A year ago
Calvin Ramsay, a fullback for Liverpool, will likely spend the upcoming season on loan at Preston.
Due to a back issue and later a knee ailment, the 19-year-old played just 93 minutes of football in two matches in the Carabao Cup and Champions League in November, ending his rookie season early.
According to the PA news agency, Ramsay underwent surgery in February and is in need of regular first-team football, which is why he has been permitted to go out on loan to the Championship squad.
For an initial £4 million, the Scotland international moved to Anfield last summer from Aberdeen.
Although the Reds may have one of the biggest salary bills in the league, any limitations placed on Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea, and Newcastle could ultimately be seen as a benefit by supporters.
While a number of solutions are being considered, the most popular one is the proposal to cap salaries based on the TV revenue received by the team that finished last.
Ziegler used the example of a top club being able to spend four times what the bottom-placed club earned to explain, even if proportions have not yet been defined.
Applying this to Liverpool in the 2021–2022, the Reds would have had access to up to £402 million in salary spending because this is four times what Norwich, who came last, made from broadcast rights.
The wealthiest clubs, like Man City, have been able to evade penalties by paying attorneys significant sums to discover exceptions, proving that FFP is useless.
Similar rules to those mentioned by the Premier League are expected to be implemented by UEFA.
The Times reports that they are awaiting approval of laws that would limit how much money teams may spend on salaries and transfers to 90% in 2023, 80% the next year, and 70% in 2025.
These regulations would probably help Liverpool because they play in the richest league and have more earnings than most teams in Europe, which allows them to spend more on transfers.
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