Leeds and Burnley make Premier League request amid fears over Everton's financial data
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Burnley and Leeds have asked the Premier League to ensure none of Everton's financial data from the last three years 'ends up in the North Sea' before any investigation into alleged breaches of financial fair play rules.
The two relegation-threatened clubs have warned they are considering bringing a case against the Goodison Park outfit over whether or not it has broken FFP laws after it recorded loses of £371.8million over the last three years.
Clubs are allowed to make losses no greater than £105m in any three-year period. As a result, Burnley and Leeds have asked the Premier League to write to Everton to tell them they must make available details of every single transaction.
They insist that no shred of evidence should go missing as it has done in the ‘Wagatha Christie’ trial between Coleen Rooney and Rebekah Vardy. The mobile telephone which belonged to Vardy’s agent, Caroline Watt, allegedly fell into the North Sea before their tria l and with it went records of messages that were central to the case.
Burnley and Leeds are keen to ensure there is no chance that any of Everton’s financial records from the last 36 months meet the same grizzly fate. Everton have been backed by owner Farhad Moshiri and, until he was sanctioned following Russia ’s invasion of Ukraine, billionaire businessman Alisher Usmanov. They brought in four new players in January in Vitaly Mykolenko for £17m, Nathan Patterson for £12m and, on