If it wasn’t for his exorbitant wages, would any of you had been open to have him back in the squad and be used in one of the #10 roles?
No, but at least other teams might look at signing him.
If it wasn’t for his exorbitant wages, would any of you had been open to have him back in the squad and be used in one of the #10 roles?
I'm sorry but real life football doesn't operate as football manager where, the way you make it sound... oh they should have sold him earlier. It was obvious from the January before they were looking at selling /loaning Sancho, there were no takers, because he is on high wages and he is not a good player, add to that his stinky attitude, no one wants him.
I get Ten Hag was not the best manager but the Varane situation is actually a brilliant example of a player who has the right attitude, when you have that, you give a manager 0 excuses. Varane was frozen out for a bit but unlike Sancho who went crying on twitter, respected the manager and then got back in the fold and started the FA cup final.
How long after tweeting did he delete it? he didnt apologise to the manager. I think its natural for a manager to come out and say, he didnt get selected because he didn't train well, every manager does it.
I guess you feel the same way about Amorim then? he has come out and spoken about players in training.
Am I making it sound like Football manager though? I don't believe that I am to be honest.
There were absolutely no takers in the summer of 2023? But then we had no problem loaning him out to two different clubs in the next two windows. I'm not buying that one to be honest.
Bear in mind I'm not defending Sancho's attitude, I'm criticising Ten Hag and the clubs handling of the situation.
I don't think the manager of Manchester United should ever be speaking about private club matters in the press, full stop. I'm of the same opinion as SAF on the matter. Internal club matters especially relating to players should stay internal as nothing positive will come from speaking about internal player issues publicly.
Am I making it sound like Football manager though? I don't believe that I am to be honest.
There were absolutely no takers in the summer of 2023? But then we had no problem loaning him out to two different clubs in the next two windows. I'm not buying that one to be honest.
Bear in mind I'm not defending Sancho's attitude, I'm criticising Ten Hag and the clubs handling of the situation.
I don't think the manager of Manchester United should ever be speaking about private club matters in the press, full stop. I'm of the same opinion as SAF on the matter. Internal club matters especially relating to players should stay internal as nothing positive will come from speaking about internal player issues publicly.
Ideally, yesWhen a manager is asked in the presser, you want him to say, next question, my team selection is a private club matter?
But Ferguson didn’t stick to that mantra, though.Am I making it sound like Football manager though? I don't believe that I am to be honest.
There were absolutely no takers in the summer of 2023? But then we had no problem loaning him out to two different clubs in the next two windows. I'm not buying that one to be honest.
Bear in mind I'm not defending Sancho's attitude, I'm criticising Ten Hag and the clubs handling of the situation.
I don't think the manager of Manchester United should ever be speaking about private club matters in the press, full stop. I'm of the same opinion as SAF on the matter. Internal club matters especially relating to players should stay internal as nothing positive will come from speaking about internal player issues publicly.
I think you are saying oh.. we should have sold him. Its like if you have a car that no one wants.. you cant just say sell it.. there has to be a buyer.
It gets to a point where you are so desperate to sell the player, a club comes and says, we will loan with obligation, the club will take that.
We loaned him to Dortmund because they were never paying him 300k in wages... which is why only a short loan... they didn't even come back in the summer shows how bad Sancho is.
You say you dont buy it, so are you in the opinion the club dont want to sell him?
What did Ten Hag do that was wrong?
Well, lets just cancel all media from the players and managers then right? If they cant be honest..
How is it an internal private matter when the manager says, I select players based on who is good in training?
When a manager is asked in the presser, you want him to say, next question, my team selection is a private club matter?
For me, the issue isn’t the £5m, it’s that it’s going to be tough to get rid of him in the summer. He’ll stick around like a bad smell until we get a loan with us subsidising his wages until he leaves on a free next year.The deal really isn't all that remarkable - in any way.
All in all this was about the best deal United could have agreed considering the circumstances. The poor negotiation didn't take place last summer, it was when you signed him for £73m on wages of £250k per week. That's a £138m outlay over the course of his deal. That put United in an incredibly weak position from which they struck a deal that was pretty fair for both sides.
- Having a penalty clause doesn't mean there wasn't an obligation to buy. Quite the opoosite. Chelse are obligated to buy Sancho and will have to pay a penalty for not doing so. Just as outfield footballers are obligated to not control the ball with their hands and are penalised for doing so (with a penalty kick if they do so in the penalty area).
- Also, penalty clauses are not that uncommon and are always a fraction of the total deal price, frequently 5-10%. So actually, a 20% clause is actually a decent level of downside protection for United.
- As has been mentioned, United didn't negotiate a way to share in any upside if Sancho performed brilliantly, but he didn't and was always unlikely to, so I don't see the huge problem here.
The deal really isn't all that remarkable - in any way.
All in all this was about the best deal United could have agreed considering the circumstances. The poor negotiation didn't take place last summer, it was when you signed him for £73m on wages of £250k per week. That's a £138m outlay over the course of his deal. That put United in an incredibly weak position from which they struck a deal that was pretty fair for both sides.
- Having a penalty clause doesn't mean there wasn't an obligation to buy. Quite the opoosite. Chelse are obligated to buy Sancho and will have to pay a penalty for not doing so. Just as outfield footballers are obligated to not control the ball with their hands and are penalised for doing so (with a penalty kick if they do so in the penalty area).
- Also, penalty clauses are not that uncommon and are always a fraction of the total deal price, frequently 5-10%. So actually, a 20% clause is actually a decent level of downside protection for United.
- As has been mentioned, United didn't negotiate a way to share in any upside if Sancho performed brilliantly, but he didn't and was always unlikely to, so I don't see the huge problem here.
Well we didn't lie about it, the obligation exists or else there would not be a penalty for breaking it. For what it's worth Chelsea were the ones to confirm the obligation to buy in their own statement about the signing.Which brings us back to, if it was such a great deal considering the circunstances, why lie about it for six months and disguise it as an obligation to buy?
Incidentally, was a 5M loan fee with a 20M buy (same output) option completely out of the table? Cause that would've been better for United (especially if they're short on cash).
Probably as journos tend to not really know everything?Which brings us back to, if it was such a great deal considering the circunstances, why lie about it for six months and disguise it as an obligation to buy?
Incidentally, was a 5M loan fee with a 20M buy (same output) option completely out of the table? Cause that would've been better for United (especially if they're short on cash).
Probably as journos tend to not really know everything?
The reality is one tier 1 journo likely got the rough number, then the waterfall of retweets, rehashing the same info and speculation followed and muddied the water.
As in specifying what the poster is asking about how it's structured?Chelsea literally announced it as an obligation on the official announcement.
Which brings us back to this...Which brings us back to, if it was such a great deal considering the circunstances, why lie about it for six months and disguise it as an obligation to buy?
A penalty, by it's very definition can only be applied when there is an obligation. "A penalty clause in a contract is a provision that imposes a monetary or other detriment on a party for breaching a contractual obligation". A quick Google.
- Having a penalty clause doesn't mean there wasn't an obligation to buy. Quite the opposite. Chelsea are obligated to buy Sancho and will have to pay a penalty for not doing so. Just as outfield footballers are obligated to not control the ball with their hands and are penalised for doing so (with a penalty kick if they do so in the penalty area).
The deal really isn't all that remarkable - in any way.
All in all this was about the best deal United could have agreed considering the circumstances. The poor negotiation didn't take place last summer, it was when you signed him for £73m on wages of £250k per week. That's a £138m outlay over the course of his deal. That put United in an incredibly weak position from which they struck a deal that was pretty fair for both sides.
- Having a penalty clause doesn't mean there wasn't an obligation to buy. Quite the opoosite. Chelse are obligated to buy Sancho and will have to pay a penalty for not doing so. Just as outfield footballers are obligated to not control the ball with their hands and are penalised for doing so (with a penalty kick if they do so in the penalty area).
- Also, penalty clauses are not that uncommon and are always a fraction of the total deal price, frequently 5-10%. So actually, a 20% clause is actually a decent level of downside protection for United.
- As has been mentioned, United didn't negotiate a way to share in any upside if Sancho performed brilliantly, but he didn't and was always unlikely to, so I don't see the huge problem here.
Ah, so it was hiding in plain sight! An obligation disguised as an obligation. Genius!Which brings us back to this...
A penalty, by it's very definition can only be applied when there is an obligation. "A penalty clause in a contract is a provision that imposes a monetary or other detriment on a party for breaching a contractual obligation". A quick Google.
Probably safe to just assume he's a squad option as one of the 2 #10's for next season, which incidentally is probably his best position anyway if you ignore he isn't cut for the prem or the expectation of a big club. Doubt we'll be able to sell him after this situation with Chelsea.
Probably safe to just assume he's a squad option as one of the 2 #10's for next season, which incidentally is probably his best position anyway if you ignore he isn't cut for the prem or the expectation of a big club. Doubt we'll be able to sell him after this situation with Chelsea.
He has. Dortmund played a 3-4-2-1 and he played as the left-sided forward/ no.10, at his best.Interesting you say his best position is the 10... what makes you say that when he has never really played in the 10 for a period of time?
Sancho to me is more suited a certain manager, someone who doesn't want to press , in the ilk of Big Game or Sean Dyche, which highlights he is a lower table player.
At Dortmund his best form came when he was basically in that roaming 10 role off to one side of the other. He didn't play as a proper winger, and often they used a 3-4-3 type system where he played as one of the 2 behind the striker. Similar to Mount under Tuchel at Chelsea. Amorim doesn't use wingers or wide forwards, and that's what Ole/Ten Hag and Chelsea have tried to use Sancho as.Interesting you say his best position is the 10... what makes you say that when he has never really played in the 10 for a period of time?
Sancho to me is more suited a certain manager, someone who doesn't want to press , in the ilk of Big Game or Sean Dyche, which highlights he is a lower table player.
Best prepare yourself. If Ornstein feels the need to actually report that the exit clause exists, it's probably because there's people actually considering it.The safe assumption is that he is gone. The only reliable reporting on this is that whilst the existence of the clause has been confirmed both Chelsea and Sancho are intending to go through with the permanent deal and contract negotiations won't be an issue. If someone like Whitwell or Ornstein starts reporting that the situation has changed then I will be concerned but right now the only scaremongering is coming from clickbait merchants and fan channels.
Out of curiosity what type of reception would he get if he actually returned as a player? I was/am under the impression it would make our reaction to Benitez look like a massive love in.Probably safe to just assume he's a squad option as one of the 2 #10's for next season, which incidentally is probably his best position anyway if you ignore he isn't cut for the prem or the expectation of a big club. Doubt we'll be able to sell him after this situation with Chelsea.
Best prepare yourself. If Ornstein feels the need to actually report that the exit clause exists, it's probably because there's people actually considering it.
Ornstein reported it because rage merchants were posting all manner of nonsense on social media and YouTube and so he confirmed that yes it does exist but Chelsea are not looking to use the clause as their preference is still to keep Sancho and the player wants to stay. The only reporting saying otherwise is from fairly unreliable sources whereas the Athletic put out a piece a few days back essentially underlining that despite the lack of stats Chelsea remain happy with Sancho, his attitude and professionalism have been good and Maresca wants him. The biggest potential issue would be if Chelsea were to decide to dump Maresca as he does seem to be the one most supportive of keeping Sancho. Chelsea are having an ok season but the excitement of a possible title challenge at Christmas has receded to a CL finish and if the ho hum results continue and they slip out of the top 5 it would not be that shocking to see Maresca given the boot.
I don't think it's that black or white, especially when you're comparing it to Fergie aka Mr Manchester United i.e totally different context, hierarchy and situations etc. ETH said a really tame criticism of Sancho because he felt the need to say it publicly, which plenty of mangers in the past, present and future will continue to do so. He couldn't get a tune out of him after giving him 3 months off in the middle of the season previously and didn't feel he stepped up his game the next year. Look at Maresca showering Sancho with praise and love. The end result? Still all around shite performances.
Keeping it 'internal' and just meandering along with whatever Sancho/Rashford do as they please in the background is as 'detrimental' as not shaming/criticising them in public. Sometimes enough is enough.
I think (hope) it’s 2. He’ll have £17m left on our book value which they’ll know and maybe they’re aiming for that… which we may well accept (saves wages)Outside chance but it’s possible Chelsea leaked this because:
1. They wanted to light a fire under Sancho for the remaining part of the season.
2. They putting pressure on United, hinting they might just pay the £5m in the hope the £25m fee becomes £20m or £15m.
I think you are saying oh.. we should have sold him. Its like if you have a car that no one wants.. you cant just say sell it.. there has to be a buyer.
It gets to a point where you are so desperate to sell the player, a club comes and says, we will loan with obligation, the club will take that.
We loaned him to Dortmund because they were never paying him 300k in wages... which is why only a short loan... they didn't even come back in the summer shows how bad Sancho is.
You say you dont buy it, so are you in the opinion the club dont want to sell him?
What did Ten Hag do that was wrong?
Well, lets just cancel all media from the players and managers then right? If they cant be honest..
How is it an internal private matter when the manager says, I select players based on who is good in training?
When a manager is asked in the presser, you want him to say, next question, my team selection is a private club matter?
Is there not an option 3, to increase their leverage in the contract negotiations with Sancho, I think option 3 is the most likely.Outside chance but it’s possible Chelsea leaked this because:
1. They wanted to light a fire under Sancho for the remaining part of the season.
2. They putting pressure on United, hinting they might just pay the £5m in the hope the £25m fee becomes £20m or £15m.
But Ferguson didn’t stick to that mantra, though.