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Hull City avoid points deduction by selling Ivor Pandur & Aidon Shehu

BBC Published Jul 1, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Hull City avoided a potential six-point deduction in the Premier League by selling goalkeeper Ivor Pandur and midfielder Aidon Shehu before the June 30 deadline.
6 points · Hull City
Hull City, club
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Hull City earned guaranteed riches of about £200 million from winning promotion to the Premier League.
about 200 million pounds · Hull City
Hull City, club
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The EFL's profit and sustainability regulations restrict Championship clubs to losses of £39 million over three years.
39 million pounds · Championship clubs
EFL, regulator
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Hull City had an overspend of about £6 million for the period ending 2025-26.
about 6 million pounds · Hull City
Hull City, club
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Hull City sold goalkeeper Ivor Pandur to Rangers for £6 million.
6 million pounds · Ivor Pandur
Hull City, club
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Hull City sold midfielder Aidon Shehu to Panathinaikos for £2.5 million.
2.5 million pounds · Aidon Shehu
Hull City, club
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The combined sales of Pandur and Shehu generated about £7 million in profit for Hull City.
about 7 million pounds · Hull City
Hull City, club
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Hull City had planned to sell Kyle Joseph to Middlesbrough for £5 million to clear the deficit, but the deal could not be completed on time.
5 million pounds · Kyle Joseph
Hull City, club
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Profit and sustainability regulation concerns prevented Hull City from signing new players before the new season.
Hull City, club
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The profit and sustainability regulations are being replaced by a new system called squad cost ratio.
EFL, regulator
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Hull City avoided the threat of a points deduction in the Premier League by selling goalkeeper Ivor Pandur and midfielder Aidon Shehu hours before Tuesday's deadline.

The Tigers returned to the top flight by beating Middlesbrough 1-0 in the Championship play-off final in May, earning guaranteed riches of about £200m.

But profit and sustainability regulations (PSR) created the situation whereby a club set to receive significant funds had no choice but to sell players before the accounting period ended on 30 June.

The EFL's PSR restrict Championship clubs to losses of £39m over three years. Hull had an overspend of about £6m for the period to 2025-26.

The club faced being deducted up to six points in the Premier League if they failed to erase the deficit.

Only the profit on transfers counts towards the PSR calculation.

On Tuesday evening Hull announced the sale of first-choice keeper Pandur to Rangers for £6m.

The 26-year-old, who cost £1.5m from Fortuna Sittard in January 2024, won three of the club's player of the year awards in 2024-25.

On Wednesday morning Hull confirmed that Shehu had been sold to Panathinaikos for a reported £2.5m.

The sale of the 19-year-old - signed from Southend United two years ago for a small compensation figure - is effectively pure profit for Hull's PSR calculation.

The Albania Under-21 international did not make a first-team appearance for Hull and spent the end of last season on loan at Scarborough Athletic.

The two deals equate to about £7m of profit.

Hull were expected to sell Kyle Joseph to Middlesbrough for £5m to clear the deficit, but a snag between the clubs meant it could not be completed on time.

The PSR concerns have prevented Hull from making any new signings before the new season.

Transfer activity will now ramp up from Wednesday when the new accounting period begins.

PSR is being replaced by a new system called squad cost ratio (SCR).

Rather than assessing losses over a three-year period, it allows clubs to spend 85% of the income they generate on their squads and is assessed annually.

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