Simply Ned wrote:There has been some discussion on the problems of offloading players who are on contract and wonder if anyone can clarify the position in relation to the following:-
I understand when a club signs a player on a 2 year contract and then decides after the 1st season he has not met their expectations the club are contracted to pay up the remainder of his contract if they want to release him from the wage bill.
However, is it correct that unless the player insists on sitting out the remainder of his contract the manager can make the player available on a free transfer. If the player then agrees a satisfactory deal with a new club then the selling club does not have to pay up the remainder of his contract? If the player is unable to agree a deal with a club then he remains until his contract expires.
It's not that clear cut.
Let's say player x has one year on his contract with club y. He gets paid £1,000 a week. If club y put him on the transfer list (even for free) they're immediately saying to other clubs that he's not good enough for them or surplus to requirements. As a result another club is unlikely to meet the same wage demands that would enable a move. So the circumstances you describe at the end of your post are very unlikely.
However let's say club y put player x on the transfer list and say a previous manager with club z who knows and rates the player comes along via the efforts of club or agent and offers the player a two-year contract on £750 a week. The player may still be unlikely to move so club y offer to pay up part of the contract let's say a one-off payment of £20,000, which means player x is better off in the first year of his contract. He then leaves y and joins z.
Given Ryan McCann walked straight back into the Queen of the South squad the scenario above is what's likely to have happened there.
Back to the scenario, OK Morecambe are norminally out of pocket with an up front payment of £20K but over the course of a season they've now freed up £30K to spend.