Norwich have released Steven Naismith, Matt Jarvis, Ivo Pinto and Yanic Wildschut.
Was reading about two of them. Seems Wigan and Everton insert better clauses in transfers than we do. They are getting more than we do for a player being sold on for £15 million just because Norwich got promoted despite them playing little to no part. Just think what other clubs could do if they had business geniuses in charge like we have.
See Norwich are being sensible and paying off the money owed on their new training and academy set up.
City's Championship promotion - earned with the EFL title - means the Premier League Toffees and second-tier Latics will earn the additional transfer fees, for Steven Naismith's arrival at Carrow Road in January 2016 and Yanic Wildschut's signing 12 months later.
“That is despite the fact both players are out of contract this summer, and neither played a single second of football for Norwich under Daniel Farke this season.
A reported £7m arrival from Everton, Naismith spent the full 2018-19 campaign on loan at Scottish top-flight side Hearts - where he is now expecting to become a permanent fixture as a free agent.
Wildschut - an initial signing from Wigan for under £5m - endured a difficult, injury-hit campaign with crisis-club Bolton who spent much of the season struggling to pay their players' wages. That includes what they owe Norwich, with the Trotters eventually relegated to League One and then entering administration.
With the Canaries' having to wait until July and August for their first tranches of Premier League revenue, football finance blogger Kieran Maguire reported Norwich City have taken out a loan from Barclays this week.
That bridging loan - effectively an increase in the club's overdraft facility - is to be secured against TV revenue due from the 2018-19 season, as well as forthcoming money from the Premier League for the next campaign.
It will also allow the self-funding club to pay their promotion liabilities to Everton and Wigan, as well as plenty of bonuses following their Premier League return, and repay the £5m Canaries Bond - which funded the recent redevelopment of Colney - ahead of schedule and avoid paying out a second year of interest.”