San Lorenzo is getting tougher by the day: five suspensions have been dropped, bringing the total to 11!

Every day that passes, the hole San Lorenzo is sinking into gets a little deeper. And the way out seems ever more unattainable. At the start of a crucial week, waiting for Marcelo Moretti to convene the Board of Directors meeting required by the same court ruling that annulled the head of the club and returned him to the position of president, the club has been hit with five more FIFA bans. Added to the ones it has been carrying since before mid-year, there are now 11 debts it must clear in order to be able to sign players this summer.
Everything happens all the time at Ciclón. And, with the exception of the current situation with the first team led by Damián Ayude, which is qualifying for the playoffs and the 2026 Copa Sudamericana, everything that happens is bad for the club.
In Boedo, there were already six restrictions that were never lifted, due to a decision by Julio Lopardo, then in charge of San Lorenzo after Moretti's leave following accusations of "unfair administration," to not pay because he wasn't going to incorporate enough money to cover current expenses with ordinary day-to-day income.
Well, five more were registered yesterday: three for the solidarity mechanism related to Diego Herazo's transfer and two for overdue installments on Rafael Pérez's debt payment plan. Although there was no official communication from Boedo regarding this situation, these new debts would total approximately $350,000.
San Lorenzo's 11 suspensions listed in FIFA.But to that figure, we must add the more than $2.5 million accumulated by the other six reserves (debts to Diego "Torito" Rodríguez, to Monterrey for the purchase of Adam Bareiro, to Austin FC of the MLS for Jhohan Romaña, and two others for FIFA administrative charges). This means the treasury will have to pay out almost $3 million in the next transfer window if it wants to sign players.
At the same time, it will eventually have to face a bankruptcy petition of approximately $5 million from the Swiss fund AIS Investment Fund, although it has bought itself time until early next year.
Meanwhile, inside the Barcelona club, everyone is waiting for Moretti to call a meeting of the Board of Directors, where the leadership could be reinstated if the resignations are ratified.
Clarin




