Al Nassr, a club Cristiano Ronaldo plays for in Saudi Arabia has been banned by FIFA from registering new players due to “outstanding debt”.
The ban means the Saudi Pro League side could technically sign new players but would be unable to register them to play until their debts are cleared.
“Al-Nassr is currently prevented from registering new players, due to outstanding debts”.
“Relevant bans will be lifted immediately upon the settlement of the debts being confirmed by the creditors concerned”, FIFA spokesperson.
It is reported that the ban comes from the club’s failure to pay Championship side Leicester City add-ons related to the transfer of Nigerian forward Ahmed Musa.
Musa joined Leicester immediately after their historic title win in 2016 but struggled to make an impact in England, scoring only five goals in 33 appearances.
He was subsequently loaned back to his former club CSKA Moscow before being sold to Al-Nassr for a reported fee of £14 million in 2018.
During his time at Al-Nassr Musa played 60 games and won the league title but was released as a free agent two years later. FIFA’s ruling states that Al-Nassr failed to pay €460,000 (£390,000) plus interest in performance-related add-ons owed to Leicester City.
The initial ruling was issued in October 2021, with Al-Nassr being warned that a transfer registration ban would be imposed if they failed to settle the outstanding amount. It appears the club has not complied with the ruling, resulting in the registration ban being enforced. This ban applies to both domestic and international transfers, meaning Al-Nassr cannot register players from abroad at the moment.
FIFA’s original ruling stated the ban would cover three consecutive transfer windows. Al-Nassr have also been warned that the matter would be referred to the FIFA Disciplinary Committee if Leicester City remained unpaid by the end of the ban.
Al-Nassr has since indicated that the issue arose before the club’s acquisition by the Public Investment Fund (PIF). They have reassured that such issues will not occur again under the new club structure, and the payment owed to Leicester for Musa’s transfer will be promptly settled to lift the ban.