pedro, are due to leave – the boss has sent a warning to his new young talent.

He said on Friday: “As we go forward of course if I feel there are positions we can strengthen then we will obviously look at that, as all big clubs do.”