Captain Havoc wrote: » I don't see what you're saying, it's up to the player if he wants a minimum release clause or not and it's up to a club to take a risk if a player is worth a long term contract to stop him from going anywhere for a while.
Sheepy99 wrote: » Do you think today's game, where the so called smaller clubs ALWAYS lose their best players in the end to the wealthy ones, would benefit if minimum fee release clauses were more widespread, particularly in England where they seem to be non-existent? At least that way, clubs are guaranteed a big fee every time (unless they're silly enough to set it at a low amount relative to their potential) and it allows them to say bug-off in a nice way. I'd like to think it would work well if it became regular practice when giving a player their first senior contract. I mean it's not going to hurt anybody's hand or pocket to write the condition in a contract. One recent example that springs to mind of a club who flat out did not want to sell their player is when Sociedad sold Illarramendi to Real for 32M. At this stage it's looking like great business, given that his career has stalled, as unlikely as it was that it would have nosedived as much as quickly, had he remained with Sociedad and kept his chance of regular football. One negative aspect would be that a club would flat out refuse to sell a player even if his heart was completely set on a move. However footballers are paid well enough nowadays to get over something like that, plus the fact that in any other sort of employment, to be openly seeking a transfer would be laughable.
Chancer3001 wrote: » Suarezs wasn't a release clause. It was a nothing clause really. The minimum fee clause only really works if it's a smallish amount, or an amount below what the player is valued at. It has been used in England in the past. Craig Bellamy at Blackburn is one example I can think of off the top of my head
Henry is reported to have said. "He had a buyout clause of £40m. Arsenal, one of our prime rivals, offered £40m plus £1. What we've found … is that contracts don't seem to mean a lot in England – actually, in world football."
Chancer3001 wrote: » His wasn't a sell clause though, it was some silly clause that he had to be informed of bids over a certain amount
~Rebel~ wrote: » I don't really see what you mean... How does it help the club to have a minimum release clause? That clause only stipulates the price at which the club MUST sell. Plenty of players get sold for below that price. Take 2 players at clubs. One with a clause of 25m, the other with no clause. There's no reason the second one would be sold for less than 25m, it's quite the opposite - the second one can hold out for more if they so wish. Calling it a minimum release clause doesn't really match what it is - it's just a release clause, it's the most you can get.
CSF wrote: » Well it is upto the player if he wants a minimum release clause or not, but to say that players always hold the sway in contract negotiations wouldn't really be true, particularly for young players who would be happy to sign up for one for an extra thousand or 2 on their weekly pay.
bucketybuck wrote: » And what would be the difference with minimum fee releases clauses? That young player still has no bargaining power so the clause gets set at a value that suits the club, what problem is this solving?
Blatter wrote: » http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/mar/02/liverpool-john-henry-luis-suarez-clause It certainly turned out to be effectively a nothing clause alright!
AdamD wrote: » I reckon this is just Henry looking for some cheap goodwill with the Liverpool fans.
Blatter wrote: » I doubt it seeing as there was a lot of talk at the time that Suarez was considering legal action over the whole debacle.
~Rebel~ wrote: » I can't see any way in which this helps the club. Without a clause, the club can say absolutely any price they want. They own the players contract. They're in the position of power. A release clause only benefits the player, as it allows a way for an outside party to break the players contract with the club.
CSF wrote: » Prevents the club getting taken for a ride, when the young player eventually meets potential. I believe something like this is happening Dortmund this summer with Reus. Obviously we're talking in a hypothetical world where Minimum fee release clauses become the norm like they are in Germany (to an extent) and Spain. Obviously the club would be in a better position if they're tied to nothing.
Shanotheslayer wrote: » Lot's of players go cheaper then what they are worth, the club could value a player higher than what they think. EG- Sterling/Barkley bright england prospects could set a minimum release of 60Mil. Over value them. As aomeone else said Illra going for 35mil. He's barely getting a game atm and wont sell again for near that imo
Liam O wrote: » But Dortmund surely then took Gladbach for a ride then when buying Reus if we go by that. The minimum clause means nothing really, it's just the minimum amount that must be accepted. The club can still sell for less.
Shanotheslayer wrote: » Lot's of players go cheaper then what they are worth, the club could value a player higher than what they think.
Chancer3001 wrote: » They benefit the player
CSF wrote: » Well moreso the buying club, but yeah to an extent.
CSF wrote: » Prevents the club getting taken for a ride, when the young player eventually meets potential.
keane2097 wrote: » It does the opposite. You have a young player and give him a release clause of 25M, then he has a Bale-style blossoming and becomes a monster worth 40M+ you are now forced to take 25M for him. You don't seem to understand this at all. This clause sets an artificial maximum $ value on the amount a club can get for a player, and is entirely a manner in which they can ensure they get rode if one of their players excels unexpectedly.