Quote from: cdbullyweefan on July 19, 2015, 05:14:26 PMNah. It's like letting your ex-girlfriend stay in your house after she's left you in a tantrum claiming she can do better, with a book full of phone numbers of all the wealthier blokes in town.Nah.You've grown apart over time, she's moved out. She's finding it tough moving on and is mentally "in a bad place", so you let her kip on the sofa for a bit.However, you both know that sexual contact would be bad. Luckily, you're both grown up enough to realise it.
Nah. It's like letting your ex-girlfriend stay in your house after she's left you in a tantrum claiming she can do better, with a book full of phone numbers of all the wealthier blokes in town.
He has chosen not to remain at the club so don't see why we should help him get fit to potentially play against us in the future. When I left my job, I didn't expect to be able to wander back and help myself to stationery, photocopying and a new laptop.
Quote from: chrisw1 on July 20, 2015, 11:00:54 AMI'm not sure I agree. Players who run down their contracts generally do so out of greed.There's a thin line, though, between what we'd consider "greed" and what a player just sees as getting the best options he can.If you look at Vlaar, one of the most noticeable players - certainly defenders - of the world cup, at a struggling club, last year of his contract about to start, nudging 30, lots of injury problems in the past - all of those things will have been going through his mind when deciding what to do.You're right, a lot of players are driven by greed, but if you spin that out to mean all of them, then you don't really have much latitude to complain when they act accordingly.I also think we used greed as a convenient excuse. Benteke leaving = greed. Delph changing his mind = greed. And so on.It's too easy. When Milner left, there were people on here saying he was leaving through greed. Four years on, look at what he's won in the meantime, and look at the seasons we've had since he went.
I'm not sure I agree. Players who run down their contracts generally do so out of greed.
I'm in the camp that says that we have no contractual obligations to a former player who decided his future lay elsewhere and an elsewhere that he considered more fitting of his abilities. As such he can now sort himself out, even if having to pay for his own treatment and rehabilitation wasn't quite what he planned.
At the very least he should have a comprehensive induction on how to use all the machines, with a man in a shellsuit.
Can you imagine the groans from the medical team if Vlaar hobbled in through the door again?
Quote from: Risso on July 20, 2015, 02:16:45 PMCan you imagine the groans from the medical team if Vlaar hobbled in through the door again?Oh I don't know some might fancy a spot of overtime.