Barcelona's Dani Olmo and Pau Victor will be unable to play for the La Liga side in the second half of the season, Spanish football authorities said on Saturday. The ruling was made while rejecting the former La Liga champions's latest attempt to extend their registration.
šØāļø OFFICIAL: La Liga and Spanish Federation RFEF have jointly decided to REJECT Dani Olmo and Pau Victor's registrations for Barcelona.
— Fabrizio Romano (@FabrizioRomano) January 4, 2025
Barcelona will go to court. ā ļø pic.twitter.com/eW1Y8OHNir
According to Spanish media reports, Barcelona plan to file a complaint to the Spanish government via the Administrative Sports Court (CSD) in a last-ditch attempt to allow the pair to play. There was no immediate comment from Barcelona.Ā
Euro-winning midfielder Olmo, 26, has been an integral part of Barcelona's team this season, while forward Victor, 23, has been largely restricted to substitute appearances. Barcelona are third in La Liga, five points behind leaders Real Madrid and three behind second-placed Atletico.
What can Barcelona do against RFEF ruling?
The Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) and LaLiga said in a joint statement they had rejected a request to register them both for the second half, saying a cancelled licence could not be revived for a player by the same club in the same season.
"The Monitoring Committee agrees not to grant the prior approval or the definitive licence requested by FC Barcelona for the players Daniel Olmo Carvajal and Pau Victor Delgado," the RFEF said. Two courts had previously rejected the club's requests.
Hansi Flick's Barca had signed Olmo from RB Leipzig on a six-year deal in August for around 55 million euros ($56.7 million) and Victor in July, but only registered them for the first half of the season due to LaLiga wage cap considerations.
La Liga had previously welcomed the legal rulings, saying additional spending is allowed so long-term injuries do not weaken a team but the rule should not be exploited to allow the registration of players whose salaries exceed the limit. The club had managed to register Olmo after long-term injuries kept first-team players out of the squad for months, allowing Barca to allocate a portion of wages to register the man who was joint top scorer at the Euros.