BR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
Why?
by YateleyRoyal » 09 Dec 2013 15:20
BR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
by Sanguine » 09 Dec 2013 15:22
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 15:23
Sanguine I like Martin Samuels idea that if a player doesn't play for his loan club against his owners, he is suspended for his loan club's next game (subject to a medical).
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 15:25
YateleyRoyalBR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
Why?
by BR2 » 09 Dec 2013 15:29
YateleyRoyalBR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
Why?
by BR2 » 09 Dec 2013 15:31
TBMYateleyRoyalBR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
Why?
Yeah this ^
There is a limit on the amount of players you can loan in, and what the loan system does well is stop some clubs going bust.
by YateleyRoyal » 09 Dec 2013 15:40
BR2YateleyRoyalBR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
Why?
Premier clubs have loads of dosh so why don't they back their own judgement and buy players rather than borrow them?
As I said earlier, the loan system was brought in to cover injuries on a short term basis and not to provide a player for a whole season that the receiving club may well not buy at the end of it.
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 15:43
BR2TBMBR2 Despite what others have written I still think that the idea of having loans between Premier League clubs is wrong-within the current rules yes, but IMHO the rules are wrong.
Yeah this ^
There is a limit on the amount of players you can loan in, and what the loan system does well is stop some clubs going bust.
At the lower level yes, but at Premier League level do you expect Everton, Man City or Chelsea to go bust if Lukaku and Barry stay with their parent clubs?
by Silver Fox » 09 Dec 2013 15:50
Sanguine I like Martin Samuels idea that if a player doesn't play for his loan club against his owners, he is suspended for his loan club's next game (subject to a medical).
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 15:57
Silver FoxSanguine I like Martin Samuels idea that if a player doesn't play for his loan club against his owners, he is suspended for his loan club's next game (subject to a medical).
I don't know if that works but loanees should definitely be able to play against their parent clubs, a point I've been rattling on about for years.
by 6ft Kerplunk » 09 Dec 2013 16:01
TBM I did say "some clubs" - so although Chelsea and Man City won't, it allows the likes of Everton to have a quality player for a season without having to splash out 20m + wages on him - which in turn makes the league more competitive.
by YateleyRoyal » 09 Dec 2013 16:01
TBMSilver FoxSanguine I like Martin Samuels idea that if a player doesn't play for his loan club against his owners, he is suspended for his loan club's next game (subject to a medical).
I don't know if that works but loanees should definitely be able to play against their parent clubs, a point I've been rattling on about for years.
It wouldn't work
2) What if he decides to score an own goal, to give his parent club the win?
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 16:02
6ft KerplunkTBM I did say "some clubs" - so although Chelsea and Man City won't, it allows the likes of Everton to have a quality player for a season without having to splash out 20m + wages on him - which in turn makes the league more competitive.
Or maybe if Chelsea and Man City weren't hoarding players on massive wages and letting the likes of Everton pay half the wages for a year they'd think twice about the hoarding. Then player's wages wouldn't cost so much and Everton could afford to but them anyway. All the current loan system does is allow the bigger teams to buy more players than they need and the smaller Premier League clubs to have players they can't afford which just raises the gap between the Premier League and the FL.
by 6ft Kerplunk » 09 Dec 2013 16:03
by Sanguine » 09 Dec 2013 16:07
Silver FoxSanguine I like Martin Samuels idea that if a player doesn't play for his loan club against his owners, he is suspended for his loan club's next game (subject to a medical).
I don't know if that works but loanees should definitely be able to play against their parent clubs, a point I've been rattling on about for years.
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 16:11
SanguineSilver FoxSanguine I like Martin Samuels idea that if a player doesn't play for his loan club against his owners, he is suspended for his loan club's next game (subject to a medical).
I don't know if that works but loanees should definitely be able to play against their parent clubs, a point I've been rattling on about for years.
It used to be a gentleman's agreement - so the Premier League acted to stop that and loanees are now actually not allowed to play against their parent clubs, full stop. As Samuels highlighted - whilst Mourinho's argument looks a little made up after the event, it's very true that clubs like Chelsea and City can send good players out to stick one over their rivals, safe in the knowledge that the player isn't allowed to do it against them.
by Sanguine » 09 Dec 2013 16:15
by YateleyRoyal » 09 Dec 2013 16:17
by TBM » 09 Dec 2013 16:20
Sanguine he wouldn't have ended up at a club where Petr Cech will be the first choice until he retires.
by YateleyRoyal » 09 Dec 2013 16:25
Sanguine It would also deal to an extent with big clubs hoarding talent, as they won't be able to ship them out for experience. Take Thibault Courtois, the Chelsea keeper who has been on loan at Atletico for three years. Arguably the best young keeper in Europe, such a rule would have seen Atletico or some other club sign him permanently, and he wouldn't have ended up at a club where Petr Cech will be the first choice until he retires.
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