The Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA) has cautioned that a court case involving players and clubs will be the outcome “inevitable” where the Premier League decides to go ahead with a salary cap and new financial regulations of its own accord.
Executive members of the league will be voting on Tuesday on replacing the current Profit and Sustainability Rules with harsher measures like “squad cost ratios” and “top-to-bottom anchoring” (TBA), which would not only put a limit on club spending to 85% of revenue but would also restrict total expenditure to five times the income of the league’s bottom club.
The limitation would be about £550 million for each club under the 2023–24 season data — a value that would see several teams in an immediate breach of the rules.

PFA chief executive Maheta Molango claimed that the union “would take steps” to reject the regulations, contending that players were not sufficiently consulted. “If these measures are implemented, some clubs would be instantly in breach,” he stated to The Times. “These situations directly involve our members, and the taking of legal actions cannot be ruled out.”
Nevertheless, the Premier League maintains that the proposals were put together after “extensive consultation” since March 2024 and are meant to keep competitive balance and financial sustainability — however, the rising number of opponents makes it seem that a major confrontation is on its way.
















