YUPfaaip wrote:
and you've made my point....

YUPfaaip wrote:
and you've made my point....
Also, of course, in the cases of Gradel and Howson, Bates got in some money that he could either (a) reinvest in the squad or (b) trouser.weasel wrote:As a fan of bacon, Marko, I'm glad I don't live near you as it must be very expensive.
Would Howson have signed a new contract? Probably yes if he'd stayed till the end of the season and we'd been promoted. Were Leeds in a position to gamble a £2m transfer income on hoping the team that was around 8th at the time would definitely get promoted? Of course Howson would have liked to have got promoted with Leeds and played in the prem with Leeds, that is fairly clear, but the reality is that if we'd not got promoted he would have gone and we'd have got no fee. Even going to a Norwich is a good career move as it is the Premiership. Even if Norwich get relegated he has had the opportunity to show what he can do in the premiership and as such put himself in a position to get a move to a better club than Norwich. Heck maybe even an England cap or two.
I have a nephew who is about to sign professional terms with a league 2 side, he has been in and around football since he was 7 years old, his take on football is totally different to most generations , they are taught that basically this is your trade be as good at it as you are able and go as far as you can with whoever it may be, playing for the team you support may be a bonus but never let it cloud your judgement, it's a short career, financially make the most of it while you can.OCAFC wrote:
Do you honestly think as a player who came through the youth team and whos family live in leeds, JH wouldn't have stayed if Leeds had made a reasonable offer?
And they are right to do so.gessa wrote:
I have a nephew who is about to sign professional terms with a league 2 side, he has been in and around football since he was 7 years old, his take on football is totally different to most generations , they are taught that basically this is your trade be as good at it as you are able and go as far as you can with whoever it may be, playing for the team you support may be a bonus but never let it cloud your judgement, it's a short career, financially make the most of it while you can.
We all think as fans , players think of it as business.
ThisGuildford White wrote:
And they are right to do so.
Calling them Judases if they leave is just plain stupid.
Which further begs the question, why does the club never renegotiate contracts earlier? Why do we have so many of our best so close to the end of their contracts when negotiations even begin? Furthermore, why are the contracts we offer so short? The risk is that you end up with a player not good enough or injured or whatever on a long contract. It's not a risk if the board account for player overheads in the budget. There will always be players out of favour, not being used at any football club, so why does ours so often try unsuccessfully to avoid an inevitability, then refuse to pay for it when it does happen?weasel wrote:There is no loyalty in football. Yeah it's nice to play with the team that you support but if someone offers more, or a chance to win trophies off they go. I remember Gary Speed, the Everton fan, leaving Leeds to go to Everton as it was his dream move. A couple of years later, despite being a regular in 'his' team he moved to Newcastle.
The Zaha situation is completely irrelevant. Zaha had signed a 4.5 year contract as fairly much an unknown in November 2010. As such when he signed his new 5.5 year deal last December he still had 3.5 years left on a contract that was probably paying him very litte.
If he hadn't signed the new deal Palace had no pressure to sell. He still had 3.5 years so no rush to sell, his value would likely rise as well and he was on low wages. So it was in Zaha's interest to sign a new deal with no doubt a substantial pay increase (much like how Tresor Kandol and Jermaine Beckford signed improved contracts when we were in league 1).
There is a huge difference between a player having half a year and having 3.5 years left on their contract.
The club was right to sell Howson. Where the money went is a different matter.
Does that relate to you as we'll!!Silky wrote:
;)Silky wrote:heyheyhey...... we're not talking about me here, we're poking fun at marko
There's a balance. Ridsdale might have gone too far. bates isn't going far enough. One extreme isn't better than the other.weasel wrote:Jeez Marko there is a clue to why the club doesn't renegotiate contracts earlier when I mentioned Beckford and Kandol both being offered new improved deals because of their good start to the first league 1 season. As shown JB went on to do well whereas Kandol didn't and we ended up paying a lot of money out on wages for a player who quickly became surplus to requirements. You'd offer these new improved deals to everyone who showed a bit of promise and guess what you'd have even more players clogging up our squad as no other team would take them off our hands as they wouldn't want to pay the wages that they are on.
Perhaps cast your mind back to a certain former chairman who handed out great contracts to players. Remember how their wages helped dragged the club under as we ended up paying their wages for years even after they'd left the club.
Very easy to say with hindsight why wasn't he offered a better deal, not so easy to get it right at the time. Take the case of Bradley Johnson. We all thought he was fairly sh*t. He'd failed to establish himself under Macca (sent out on loan) and Grayson. He wasn't really seen as a first team starter as he entered the last year of his contract but then suddenly started playing really well. By this stage it was too late as he was now attracting the attention of premiership clubs. No one would have given him an improved contract prior to his final year.