Chelsea have transfer ban lifted by CAS

November 6 – International sport’s top court today suspended a transfer ban imposed on Chelsea while it rules on a dispute over the signing of French youngster Gael Kakuta (pictured).

A statement from the Lausanne-based court said: ”The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has granted the request for a stay filed by Chelsea Football Club Ltd and Mr Gael Kakuta in relation to the decision taken by the FIFA Dispute Resolution Chamber on 27 August 2009.”

The Premier League side had asked for a suspension in a bid to sign new players during the January transfer window.

The arbitrators normally take about four months to rule on cases from the moment they were lodged, in Chelsea and Kakuta’s case on October 22.

That would potentially leave the London side free to take part in the next transfer window between January 1 and 31, 2010.

The ban on signing any new players until January 2011 was imposed by world football’s governing body FIFA in August, when its Dispute Resolution Chamber concluded the Blues had induced Kakuta to break his contract with his first club, Lens.

The CAS also temporarily lifted a four month suspension imposed by FIFA on Kakuta pending a full ruling on the case by the arbitrators.

The statement said: ”The FIFA Dispute Resolution Chamber imposed, inter alia, a restriction of four months’ ineligibility on Mr Gael Kakuta, and Chelsea Football Club Ltd was banned from registering any new players, either nationally or internationally, for the next two complete, consecutive registration periods.

“Such sanctions are now stayed until the CAS renders its final decision in this matter.”

The CAS has not yet set a date for a hearing on the case, officials said.

FIFA has been trying to clamp down on the practice of negotiating and making deals with players already under contract with another club, especially those involving youngsters.

Kakuta, who has shone in Chelsea’s reserves, was still a Lens player and only 15 years old in June 2007 when he signed a contract with the English club.

Lens felt that Chelsea came and used their wealth to “steal” a young player that they had nurtured, and complained to FIFA.