Lyon appeal relegation to Ligue 2 by financial regulator
Lyon's French forward Alexandre Lacazette (L) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between Montpellier Herault SC and Olympique Lyonnais (OL) at The Stade de la Mosson in Montpellier, southern France on October 22, 2022. (Photo by Sylvain THOMAS / AFP)
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Seven-time Ligue 1 champions Lyon said on Tuesday they would
appeal their relegation to the second-tier by French football's financial
watchdog.
At a hearing earlier in the day, Lyon were unable to
convince the regulator (DNCG) to lift the restrictions it had put on the club
in November.
"Over the past few months, we have worked closely with
the DNCG, meeting all of its demands with equity investments exceeding the
amounts requested," the club said in a statement."
After the meeting, Lyon's president John Textor said he
remained confident of avoiding the drop to Ligue 2 for next season, where the club
has not played since 1989.
"Our liquidity situation has improved
considerably," he said.
American Textor took over as Lyon's majority owner in
December 2022 from long-standing boss Jean-Michel Aulas, who had overseen
unprecedented success at the French outfit.
Textor, 59, also holds stakes in Brazilian side Botafoga,
Belgian club Molenbeek. Earlier this week he sold his 43 percent stake in
Premier League outfit Crystal Palace.
According to the BBC, they were sold for 190 million pounds
to Woody Johnson, the owner of the NFL's New York Jets.
Lyon have reduced their salary bill with attacker Alexandre
Lacazette and goalkeeper Anthony Lopes released.
They have sold Rayan Cherki to Manchester City and Maxence
Caqueret to Como.
Textor said his Eagle group has also put 83 million euros
into the club.
"Thanks to the equity contributions from our
shareholders and the sale of Crystal Palace, our cash position has improved
considerably, and we have more than sufficient resources for the 2025-2026 season,"
said the club statement.
Lyon qualified for next season's Europa League after
finishing sixth in the French top-flight.
If their relegation is confirmed, they would be replaced in
Ligue 1 by Reims.
Lyon won seven consecutive French titles between 2002 and
2008, under Aulas.
"It's a terrible blow to all those who love Lyon"
Aulas said on X on Tuesday.
"For 36 years I made sure that such a situation could
not happen.
"I gave everything to build a solid, respected,
ambitious club that was financially healthy.
"Today, it's sadness that dominates. And an immense
failure to understand," the 76-year-old added.
Only five clubs have won Ligue 1 more often. Paris
Saint-Germain hold the record with 13 titles.


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