New transfer proposal

Published: 16 January 2001 y., Tuesday
The Union of European Football Associations threatened Monday to cut contact with FIFA because soccer's governing body failed to seek its input on a new transfer proposal. FIFA last week submitted a new plan to the European Union, which says the current transfer rules violate European laws. UEFA called an extraordinary meeting for Tuesday and Wednesday. "UEFA and the top 13 European leagues totally rejected the document on transfers recently submitted by FIFA to the European Commission and condemned FIFA's decision to forward proposals to the EC without any consultation with the representatives of European football," said a joint statement from UEFA and the European leagues. UEFA and the European leagues, who feel that FIFA's package gives too much consideration to elite professional players and not enough to the clubs, are demanding that FIFA withdraw the new proposals, agree to more stability for clubs and promise the full involvement of European football in future negotiations. Under FIFA's proposal, players could leave clubs with three months' notice and could break contracts if they were unhappy at being benched, disagreed with the coach's tactics or the club's sporting policies, or if the club was relegated. In 1995, the European Court of Justice struck down FIFA's transfer rules and said players whose contracts had expired could switch teams within the EU without having their old clubs pay transfer frees to their new teams. According to EU employment laws, a soccer player has the same rights as any other employee in Europe, which means he should be able to break his contract at any time and seek another job. FIFA said it was "surprised at the reactions expressed by certain groups following the presentation of new proposals. FIFA is committed to find a golbal solution that will be satisfactory to all parties."
Šaltinis: sportserver.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Olympic Success

The Baltic states have won more medals per capita than virtually any other nations taking part in the Olympics more »

Latvia gets first gymnastics medal, Nemov wins silver

Latvia has its first gymnastics medal -- a gold, no less -- while Alexei Nemov now has one of every color. more »

Romanians sweep all-around amid vault controversy

With bright eyes and a captivating smile reminiscent of another Romanian darling, tiny Andreea Raducan captured the Olympic women's gymnastics all-around gold medal Thursday. more »

Malchow wins 200 fly; Thorpe, Aussies win relay gold

Spurred by rousing cheers of "Thorpey! Thorpey!" Ian Thorpe gave the Australians a huge lead as they set the world record in winning the Olympic 4x200-meter freestyle relay Tuesday. more »

Golden gun

Nancy Johnson of the United States wins the first gold medal of the 2000 Games more »

Let the Games begin

"The most beautiful Opening Ceremony" more »

Sydney stays positive as football kicks off

With the opening ceremony just two days away and the football competition kicking into gear, the Olympic Games should be drowning in unbridled optimism and competitive spirit. more »

Sydney declares 'We're ready'

Sydney has declared it is ready to get the Olympics underway after a rehearsal of the opening ceremony - despite a hairy moment when fireworks caused grass fires close to the stadium. more »

Acrobatic Pilot Did Incredible, but Not Impossible

Recently the most famous Lithuanian acrobatic pilot Jurgis Kairys has performed incredible thing: the flight of Su-26 under the pedestrian bridge with wheels up. In official history of civil aviation this trick was performed for the first time. more »

Olympics Site Discriminates Against The Blind

An accessibility battle between a blind Sydney man and the organizers of the 2000 Olympic Games (SOCOG) came to a head. more »