MLS investigating Beckham's Miami team over Matuidi signing


PTI | Newyork | Updated: 06-03-2021 10:52 IST | Created: 06-03-2021 10:22 IST
MLS investigating Beckham's Miami team over Matuidi signing
Representative image Image Credit: ANI
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Major League Soccer announced Friday that it is investigating whether David Beckham's Inter Miami violated salary budget and roster guidelines by its signing of French midfielder Blaise Matuidi.

The 33-year-old Matuidi, a member of France’s 2018 World Cup champions, joined Miami on Aug. 13 from Juventus. Miami said it used targeted allocation money.

Each team was allowed two high-priced designated players whose budget charge could exceed the maximum plus a third if there was a USD 150,000 payment to the league split among other teams, under roster rules announced by the league on March 1 last year Ahead of its first season as an expansion team, Miami announced it signed Argentine midfielder Matías Pellegrini as a young designated player from Argentina’s Estudiantes on July 26, 2019; Mexican midfielder Rodolfo Pizarro as a designated player from Monterrey on Feb. 17, 2020; and Argentina forward Gonzalo Higuaín as a designated player from Juventus Sept. 18. Matuidi was not announced as a designated player.

In its March 1, 2020 announcement, MLS said its rules for the season gave each team a salary budget of USD 4.9 million for the first 20 players on its roster, although teams were allowed to spread that budget over 18 players, and the league permitted a maximum UD 612,500 salary charge per player.

Designated players carry the maximum budget charge even if above USD 612,500 (or USD 306,250 if signed in the summer transfer window).

Also, designated players 20 and younger count a maximum of USD 150,000, and from ages 21-23 count a maximum of USD 200,000 (USD 150,000 if signed in the summer).

Each team could use USD 1,525,000 in general allocation money to ''buy down'' a player's salary budget charge, and USD 2.8 million in targeted allocation money to sign new players whose salary and acquisition costs were above the maximum salary charge or to convert a designated player to a non-designated player.

The league did not immediately respond to an e-mail Friday asking whether those rules were modified in the negotiation to restart the season following the break caused by the pandemic.

Miami said in a statement it intended to engage with the league's review process.

Beckham, a former England captain, and Manchester United star is Miami's co-owner and president of soccer operations. Jorge Mas is the managing owner.

Miami finished 10th among 14 teams in the Eastern Conference with seven wins, 13 losses, and three draws, and it lost to Nashville 3-0 in the first round of the playoffs.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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