September 28, 2025
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Dejphon Chansiri: Sheffield Wednesday owner takes blame for points  deduction - BBC Sport

Dejphon Chansiri has already made his feelings known on the prospect of a Sheffield Wednesday embargo

Sheffield Wednesday have failed to pay players on time for the second time this year – and face the prospect of potentially catastrophic football consequences.

At least some players and backroom staff are understood to have not been paid in full on their expected pay day for the month of May, as was the case in March. It was also revealed that this time around, many lower-paid non-footballing staff had been paid just £700 of their monthly salaries.

The Star has seen separate letters of correspondence from the club to both players and non-footballing staff apologising for the delay in payment, along with assurance of the club’s anticipation payments will be made during the course of Monday.

Dejphon Chansiri: Sheffield Wednesday owner charged with misconduct by EFL  | Football News | Sky Sports

The Owls are in danger of being slapped with a three-window registration embargo after the combination of a failure to satisfy a HMRC payment and the March payment issues took them to a 29-day tally of late payments as per the EFL’s ‘30-day rule’. The rule was brought in to deter clubs who persistently default on important payments.

Speaking to The Star at the time of the March payment issues, Wednesday owner Dejphon Chansiri cited cashflow issues in his private business dealings and apologised for the problems suffered by the club, saying he was ‘wrong’ to have put the club in that position and that he had tried ‘everything his best’ to pay individuals on time and in full. The payments were eventually made to players, backroom staff and a small number of non-footballing staff owed wages on April 7.

Dejphon Chansiri club statement - Sheffield Wednesday FC

Most concerningly, Chansiri told The Star he was unable to guarantee the issue would occur once more. Just two months on, Wednesday are once again in danger of incurring that embargo, which would inhibit the transfer business available to them by banishing the signing of any players for transfer fees or loan fees for three transfer windows. Deals would have to be ratified by the authorities and the Owls squad would have to be limited to a size of 23 players of a ‘professional standing’.

Sheffield Wednesday fans have been protesting against Dejphon Chansiri's ownership.
Sheffield Wednesday fans have been protesting against Dejphon Chansiri’s ownership. | Nathan Stirk/Getty Images

Areas of the Wednesday squad are ageing and put to the Wednesday owner that a three-window embargo would prove ‘catastrophic’ to the club’s progress, Chansiri took a surprisingly philosophical view – citing League One crisis outfit Reading as an example of how things can be achieved in spite of that sanction. The Royals went on to miss out on a third tier play-off spot and have recently been taken over by new ownership following a sustained period of mismanagement and fan protest.

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