TheRam wrote: ↑Sat Dec 16, 2023 1:24 pm
Why would we release him on a free then sign him back?
Why wouldn’t we just simply renew the contract?
Well, since Spurs have shown little/no interest in seriously renegotiating the original deal, there is absolutely no obligation for us to be any less unscrupulous.
Getting around the table and negotiating a sensible compromise would have been best for all parties involved. Whilst players are seen by clubs as a commodity, they are also human beings, and Dele clearly has a lot of issues that he's working on right now. Coming to a sensible agreement would have allowed Spurs to recover some money, Everton to continue working with the player on his rehabilitation without the jeopardy of a sudden £10m bill and allowed Dele some hope of actually getting back on the pitch sometime soon. The current stalemate benefits nobody.
In contract law there's 'acting in bad faith', which part of is 'evasion of the spirit of the agreement'.
I'd imagine if there is a clause that states X payment on contract renewal, and we instead waited of the contract to expire and then offered him a new one under the guise of it being a new signing, even if it got around the clause then we'd fall foul anyway by acting in bad faith.
That's of course presuming offering him a new contract after his existing one expired was classed as a new signing and not just a contract renewal.
Gash wrote: ↑Sat Dec 16, 2023 4:32 pm
Can we just call it a draw?
Yeah I mean it's not actually important really is it? We're talking about a player who most likely won't ever play for us again, and certainly not in a meaningful way.
Got to love a redemption story though, and it feels a bit like circumstances are going to prevent any chance of that even if the actual likelihood anyway is extremely small.
Goaljira wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 3:07 am
Seeing Keane and Godfrey step in with no recent football and not miss a step has got me very intrigued for how the 5 games we can use him for will go.
Don’t know how fit he’ll be. Last update from Dyche was that he was ‘on the grass’.