In another example, Derry initially offered UCDD 5,000 pounds for an U21 international goalkeeper and then declined to pay the higher fee agreed.
I know there are enough people on here with a bit of business accumen so I put this question to you, is £200k enough for a player that has just won LOI Young Player Of The Year?
Jay O'Shea was probably ripped off in hindsight but there you go - by that I mean Jay was a far better candidate.
For years, since the LOI was a random post BBS piece of garbage that even Dan O'D could make sense on we've been argueing for proper transfer fees and yet this close season we have seen Jay O'Shea, Keith Fahey (recommended in fourfourtwo magazine) and now McGinn go for buttons!
I thought Kevin Doyle and Shane Long might have stopped the flow but obviously not.
Disclosed fee me hole, 200k Derry got for a player well worth more than that.
Why do we bother?
I know why we bother, because we love our teams but it is ****e that Celtic can come and take and offer undisclosed fees, pish!
Year on year we try and better this league by supporting our holes off yet money and a feeling of beliittement lets us down. F**k Celtic and all that follow!
Last edited by EireBadBoy; 19/12/2008 at 3:34 AM.
I'd rather die laughing than trying!
In another example, Derry initially offered UCDD 5,000 pounds for an U21 international goalkeeper and then declined to pay the higher fee agreed.
A player is only worth what someone is willing to pay. I can't see how you're upset with Celtic because Derry accepted their offer
Doyle and Long did cause transfer fees to rise, but subsequent "failures" from O'Donovan, Byrne and a host of others have brought them down again
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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CCFC reportedly got a lot more than £200k for Bennett and O'Donovan
People can say a player is worth half a million, the fact of the matter is that most clubs are hardly worth that on paper and those bidding know it. Reading seem to have some instinct for appearing at our door whenever we're most stuck to wave a derisory offer in our faces, but we keep taking them up on those offers because we [and most clubs] can rarel afford to say no.
its down to contracts whats the longest contract an eircom league player has, 2 maybe 3 years, most semi-pros are only a year, scotland and england sign players for 4-5-6 years, renegotiate with 2 years left, wheras we renegotiate with a year left, then your better off getting what you can for a player, rather than let him go for free in a year,
the eircom league is a far way away from offering contracts that can lock a player into a club, forceing the likes of celtic and reading to pay more, they will look for good deals, so if our players get to expensive theyll just go elsewhere
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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New blog if anyone's interested - http://loihistory.wordpress.com/
LOI section on balls.ie - http://balls.ie/league-of-ireland/
Transfer fee discussions are a process of negotiation.
The key to coming out on top in any negotiation is to be there from a position of strength (or perceived strength). To need a positive outcome less than the other side does.
City need £200k more than Celtic need either Niall McGinn or £200k. That imbalance in negotiating strength meant we were always going to get less than many people believe the player is worth.
EL clubs can't afford the balls to play poker-face in these type of negotiations and knock-back what is big money for Irish football. We’ll always blink first.
Until Irish clubs are consistently in the financial position to wave goodbye to such offers and say 'Nah - we'll just keep him and do without the £200k thanks', we won't get any higher fees. But it would be a very ballsy call to make given the current finances of all clubs here. The Directors of football clubs here understand that - it's the fans that don't seem to understand or accept it.
That might true at the lowest level, but certainly in the Championship (and above) the average is much higher than that - I've got a complete list of current contracts for a (currently struggling) Championship club, and only 3 players are on 1 year deals, all of them former Academy players that have so far failed to get anywhere near the first team.
The majority of senior players or highly rated youngsters are on 3 and 4 year deals. That includes nearly every player in the Academy - the standard contract offered to a 16 year old at that level is for 3 years (2 trainee + 1 pro).
Agree with all of these posts.
I think Cork (at the time) felt they were in a decent position financially, and were able to hold out for higher figures for Doyle and Long.
Not talking specifically about the club in the opening post, but it's hard to turn down a bid of 200,000 quid (or whatever figure) when you desperately need the money to sort out financial affairs, even if you know the player should be valued higher. And any bidding club which does even a rudimentary amount of research will know the financial status of the selling club, and will bid accordingly. It has nothing to do with foreign clubs 'belittling' LOI clubs. It has lots to do with LOI clubs putting themselves in a position where they are forced to sell their players for less than they think the player is worth.
Didnt something similar happen with Leeds when they needed cash?
Last edited by osarusan; 19/12/2008 at 12:26 PM.
We got €117,000 for Doyle and €30,000 for Long.
Reading offered the exact amount of Doyle's buy-out in what Eamonn Dolan, Reading's Academy coach called "an act of revenge" for Cork City's sacking of his brother. Long had only made a coupel of appearances for us so we weren't too concerned about it but the Doyle fee still upsets us.
Of course we recently shot ourselves in the foot by accepting any transfer fee for him in January would be €2,000,000 when we accepted a buyout of our 10% clause, so as is so often the case, CCFC are our own worse enemies.
E20k (ignoring the time value difference of the E20k when we agreed it and when it was actually paid).
So the points are (a) Derry can't really complain about this when they do the exact same thing themselves and (b) £200k is a decent deal, especially when you're stuck for cash.
I think over here on this island, Expecting fees of €500k+ is a bit far fetched. There are some hidden gems that will make the grade, but unfortuntely there are plenty who are excellent players but for one reason or another they just don't do it. So it is a big risk for teams to fork out big money for a player who on ratio terms is more likely to fail than to succeed.
The Hallion Battalion Molests football.:D
Makes Student Mullet's original point somewhat irrelevant.
I don't think anyone blames Celtic or misses the fact that we need the money, most of the annoyance on our forum (when it works) is directed at our board for a worrying habit of agreeing to friendlies as part of the deal, leading to our fans to pay over-the-odds to help to sell our players. Madness.
But havent transfer fees improved even if only slightly? We will recieve our biggest transfer fee ever for Jay(whenever the deal actually goes through) and it will way outstrip anything we recieved previous. I would imagine that the money Pats will recieve for Fahey will also be their biggest transfer fee? In previous years anything over 100,000 euro was a big fee. Most fees for top LOI players are now substantially more than that. The fees are getting bigger although the current financial climate may put a halt to the increase.
Not really, for the two points I mentioned.
True, especially when you get a junior team Celtic side with Paddy McCourt as captain.I don't think anyone blames Celtic or misses the fact that we need the money, most of the annoyance on our forum (when it works) is directed at our board for a worrying habit of agreeing to friendlies as part of the deal, leading to our fans to pay over-the-odds to help to sell our players. Madness.
Not really, as we had to be "leaned upon" to stump up the cash. Also we were handing over signing on fees to subsequent signings whilst still owing UCD and others cash.
Ah sh*t, I'm criticising our board.
EBB- I agree with your views, but I don't think the majority of our support realise how tight to the wire we are sailing.
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