Behaviour is symptomatic of football’s ugly side

Date: 28th September 2011 at 4:48 pm
Written by Rob-Schatten

It’s bizarre to think that the richest footballers in today’s game – the likes of Carlos Tevez, Wayne Rooney, Samir Nasri, Luka Modric et al – owe their fortunes to a moderately talented Belgian who spent just eight seasons in professional football before a five-year court battle backfired on him and ended his career.

The tale of Jean-Marc Bosman is a sad one. Interviewed by the Sun in March, Bosman, a recovering alcoholic, was living on benefits. The entire Belgian football system shunned him after his victory in a 1990-95 court case against RFC Liege which opened the door for him, and the other professionals of European football, to move freely between European Community clubs (across borders, if they wished) when their contracts expired. The irony was, though, that once the case began, even clubs in his own country were too afraid of Bosman’s new-found notoriety to offer him a contract. He ended up playing for free with Charleroi for free for two years just to stay fit, before retiring in 1993 – so never tasted the fruits of his own success.

In the fifteen years since the case was concluded in Bosman’s favour, players have moved from the position of ‘employee’ to something more akin to freelance contractors. It is no longer a club’s decision when a player moves on; if their contract expires and the club doesn’t offer them terms they are impressed with, they’re off. The Premier League has seen power plays of that nature by Rooney, Nasri and Cesc Fabregas in the past year alone. It’s not only Premier League stars, though – Marouane Chamakh played exactly the same game with Bordeaux two years ago after they refused to sell him to Arsenal.

In Rooney’s case, stating a desire to leave has served as leverage in the negotiation of a new contract. Rooney’s case lasted a matter of weeks – in the aftermath of being left out of a trip to former club Everton last September, his relationship with Sir Alex Ferguson appeared to sour rapidly until eventually Rooney stated his desire to the club to see out his contract and leave. A new offer of around £200,000-a-week was enough to change his mind.

Unfortunately, the legacy of the Bosman ruling is that players now have far more power than ever before in the game, and are not always using it with the morality fans would like to see from their idols. Fabregas and Nasri both used the Bosman rule to force their way out of the Emirates, knowing the club couldn’t afford to keep them for longer and risk losing them for nothing.


Modric’s is another baffling story. Just twelve months ago, the Croatian international signed an unusually long six-year contract at Tottenham, an obvious statement of commitment and loyalty to the cause. This summer, Chelsea decided they needed a little more creativity in midfield, and set their sights on Modric. Suddenly that six-year contract didn’t look too appealing, and Modric entered a tug-o-war between Chelsea and Spurs chairman Daniel Levy. Levy held out, though, and, still a Spurs player and still with five years on his contract, Modric is now ready to negotiate a new, more lucrative deal.

Last night, though, Tevez took the idea of player power to a new level. The Argentine has endured a tumultuous relationship with Roberto Mancini since the Italian arrived at Manchester City in 2009, clashing over Mancini’s tactics and training methods while repeatedly begging for a transfer back to his native South America. A deal with Corinthians fell through this summer and now Tevez is stranded in Manchester for a fifth year – and he hasn’t taken the disappointment well.

Refusing to come on with about half an hour of last night’s Champions’ League game at Bayern Munich to play, Tevez sparked extraordinary scenes in the City dugout as players, coaches and the manager argued amongst themselves while those on the pitch, looking for leadership and guidance as Bayern ran rings around them, were left to their fate. A furious and obviously hurt Mancini stated bluntly after the game that Tevez will not play for him again and that he has had enough of taking dissent from his own camp.

Tevez is, in microcosm, an encapsulation of all the power players have muscled away from clubs in the past fifteen years. His mysterious agent, Kia Joorabchian, plucked him and Javier Mascherano from the Corinthians squad and landed them in, of all places, West Ham. His arrangement with Joorabchian robbed West Ham, then Manchester United, of his services, when it emerged that United had essentially signed Tevez on a two-year ‘loan’ from Joorabchian’s Media Sports Investment ownership company. A free-agent move to City followed. Now Tevez is once again trying to force a transfer, and almost ended up this summer at the very club he strong-armed his way out of five years ago.

In 2011, football is a completely different professional environment to what it was two decades ago. Jean-Marc Bosman is not to blame for what has followed from his victory, but football clubs and their fans are now ever more at the mercy of those  they employ, and that seems a broken system. Whether there can be any way back remains to be seen.


FREE football app where you get paid to view apps

Rate this article

0 votes Vote!!
 

3 Comments

  • Domhuaille says:
    Date: September 28th, 2011 at 6:16 pm

    There may be an answer in North America sports ventures. The NFL now has salary caps and a draft, the NHL has open trading during the season as well as a draft system for new players. It is time the FIFA-EUFA cabal instituted the following;

    1)A salary cap where the Clubs are limited to a total maximum amount, regardless.
    2)A draft system where all talented new players are made available to the weakest Clubs first,
    3)A crackdown on player’s agents and their fees….limiting the % paid to them and their influence on the transfer process.
    4)Legal intervention to force players to respect a signed contract. How can they justify ignoring a signed contract…as common citizens can we ignore our mortgage agreements or work contracts?

    These are a few ideas….I am sure there are more available but will the corruptocracy that is the FA-FIFA-EUFA ever act on these or other strategies…I seriously doubt it.
    The Bosman ruling addressed a serious injustice back then but the pendulum has swung too far the other way…it is time to redress the situation OR face the consequences…the death of Football as we knew it.

    Reply

    Rob-Schatten Reply:

    Unfortunately Domhuaille, while I would love to agree with you, I can’t. The problem with a salary cap system is that it could never be workable across UEFA as a whole, and to be meaningful, it would have to be a flat salary cap across the continent for the Champions’ League. In the US leagues, the caps work because they’re applied over one-country leagues with next to no contact with teams in other leagues. The MLS’s salary cap system is slowly being eroded as its teams compete in North American continental competitions.

    Also, if you take a look at what’s happening in my sport, the NBA right now, you’ll see another problem with a salary cap – every so often, it leads to a conplete work stoppage, which isn’t great for fans or teams…

    Reply

    says: There may be an answer in North America sports ventures. The NFL now has salary caps and a draft, the NHL has open trading during the season as well as a draft system for new players. It is time the FIFA-EUFA cabal instituted the following; 1)A salary cap where the Clubs are limited to a total maximum amount, regardless. 2)A draft system where all talented new players are made available to the weakest Clubs first, 3)A crackdown on player's agents and their fees....limiting the % paid to them and their influence on the transfer process. 4)Legal intervention to force players to respect a signed contract. How can they justify ignoring a signed contract...as common citizens can we ignore our mortgage agreements or work contracts? These are a few ideas....I am sure there are more available but will the corruptocracy that is the FA-FIFA-EUFA ever act on these or other strategies...I seriously doubt it. The Bosman ruling addressed a serious injustice back then but the pendulum has swung too far the other way...it is time to redress the situation OR face the consequences...the death of Football as we knew it.
    Domhuaille
  • passing cloud says:
    Date: October 3rd, 2011 at 2:59 am

    Buzz off; Chamakh is class. Tevez is a Tug; stealing from Cheicks

    Reply

    says: Buzz off; Chamakh is class. Tevez is a Tug; stealing from Cheicks
    passing cloud

Leave a Comment



Your Comment:

Subscribe to our VIP mailing list

Enter Security Code:

If you want your picture to display next to your comments you can join our VIP Lounge where you can add your profile image, support your team and connect with other fans.