Fabian Delph, 25, can leave Aston Villa for just £8m this summer after the club agreed a remarkable release clause in his new contract, understood to apply only to teams involved in European competition. (Telegraph)
Maybe he had it put in in case Lambert was still manager.
Quote from: olaftab on June 28, 2015, 12:08:59 PMFabian Delph, 25, can leave Aston Villa for just £8m this summer after the club agreed a remarkable release clause in his new contract, understood to apply only to teams involved in European competition. (Telegraph)West Ham will be in for him then
I thought release clauses usually stated a minimum amount and not an actual amount. Also, are there not two types of clause, one an express contractual and the other an implied good faith type. In both cases, isn't there usually a limiting factor on triggering the clause e.g. relegation, CL qualified club etc. With a minimum amount, wouldn't this imply that you could get two or more teams bidding. The player is not a free agent.
If citeh's interest and the clause are genuine it would make the £12m plus players deal seem more logical. I think he'd get in the city midfield at the moment. Not if they get pogba in as well though.
Quote from: old man villa fan on June 28, 2015, 04:29:11 PMI thought release clauses usually stated a minimum amount and not an actual amount. Also, are there not two types of clause, one an express contractual and the other an implied good faith type. In both cases, isn't there usually a limiting factor on triggering the clause e.g. relegation, CL qualified club etc. With a minimum amount, wouldn't this imply that you could get two or more teams bidding. The player is not a free agent.What would be the point of a 'minimum amount'? What if the player turned out to be rubbish and you wanted to sell him, but because you've put a minimum amount in the contract you wouldn't be able to? A release clause is just as the name suggests - it entitles the player to trigger his release from the contract. As for 'implied good faith', why would you put that into a legal contract? If neither party has to abide by it, why would you spend time even putting it in there?If there were a 'minimum amount' then yes, you could get two teams bidding. But that's not how release clauses work, so therefore you wouldn't. I can't think of any examples where a player has had a buy-out clause in his contract at the time of the transfer and the buying club paid more than they had to. There just wouldn't be a reason for them to do so.