Perhaps, though I can only imagine the amount of uneducated young players that would get terribly exploited.The entire sport would be significantly better if everyone followed his lead.
A player without an agent would have no idea of who actually wants him.A club can only take advantage of a player nobody else wants. If nobody else wants the player then they're probably not worth all that much.
Football clubs would love that to happen. The players would do far less well however.In what way? Players will know roughly what each other gets paid. They can hire a lawyer to check over the contract to make sure it's what they agreed to and above board. Job done.
New here?!You lot are talking nonsense, by the way. Enjoy it.
Slightly different…. Agents are serving the interests of a client. An equivalent analogy here is an estate agent selling a house for somebody who go buys a new house and then the agent informing that same client that they can sell their new house and make even more money…. I really do find it strange that there a few on here that seem to think that agents aren’t beneficial to professional footballers.If Estate agents move you into a house only to tell you the day after the house is crap and you should be aiming for another straight away.....
He came out and very clearly addressed it when he spoke about the agent that called him late on deadline day about joining Nice.It feels like a very low-key and somewhat shabby ending to his time here. Not sure who or what’s to blame but surely he deserves better.
I’m pretty sure that agents can no longer work for parties on both sides of the deal.Big difference. Estate agents typically charge between 0.9 and 3.6% of the cost of selling the house. Football agents got up to 40% of some deals (pogba to utd being one). Getting paid by both the selling club and buying club. Where they actually should be paid by the player as at the end of the day. He is who they are supposed to work for. Clubs also pay the agent loyalty fees for players to stay at their club and do the job they are paid to do.
Slightly different…. Agents are serving the interests of a client. An equivalent analogy here is an estate agent selling a house for somebody who go buys a new house and then the agent informing that same client that they can sell their new house and make even more money…. I really do find it strange that there a few on here that seem to think that agents aren’t beneficial to professional footballers.
I’m pretty sure that agents can no longer work for parties on both sides of the deal.
Agents (working for a player) are paid an an amount of a player’s contract with a club as specified in the player/agent contract. A players’ contract with a club consists of wages and signing on fee (spread over the length of the contract and referred to as a loyalty bonus).
The sporting agency business is huge and incredibly competitive. Agencies are trying to undercut other agencies all of the time.
Nothing in there at all that shows why a player doesn’t need representation, I would say it actually argues that players absolutely need good representation…. I could give you many, many horror stories of numerous clubs exploiting players who don’t have any (or at least decent) representation.Oh wait. So clubs would exploit uneducated players but agents wouldn't?
Watch this you might learn that players have no idea what their agreement with their agent is as the clubs pay them. They think they are free.
I’d rather not talk openly on here about situations that my Dad and some of his colleagues and peers came across in the football industry, some of them are shocking though in terms of exploitation….. and there was absolutely a direct relationship between players with no (or poor/inexperienced) representation and terrible contracts.Beneficial, yeh to players who want to lose the hassle and pay a % absolutely
Essential? Not by a long shot IMO
I’d rather not talk openly on here about situations that my Dad and some of his colleagues and peers came across in the football industry, some of them are shocking though in terms of exploitation….. and there was absolutely a direct relationship between players with no (or poor/inexperienced) representation and terrible contracts. The poorer the background the kid came from the more he got exploited. In many ways agents like Sky Andrew made a living through being able to be an advocate for young, uneducated, black males and stop them getting exploited by clubs.
Of course, it could be both. Agents getting great deals for their players while at the same time exploiting those players. Encouraging them to go to Club X who have nice big brown envelopes. Touting them around without regard to what's the best for them and their short careers. Like everything, it's a sliding scale.Of course thats fair, I am sure it happens but I am sure that their are agents in places who also act for their own benefit and exploit the players. Its a big subject, one thats probably bigger than what can be communicated on a forum TBH
My Dad barely covered his expenses with a lot of the work he did for young players in the game, he absolutely always tried to act in the players’ best interests only and yet for a vast majority of those players they would often have been better off financially with an agent like a Sky Andrew who had more sway with clubs and better contacts.Of course thats fair, I am sure it happens but I am sure that their are agents in places who also act for their own benefit and exploit the players. Its a big subject, one thats probably bigger than what can be communicated on a forum TBH
Nothing in there at all that shows why a player doesn’t need representation, I would say it actually argues that players absolutely need good representation…. I could give you many, many horror stories of numerous clubs exploiting players who don’t have any (or at least decent) representation.
The point is estate agents don't need to exist. They're worthless in the process.Big difference. Estate agents typically charge between 0.9 and 3.6% of the cost of selling the house. Football agents got up to 40% of some deals (pogba to utd being one). Getting paid by both the selling club and buying club. Where they actually should be paid by the player as at the end of the day. He is who they are supposed to work for. Clubs also pay the agent loyalty fees for players to stay at their club and do the job they are paid to do.
My Dad barely covered his expenses with a lot of the work he did for young players in the game, he absolutely always tried to act in the players’ best interests only and yet for a vast majority of those players they would often have been better off financially with an agent like a Sky Andrew who had more sway with clubs and better contacts.
My Dad actually volunteered up players to bigger agencies who he felt could serve their interests better.
it is an uneducated, ill informed opinion that the game would be better (for the players) if their weren’t football agents. I’ve seen first hand how young, uneducated, un/badly represented players get treated by clubs.
All that implies knowing what you need. As a 20 year old, would I have had the gumption to go and find a lawyer? Get in touch with my union when I needed some advice? Almost certainly not -- I was a fudgewit. A fairly numerate, literate, IT-savvy fudgewit, but a fudgewit nonetheless.Representation doesn't have to be an agent. A lawyer paid by the hour. A representative from the pfa (the whole point of a union is to stop exploitation).
As for they wouldn't know who were after them. Hire a personal assistant to deal with that.
All that implies knowing what you need. As a 20 year old, would I have had the gumption to go and find a lawyer? Get in touch with my union when I needed some advice? Almost certainly not -- I was a fudgewit. A fairly numerate, literate, IT-savvy fudgewit, but a fudgewit nonetheless.
I can't see the clubs making that sort of advice easy to get by default, as there's a conflict of interest. And the likes of the PFA couldn't feasibly assign an advisor to every young footballer.
Instead, some guy comes along promising the earth, whispering nice-sounding advice. If you're lucky, it's someone like Finney's dad. Or a family member -- but then, how's Charlie Kane worked out?