by Sanguine »
09 Dec 2013 16:41
YateleyRoyal 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.
How do you enforce it - you can only sign a young player, but only if you promise not to loan him out, and he has to be a first team regular within x number of years?
Whether or not they sign him is up to the club, and whether or not the player joins them is up to the player.
But if the club is unable to loan him to another top flight team, it may make them think twice about signing him and paying his wages, and it may make the player think twice about joining the club at all.
Take the Courtois deal again - he was already a prospect when Chelsea signed him, and has been essentially ever-present in the Atletico side since he joined, barely weeks after signing for Chelsea. That loan out will have been discussed with Courtois at the time. If that loan wasn't an option, his choices would have been to sit on the bench waiting for Cech to die, or to join a different club where he would get games (like Atletico, or someone who could afford him at the time). Moreover, had a ban on top flight loans been in place, Chelsea would unlikely have signed him in the first place.
Which all seems a lot fairer, since at the time of signing him, it was not Chelsea's intention at all to actually play him.
Last edited by
Sanguine on 09 Dec 2013 16:42, edited 1 time in total.