The Federation of International Football Association (FIFA) has banned Al Nassr from registering new players.
This is due to the club’s failure to pay add-ons owed to as part of the Ahmed Musa deal.
According to reports, despite the CAS ruling in favor of Leicester after Musa triggered €460k in performance-related add-ons between 2018 and 2020, Al Nassr turned a deaf ear to the CAS ruling and failed to pay the add-ons to Leicester.
Al Nassr’s failure to comply with the ruling resulted in the registration ban. It is reported that the ban may be limited to a matter of weeks, provided Cristiano Ronaldo’s team pays the payment promptly, which they have now indicated that they will.
The Saudi Arabian clubs have been active in the summer for players after they pulled a massive deal with Cristiano Ronaldo last summer.
This summer has seen battalions of players join the Saudi clubs, with Al Nassr completing Inter’s Marcelo Brozovic’s signature for just €18m as they seek to straighten their midfield and challenge for the league next season.
Chelsea’s Hakim Ziyech deal was almost completed, as reported weeks ago, but he had his deal hit a rock by failing to pass the medical. Al Nassr is reported to be ready to dance to the CAS ruling and make their new signings this summer.
Musa was signed by Leicester for a then-club record £16.6m fee in 2016, but he failed to make an impact.
He was shipped on loan back to CSKA Moscow the following campaign after scoring just two goals in 21 Premier League games.
A move to Al Nassr then followed, where he scored 14 goals in 62 matches in all competitions as he helped them win the 2019 league title.
The Nigeria international then made the move back to his homeland to join Kano Pillars in 2021, before returning to Europe to sign for Turkish side Fatih Karagumruk.
In other news, Kanyi Daily reported that a Nigerian big boy, Jacob Olalekan Ponle, popularly known as Woodberry, has been slammed with an eight-year and three-month jail sentence by a federal judge in the United States for orchestrating a multimillion-dollar fraud.