When's the first preseason friendlyIt feels like this has dragged on for ages!
His previous contract was due to expire now wasn't it, until he signed the extension in Oct.
So what people need to remember is that Alexis could have refused to sign the extension and the club would be getting nothing now. So in order to secure value the contract extension Brighton offered Alexis last Oct had to have enough sugar coating that Alexis signed it therefore ensuring we get something for him.
I have no idea what that sugar coating is, but when you say 'limiting the amount of money we could receive', you could argue it was maximising a return that could have been zero had he not signed the extension.
Talksport and others may say we're letting him go for a steal at £45m if he was to go for that, but that may have been a smart move to actually ensure we got something for him.
Why are we not waiting for other clubs to come in to drive up the price. Liverpool is probably the worst of the big 6 for paying large transfer fees (some exceptions of course)
Many transfers are undisclosed, bids are not announced and clubs keep the details between them. The figures we hear are often educated guesses; 'thought to be in the region of £Xm', 'way less than £Ym'.Why has there not been an actual bid? Why would Romano etc go down the clause route and not the 'Liverpool have made an opening bid if x million'?
Why are other clubs (definitely Chelsea) not being linked?
Why has it happened so quickly?
How is he talking to them without a final bid being accepted?
Why are we not trying to create a bidding war?
Why is this so different to a normal transfer?
Those in denial can't answer these questions.
If there's one thing we know about Tony Bloom, it's that he looks at the big picture and does what's best for the club in the long term. He is a pragmatic, analytical man who has literally made a living out of weighing up risk and probability.He said it in regards to our star players.
So people believe that our club would sign up to a contract that would severely restrict how much we could gain from an asset?
Does that sounds like the Bloom way?
Do people really think Tony would take massive unders for one of our star players? That we'd limit the amount of money we could receive without a single negotiation taking place.
In the history of football I’ve never heard of or seen another clause where the parameters you’ve mentioned would be included. It’s just nonsensical.As everybody is guessing, both those who are looking at the evidence and feeling he has a clause in his contract and those who are clinging on to something Barber once said, my guess is this:
Mac says he's happy here but doesn't want to extend his contract.
For whatever reason (Mac Snr shares the same dentist as Klopp, Maradona visited one of them in a dream) they insist on a clause that says:
Liverpool can come for Mac in the first two weeks of the off season (gives us time to get in a new player, prepare without Mac, or prepare with Mac)
They must be prepared to pay X amount up front.
We will then agree specific add ons relating to their position in the table and Mac's standing at that time.
Player leaves.
That's not a massively complicated clause and it answers all of my questions above.
You would have to make the assumption that we'd offered him an extension long before it got down to the last 7 months of his current one - unless you in turn make the assumption we chose to leave it that late which I can't imagine was the case.That's all based on the assumption he only signed a new contract with us because there was 100% certainty he'd never play for us again after this season.
That wasn't a given at the time. The club would have been trying to convince him along the way to stay.
Not wishing to be rude, but exactly how many footballers contracts have you actually seen?In the history of football I’ve never heard of or seen another clause where the parameters you’ve mentioned would be included. It’s just nonsensical.
All I can imagine this would have done is piss the club off as it would have made it obvious Mac/his family have been talking to Liverpool already, and that being the case why the hell would Liverpool want that clause when they could have got him for zilch? Or his agent/dad for that matter considering they could have made millions in fees.
Yes. I really can't see what is so difficult to understand here. Last November the player could leave at knock-down price in Summer as only has one year left, so realistically £25 million. Alternative is he can leave for nothing the following Summer. Club tries to tie him down to new contract to avoid this happening and he says fine but I need a sensible release clause so I know I can definitely go to a big club with no issues in the Summer, otherwise I'm not signing a new deal. Tony Bloom decides that losing him for £45 million in the Summer, while guaranteeing him staying for the rest of the season is better than losing him for £25 million or nothing the following Summer Contract signed, agent informs Liverpool and says see you in the Summer.He said it in regards to our star players.
So people believe that our club would sign up to a contract that would severely restrict how much we could gain from an asset?
Does that sounds like the Bloom way?
Do people really think Tony would take massive unders for one of our star players? That we'd limit the amount of money we could receive without a single negotiation taking place.
The huge risk a footballer takes in running down their contract is a Moder like injury for example or worse. It may seem like a great thing to do, become a free agent in June, but suffering a huge injury in April, and what then?In the history of football I’ve never heard of or seen another clause where the parameters you’ve mentioned would be included. It’s just nonsensical.
All I can imagine this would have done is piss the club off as it would have made it obvious Mac/his family have been talking to Liverpool already, and that being the case why the hell would Liverpool want that clause when they could have got him for zilch? Or his agent/dad for that matter considering they could have made millions in fees.
My understanding was his January 2019 contract was 4.5 years. See post above why it might not have been madness if it had the right terms for him.Was Alexis actually going to be out of contract THIS summer as some are suggesting, rather than 2024?
Pretty sure he had a year left - otherwise the signing of the new deal would have been madness on his part.
Next.Was Alexis actually going to be out of contract THIS summer as some are suggesting, rather than 2024?
Pretty sure he had a year left - otherwise the signing of the new deal would have been madness on his part.
You've misunderstood the situation. The new contract is not what's restricting how much we can gain, the restriction was that he only had a year left if we didn't agree it. He could be going for less than £40m without the new contract.So people believe that our club would sign up to a contract that would severely restrict how much we could gain from an asset?