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Footballers dropping their agent
Callumcafc
Posts: 63,853
Demetri Mitchell always been very active on social media. Yesterday he posted about dropping his agent and dealing directly with clubs himself.
Will we see more players go in this direction?
https://x.com/demetrimitche11/status/1938667972186280383?s=46&t=ynww82GMl7VKBjthBflU0g
Will we see more players go in this direction?
https://x.com/demetrimitche11/status/1938667972186280383?s=46&t=ynww82GMl7VKBjthBflU0g
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Comments
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Good idea. Plus the PFA can also act for you. Paying agents is just throwing away money unless you are on 100k plus pw and then you probably are not bothered.1
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At the very top of the game lots of players already do that with family members acting as agents, Kane and TAA spring to mind but plenty of them do it0
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If an agent works for a club to help move someone on then he is entitled to financial payment from the club. I have never understood why clubs pay agents fees rather than the player doing so in normal transfers.2
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Mainly because - so the argument goes - the agents costs are tax deductible in the hands of the clubs, whereas it would likely just be a net cost to the player and not offset against "salary".Starinnaddick said:If an agent works for a club to help move someone on then he is entitled to financial payment from the club. I have never understood why clubs pay agents fees rather than the player doing so in normal transfers.
The reality is that's largely bollocks, of course, and the agent is acting in the interests of the player, not the club.1 -
Yeah but Mitchell ended up at Leyton Orient...0
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VileForeverAddickted said:Yeah but Mitchell ended up at Leyton Orient...3 -
Don't know why more players dont do this, especially in the lower leagues. Broker a deal you're happy with, get a solicitor to look through the contract, then sign it. Even if it costs you a couple of bags to the solicitor (which you'dprobably ned to pay anyway), it's gotta be cheaper than giving an agent a cut of your signing on fee, salary and bonuses etc
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Most younger footballers aren't particularly bright - and they're easy prey for the shithouses that circle around football looking to trawl a living out of it. All it takes is a bloke turning up in a flash car, wearing a big watch, with a line of patter and blowing a constant stream of smoke up his arse, and the average 16-18 year old looking to sign terms that dwarf what all his mates from the estate will see in ten years will jump at the chance to not have to grt involved in any of that 'legal stuff'.Gribbo said:Don't know why more players dont do this, especially in the lower leagues. Broker a deal you're happy with, get a solicitor to look through the contract, then sign it. Even if it costs you a couple of bags to the solicitor (which you'dprobably ned to pay anyway), it's gotta be cheaper than giving an agent a cut of your signing on fee, salary and bonuses etc
The whole world of football agents is a world of shysters, chances and crooks.5 -
Great excuse to post Charlie Kane in his office looking after his 1 player ‘stable’fenaddick said:At the very top of the game lots of players already do that with family members acting as agents, Kane and TAA spring to mind but plenty of them do it
Hero.7 -
A lot of them come across as thick as two short planks, but they’re sharp as fark when it comes to money. I’ve dealt with a Prem player a few years back (the year Bournemouth first got promoted), and he was exactly like that, questioning absolutely everything on invoices, even after sending him copies of quotes that matched the invoices - seemed was bordering paranoia when it come to his money tbh.Leroy Ambrose said:
Most younger footballers aren't particularly bright - and they're easy prey for the shithouses that circle around football looking to trawl a living out of it. All it takes is a bloke turning up in a flash car, wearing a big watch, with a line of patter and blowing a constant stream of smoke up his arse, and the average 16-18 year old looking to sign terms that dwarf what all his mates from the estate will see in ten years will jump at the chance to not have to grt involved in any of that 'legal stuff'.Gribbo said:Don't know why more players dont do this, especially in the lower leagues. Broker a deal you're happy with, get a solicitor to look through the contract, then sign it. Even if it costs you a couple of bags to the solicitor (which you'dprobably ned to pay anyway), it's gotta be cheaper than giving an agent a cut of your signing on fee, salary and bonuses etc
The whole world of football agents is a world of shysters, chances and crooks.I know I’ve oversimplified things in the above post, but surely there are alternative ways to handle deals in football. Why not just use professional services on a job-by-job basis, rather than getting tied to an agent for most of your career?
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That coffee cup has a terrible leakSuper_Eddie_Youds said:
Great excuse to post Charlie Kane in his office looking after his 1 player ‘stable’fenaddick said:At the very top of the game lots of players already do that with family members acting as agents, Kane and TAA spring to mind but plenty of them do it
Hero.7





