The system doesn't become fair just because we have a wealthy enough owner to get on the right side of it. The Elite Performance Plan is just another scheme to make sure the rich get richer at the expense of the poor, however they like to dress it up. It's just lucky for us that we're now one of the rich.
I think you are misunderstanding the old system against the new system and its implication on the young players, including the children between the ages of 8-12 year olds.
You must look at it from the perspective of the young players and not the clubs, young players that previously were arbitrarily hoovered up by their local club were then locked into wholly restrictive registrations to that club, basically a postcode lottery.
Those young players that might at times not been accessing the skilled coaching required could not move without sanction, normally a exorbitant claim for compensation.
It meant the majority of skilled children, perhaps 9 years old were left to access understaffed and under resourced training and coaching, inevitably effecting their own development, whilst a similar skilled player that perhaps happened to born in say London were likely to access a higher level of coaching, it was wholly unfair.
It never was meant that lower clubs could look at their young players some as young as 11 years old as 'cash cows' to make a few bob, their two sessions a week wasnt necessarily the making of that individual player anyway, it is more complicated than that.
The new system means that kids can move without previous sanctions, there is compensation but it isnt as restrictive as before offering a pathway for any youngster to access the highest level of coaching on offer, no youngster should ever have that denied.
There has always been a pecking order and that still exists, but now clubs need good reason for why a young child might wish to stay at a clubs training centre, it offers up new challenges for all clubs, but ultimately it is the young players that prosper, which must be a good thing.
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