OccupiedPalestineBlues
Well-Known Member
I appreciate it was a simplistic analogy. However. Do you lease a player etc. knowing that at the end of the lease he has no value, or do you go for the option to actually sell the player within the lease period whereby you retain a value, and possibly profit from the lease. With a 5 year contract for Kane or Haaland, Kane in say 4 years will be worth little, but Haaland could be worth considerable sums.City tend to keep their players in the long term, and the point I was trying to make was that 12 years of Haaland is more value than 5 years of Kane for the same price.
I understand that, and yes it would have been absolutely correct in the days when the clubs could tell players what to do.
It was the way of the world but that’s all changed at our level nowadays. The players have savvy agents and only sign good contracts.
At the end of their lease period (so to speak) they can walk away free, the club can’t sell them without their agreement and their savvy agents ensure that they won’t agree to anything unless they can profit handsomely from it.
The only way to extend a players contract is to increase the players salary / bonuses to a point at which the cumulative amount is at least equal, over the extended part of the contract, to the sum that the player‘s agent thinks the player would achieve if he ran down his contract and earned a signing-on bonus and salary elsewhere for that period.
Look at Bale at Real Madrid. £400k a week and the club can’t sell him and he won’t leave because both he and RM fully understand that he earns more where he is than he could earn elsewhere for the period of time in question.
So there’s none of that “give him a 5 year contract, sell him in 3 and make a nice tidy profit - unless, the player (and his agent if he has one) are happy that the transfer is the most profitable path for the player for the time period in question.
I know that’s simplistic, and there are notable exceptions. For instance; Kevin DeBruyne represents himself because he understands that an agent‘s fee is money that the player would receive if he managed his own affairs.
Prior to his last extension, he employed a specialist agency to produce a report that demonstrated his beneficial financial impact for the club.
Armed with the report he told the club what he was worth, he and the club compared their valuations and came to an agreement.
He received the maximum that the club would pay him because he knew his worth, and he pocketed the part of that worth that an agent would have taken.
Sorry about being so long winded, just trying to be clear about why I hold my opinion, but that’s not to say that you need share it.
The point of the forum is the exchange of views and opinions and I appreciate why so many will share your take.