Creaky
Well-known member
While on gardening leave he is still a paid employee of the club, so has to abide by the terms and conditions of the contract he signed. If he was to breach that contract the club would have cause to sue him for the wages they paid him while on gardening leave and he'd also no longer be liable for any bonuses etc due to him. If this was to happen it wouldn't look good for Ashworth personally as it's likely to be played out in public and if it all goes wrong at Newcastle, then would be a stain on his reputation and he'd have to potentially explain these actions in an interview for a future role.
Gardening leave is standard when people in these type of roles leave to go to a rival, across most industries. Dan Ashworth knows that so do Newcastle. It's up to Newcastle to do the right thing and pay the compensation we want if they want him quicker.
Of course the club could sue DA for wages paid if he ignored the clubs instructions during his gardening leave - that however is a moot point if he simply returned any payments and also ignored any club instructions.
One big benefit to employers of using gardening leave is if there is also a confidentiality clause included in the contract. For instance if the notice period was defined as 12 months and there was a confidentiality clause, of say 12 months, as well then putting an employee on gardening leave, rather than agreeing a termination of the contract, means that the confidentiality clause wouldn’t come into effect until the gardening leave was completed. Effectively extending the confidentiality clause by 12 months.