Abramovich disqualified as Chelsea director by Premier League
Abramovich was one of seven more oligarchs sanctioned this week by the UK following Russia's attacks on Ukraine.
The Premier League has banned Roman Abramovich from running Chelsea after the British government sanctioned the Russian billionaire over Russia's attacks on Ukraine.
The league board's decision to disqualify the Russian oligarch from being a director on Saturday ends his 19 years in control of the west London club but does not directly impact the players.
“The board’s decision does not impact on the club’s ability to train and play its fixtures,” the Premier League said in a statement.
The team is able to continue operating under a license issued by the British government when it froze Abramovich's assets on Thursday while imposing sanctions against him over ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Chelsea had company credit cards from Barclaycard frozen as a result of the sanctions.
Bowing to pressure against his ongoing ownership, Abramovich had already announced last week before being sanctioned that he would put Chelsea up for sale.
READ MORE: Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich sanctioned over Putin links
Tightening sanctions
Abramovich originally hoped to divert the proceeds into a new foundation for the victims of the conflict in Ukraine, which he is yet to condemn Putin for launching.
But the government will only sanction a sale that does not see Abramovich benefit as the government tightens the screw on influential individuals it views as enabling Putin’s regime.
“Proceeds from any sale could not go to the sanctioned individual while he is subject to sanctions,” the government has said.
Some Chelsea fans have continued to stand by Abramovich during the opening two weeks of the attacks, even chanting his name at a game last weekend that the league hoped to use to show solidarity to Ukraine.
Abramovich's disqualification by the Premier League halts the reign of the competition's first billionaire foreign owner, whose fortune turned Chelsea into one of the biggest-spending clubs in Europe and one of the game's most successful.
His investment ended Chelsea's 50-year domestic title drought when the league was won in 2005 and the trophy has been collected another four times.
The team is the reigning European and world champion thanks to spending on players that has seen Abramovich inject more than $2 billion into Chelsea through loans he said he will not ask to be repaid.
READ MORE: Noose tightens around Russian oligarchs close to Putin