Friday, February 12, 2016

BPL: Leicester’s Players Will NOT Be Paid Any Extra For Winning Premier League

Jamie Vardy has set the league alight this campaign Getty Images

Leicester’s players will NOT receive any bonus money for winning the Premier League, according to reports.

SunSport report continues:

Terms drawn up last summer mean the Foxes could slip down to 12TH and would be in store for the same pay-out as if they were crowned champions. 

FABULOUS FOUR: Foxes could finish 12TH and receive the same bonus as if they were champions

Claudio Ranieri’s men were expected to be scrapping it out in the relegation zone this term and so a MAXIMUM pot of £6.5million to be split between the squad was promised, according to The Daily Mail.

Leciester’s stars can take comfort at least in knowing they have smashed expectations and are in store for the top payment in May.

The Foxes are top of the Prem on 53 points — five ahead of Tottenham and Arsenal and 21 clear of 12th placed Crystal Palace.

King Power chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha would have had no cause to include a title jackpot for his club, which avoided the drop by six points last time out.

A dazzling run of seven wins in nine games lifted rock-bottom Leicester to 14th place at the close of the season.

Football leaks revealed this week how Manchester United chiefs allotted £2.5m to their squad for winning the title in 2009-10 and neighbours City reportedly won a £6.2m pot for their debut triumph in 2012.

Now it is illegal for Leicester’s Thai owners to bump up the incentive even if they wanted to. Premier League rules state clubs cannot change their agreed bonus structures during a season. 

Riyad Mahrez scores against Manchester City during Leicester's 3-1 win at the Etihad Getty Images

Cardiff owner Vincent Tan had promised his soon-to-be relegated Bluebirds £3.7m to share if they avoided the drop in March 2014, but withdrew the offer once he was told he would be breaching Prem terms.

A bonus of £3.5m is in place for the squad if they finish 17th, and that number increases by £1m-per-place up to the top bracket of £6.5m for 12th. 
Each time a player is named in the team’s 18-man squad it counts towards the end-of-season reward. For the top sum available — which they are surely on course to hit — that works out at £9,500-per-game.

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