LaLiga president Javier Tebas has slammed Paris Saint-Germain's deal to keep Kylian Mbappe at the club.
The Ligue 1 champions announced on Saturday that Mbappe has decided to extend his contract with PSG while rejecting Real Madrid in the process.
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Sky Sports reported that Mbappe is set to double his current salary in the Spanish capital and is set to bag a sign-on free in the region of £100million.
Tebas took social media to express his anger with the alleged deal in place of the 2018 World Cup winner, who reportedly had an agreement with Los Blancos.
Lo que va a hacer el PSG renovando a Mbappé con grandes cantidades de dinero (a saber dónde y cómo las paga) despues de dar pérdidas por 700M€ en las últimas temporadas y tener mas 600M€ de masa salarial, es un INSULTO al fútbol. Al-Khelafi es tan peligroso como la Superliga. pic.twitter.com/sZ1Y1TaSbK
— Javier Tebas Medrano (@Tebasjavier) May 21, 2022
The news comes just weeks after Real Madrid lost out on the race for Erling Haaland's signature, with the Norwegian choosing to join Manchester City next season.
LaLiga have also confirmed that they will take legal action against the French club.
"La Liga wishes to state that this type of agreement attacks the economic stability of European football, putting at risk hundreds of thousands of jobs and the integrity of the sport, not only in European competitions, but also in domestic leagues," the league confirmed in a statement.
"It is scandalous that a club like PSG, which last season reported losses of more than €220 million euros after accumulating losses of more than €700 million euros in prior seasons (while reporting sponsorship income at doubtful valuation), with a squad cost around €650 million for this season, can close such an agreement, while those clubs that could afford the hiring of the player without seeing their wage bill compromised, are left without being able to sign him.
"La Liga will file a complaint against PSG before UEFA, the French administrative and fiscal authorities and European Union authorities to continue to defend the economic ecosystem of European football and its sustainability."
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