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Real Madrid demand Barcelona be stripped of titles in explosive UEFA complaint

 In the run-up to Real Madrid’s presidential election, a wide range of player names were floated as potential signings for the Spanish giants. Now, in the aftermath of Florentino Pérez’s decisive 65-35 victory at the ballot box, a clearer picture is beginning to emerge.

José Mourinho is set to be presented soon as the club’s new head coach. At the same time, Ibrahima Konaté and Denzel Dumfries have allegedly reached agreements to join Real Madrid, while Nico Paz is expected to return after the club previously backed his development.

From there, attention turns to squad reconstruction and fitting the pieces together. But beyond the sporting rebuild, one underlying reality remains front and center: Barcelona.

Barcelona remains central focus

Many of the moves driven by Pérez in the weeks leading up to the election, and even during the campaign itself, were reportedly aimed at pushing for what he sees as appropriate consequences for Barcelona in the ongoing Negreira case.

Recent meetings involving FIFA President Gianni Infantino and UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin were not coincidental, according to those close to the process. While part of the optics helped Pérez’s campaign, they were also intended to support Real Madrid’s broader sporting complaints.

UEFA relationship shifting

The evolving relationship between Real Madrid and UEFA is part of what sources describe as a broader alignment on key issues shaping European soccer. That includes both commercial interests and sporting governance.

Among the shared priorities is competition integrity, and the development of a regulatory framework that ensures sporting merit remains the defining factor in results and titles.

Negreira case dossier submitted

The well-known dossier, report, or formal complaint prepared by Real Madrid in recent months is now on its way to UEFA headquarters. UEFA remains the only governing body with the authority to sanction Barcelona in what Pérez has previously called “the most serious case I have seen in soccer,” a remark made by Čeferin in 2023.

In the filing, which Real Madrid officials insist is backed by evidence, the club is not only seeking potential sanctions that could exclude Barcelona from European competitions.

It goes further.

Real Madrid is also pushing for Barcelona’s titles during the period in question to be struck from the record, preventing the Catalan club from officially claiming those trophies.

UEFA has not closed the case

UEFA has not formally closed the matter at any point. Legal proceedings forced a pause while the situation moved through the courts, but the governing body has continued to monitor developments closely.

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