Former Ligue 1 club Bordeaux relegated to French fourth-tier after bankruptcy

Bordeaux, which last season finished 12th in the second-division Ligue 2, then announced two days later it would become an amateur club for the first time in almost 90 years after filing for bankruptcy.

Published : Aug 01, 2024 23:48 IST , Bordeaux - 2 MINS READ

File Photo: The logo of the Girondins de Bordeaux football club | Photo Credit: AFP

Former French Ligue 1 champions Bordeaux have been relegated a further division down to France’s fourth-tier National 2 after going into receivership, the French football federation (FFF) announced Thursday.

The cash-strapped club need to find 40 million euros ($43.6 million) to balance its books and had been in talks with the owners of Liverpool, Fenway Sports Group (FSG), before the American investors pulled out of negotiations in mid-July.

Due to Bordeaux’s financial woes, France’s National Directorate of Management Control (DNCG) had initially decided to relegate them to the third-tier National 1, a decision which the club eventually accepted after withdrawing its appeal on July 23.

Bordeaux, which last season finished 12th in the second-division Ligue 2, then announced two days later it would become an amateur club for the first time in almost 90 years after filing for bankruptcy.

On Tuesday, Bordeaux went into receivership after a decision taken by the city’s local commercial court in order to “allow (them) a season in the amateur National 1”.

However, the federal financial watchdog DNCG decided Thursday to relegate the club a further division to the fourth tier as per the French league’s (LFP) regulations, which stipulates a club in receivership must be “demoted to the division immediately below the one for which it would have qualified for the following season”.

If six-time French champion Bordeaux accepts this latest relegation, it will not need to be ratified by the FFF’s executive committee, according to the federation.

But it can still appeal to the amateur version of DNCG -- at the risk of facing a heavier sanction -- or bring their case before the French National Olympic and Sports Committee (CNOSF) as a last resort.

The National 2 season gets underway in just over two weeks’ time on August 16.