Overview
- FIFA’s website now shows 11 active inhibitions against San Lorenzo after new measures were posted in recent days.
- Recent entries are tied to solidarity and training payments linked to Diego Herazo and overdue installments owed to Rafael Pérez, with reports estimating about $350,000.
- The club failed to register players in the last window and risks being shut out again unless it clears the cases, with total outlays to lift all current inhibitions reported near $3 million.
- San Lorenzo is described as the second most sanctioned club in South America, trailing only San José de Oruro of Bolivia.
- The sporting block comes as a court-ordered reinstatement of president Marcelo Moretti after a bribery-video controversy fuels protests and as a roughly $5 million bankruptcy petition from Swiss fund AIS Investment Fund moves forward with a proposed payment plan.