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FC Nantes 'negligence cost Sala's life', mother says

Emiliano Sala has short brown hair and is wearing a yellow Nantes Football Club top. Crowds of spectators at a football ground are blurred out behind him.
Image caption,

Emiliano Sala died in a plane crash two days after signing a £15m contract with Cardiff City

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The football club which sold Emiliano Sala to Cardiff City before he died en route in a plane crash is "pretending not to be responsible" for the circumstances of his death, his mother has said in a statement.

Sala, along with pilot David Ibbotson, died in January 2019 when the aircraft in which they were travelling from Nantes to Cardiff crashed in the English Channel.

The Argentine striker, 28, had signed for Cardiff City for £15m two days previously, and the Welsh club are now pursuing FC Nantes for around £100m in damages.

Cardiff City and FC Nantes presented their case to a commercial court in Nantes on Monday and a decision is expected at a hearing on 30 March.

Cardiff City has claimed the agent who arranged the fateful flight, Willie McKay, was acting on behalf of FC Nantes during Sala's transfer, a claim that the French club deny.

The club has claimed losses of more than 120m euros (£104m) in relation to Sala's death, and claimed the striker could have kept the club in the Premier League.

FC Nantes' lawyer, Jerome Marsaudon, said: "It is sad to see that Cardiff have exploited this tragedy and turned it into a genuine legal farce", adding "nothing in this case justifies holding FC Nantes liable".

In a statement on Tuesday, Sala's mother Mercedes Taffarel said she had been unable to attend the hearing but backed the south Wales club's stance.

"Hearing about the way FC Nantes pleaded its case is repulsing," she said.

"Willie McKay used his son to close a juicy deal when his licence was revoked.

"FC Nantes pretending not to be responsible is appalling.

"The negligence of FC Nantes and its agent at the time cost my son his life.

"All I want is for justice to be done."

Flowers, scarves, cards, and jerseys are laid out on the floor as tributes to Emiliano Sala, in front of Cardiff City StadiumImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

Cardiff City has claimed losses of more than 120m euros (£104m) in relation to Sala's death

The Bluebirds have argued that Nantes, through its intermediary, agent Willie McKay, was the organiser of the private flight on which Sala was travelling – even though McKay was banned from being an agent at the time.

Cardiff City's lawyer, Olivier Loizon, told the court Mr McKay "could not have been unaware of the illegality of the flight" and argued that the agent had acted with "negligence".

"Whatever the ultimate cause of the accident, [Sala] should not have been on the flight," he added.

FC Nantes disputed "the existence of any wrongdoing, a causal link between the hypothetical wrongdoing and the damages, and then the damages themselves", a representative of club president Waldemar Kita said before the hearing.

The French club have not responded to Ms Taffarel's later statement, which was issued by Cardiff's legal team.

Neither Willie McKay or Mark McKay have responded publicly to this week's hearing, or Ms Taffarel's statement.

But in recent comments attributed to The Times, external, Willie McKay said that he was not acting as an agent in the Sala transfer, and that he was "working with my son… helping my son".

Emiliano Sala is holding a Cardiff City jersey infront of a wall which says "Welcome to Cardiff City Football Club"Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Cardiff City claimed Sala could have kept the club in the Premier League

Monday's hearing was the latest step in various legal proceedings since the deaths of Sala and David Ibbotson.

After the pilot of the flight they took was found to have been unlicensed, the man who organised it – plane operator David Henderson – was found guilty in 2021 of endangering the safety of an aircraft, and sentenced to 18 months in prison.

Cardiff City were also forced by FIFA and a ruling at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to pay FC Nantes the full £15m transfer fee for Sala, after it was deemed that it had been finalised before his death.