Thanks for your inputYou've mentioned him three times in one post there.
Thanks for your inputYou've mentioned him three times in one post there.
Players going into their final year, who we don't want any more, will be shipped out rather than loaned out, unless we get to the end of the window and it looks like we're going to get stuck with them.
Loans with a view to a sale really don't work when the player is out of contract at the end of the loan, it's very rare to get a fee in those circumstances (Jordy was the exception that proves the rule). In addition, loaning senior players is something we very rarely do, generally if we want a player gone, he goes permanently.
Worth bearing in mind, they're all back on Championship money now (at varying levels) and shifting someone like Eaves to a League One club paying his wages in full won't be easy.
Thanks for your input
Well there was certainly a player in there.
Not a great return last season, but there's always a chance that will change.God I hope not, especially with the fee Boro would expect
Maybe a bit tangential, but I've never understood the expression 'the exception that proves the rule'. If it's an example of something that doesn't align with the rule, how indeed does it 'prove' the rule?
And on the topic of JDW, didn't we have an option in our favour of an additional year which is how we wrangled a fee? And even if not, with players we may not want, as SS suggested, we could loan for a year and if the club wants them, we can trigger the year and get a small fee, and if they don't then we release the player having not had to pay their entire wage for the season. We won't get a L1 club paying their full wage, but partially offsetting it is worthwhile if we don't see a future for them at the club.
Courtesy of the Oxford English Dictionary - The exception proves the rule originally this meant that the recognition of something as an exception proved the existence of a rule, but it is now more often used or understood as justifying divergence from a rule.
We're not going to trigger another year for a player we want rid of, at least you'd hope not, hopefully the Henriksen fiasco put paid to doing daft things like that. Sending players out on loan, with a clause that generates a small fee if they decide to sign them permanently, is potentially an option, but it's not common and generally happens with players who go out in the January window.
We did it with Jordy this season and Peterborough did it with us with Maddison last season, but off the top of my head, I don't remember us being involved in any deal like this on any other occasion.
I think the approach will be somewhere in the middle, but calling someone a ****ing idiot for making a reasoned point is a bit over the top. You can disagree with them without getting personal.
I do tend to think a few of our players need to be playing and probably need a loan in League One to get any value out of them if we look to move them on. Scott, Flores, McLaughlin are the ones that immediately come to mind, possibly Mayer too (although he's injured and we might just keep him around and then release him if there isn't much interest). Assume Festus will be out on loan again too so there's 4/5 names that quite reasonably could be loaned out.
I do think we should be looking to bring in at most 2/3 permanents with a view to pinching some loans from the prem, which could end up meaning 5-6 players come in. That's not quite as busy as SS is suggesting, but there's plenty of opportunity to find value.
I understand the definition, but as it points out the common usage now is just to justify divergence which seems to go against the point of the expression. But as I said that's a bit of a tangent so never mind.
No, but you would trigger the year extension if a club wanted to buy them in order to get a fee. So for instance if we were expressing interest in signing Crowley it would be strange to see Birmingham release him (as they have done) when they could have got a fee out of us. Presumably indicates we aren't looking to sign him.
It's definitely less common at this level, seems a favourite in Italy though.
If we could merge Crowley's footballing brain with Wilks's natural talents we'd have a real gem on our hands!
Crowley's naturally very talented too. More a question of whether or not he really fits into McCann's Plan A.If we could merge Crowley's footballing brain with Wilks's natural talents we'd have a real gem on our hands!
I think that is the question.Crowley's naturally very talented too. More a question of whether or not he really fits into McCann's Plan A.
To Be or Not To Be, that is the question.I think that is the question.
Plan B or not Plan B that is the question...To Be or Not To Be, that is the question.