QPR lift trophy after Football Association verdict
- Published
QPR have been promoted as Championship winners after they escaped a points deduction for breaching regulations in the 2009 signing of Alejandro Faurlin.
The club were fined 拢875,000 after being found guilty of two of the seven charges against them relating to the Argentine midfielder's ownership.
QPR had feared , which could have left them in the play-off places.
But the verdict allowed them to receive the Championship trophy on Saturday.
QPR manager Neil Warnock and his players collected the in their final game of the season.
Warnock and the club's directors had been informed of the panel's verdict on 91热爆1's Football Focus one hour before kick-off.
Warnock told 91热爆 Sport: "There have been a few tears in the dressing room. It's been a hell of a time and how they [the players] have been able to focus I'll never know.
"I can't praise them high enough. It hasn't sunk in completely. It's just a relief to know we are the champions."
The verdict ended the possibility of Cardiff or Swansea moving into an automatic promotion place at QPR's expense.
But regarding the decision.
The decision not to dock the west Londoners points was made by an independent tribunal convened by the Football Association.
The panel imposed a fine of 拢800,000 for a breach of FA Rule E3 - which relates to bringing the game into disrepute - and a fine of 拢75,000 for breaking Rule A1, which outlaws the use of unauthorised agents.
The club was warned as to its future conduct with regard to regulatory compliance, and ordered to pay 50% of the costs of the tribunal.
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A further five charges against the club and one charge against chairman Gianni Paladini were found not proven.
The club and Paladini had been charged with submitting false information in documents provided to the FA relating to a contract extension signed by Faurlin in October.
The tribunal had been scheduled to deliver its findings by 1600 BST on Friday but the verdict was delayed because of the weight of evidence.
That prolonged the agony for QPR, who had secured their promotion to the Premier League as champions with last Saturday's 2-0 win at Watford, but had to put their celebrations on hold.
The FA had been investigating the case since September, when QPR first asked for permission to buy out the third party that owned the economic rights of Faurlin.
QPR were prompted to do this by the Football League's introduction of rules prohibiting the third-party ownership of players.
The League told the Loftus Road outfit they would have to notify the English football's governing body of their plans and it then became apparent the club may have been in breach of FA regulations for more than a year.
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