You meant neighbor.next itll be his fucking mother has an opinion as well
These idiots are really gonna risk their son/clients futur over 300k...
This is fucking ridiculous. Never seen anything like this. His fatcunt father should make up his mind and stop wasting our time any longer. Either sign the deal or fuck off.
I think thats pretty much what we told him... but he just keeps comming with new schemes and new agents...This is fucking ridiculous. Never seen anything like this. His fatcunt father should make up his mind and stop wasting our time any longer. Either sign the deal or fuck off.
This is exactly what pissing me off. Who the hell are these cunts to keep us waiting for a signature? Our first league match starts in a few days. Give them until tomorrow. If they keep on playing games then tell them to fuck off for good.I think thats pretty much what we told him... but he just keeps comming with new schemes and new agents...
Probably not 300k. Its said they want a completely new deal. So they probably want a higher salary for Samardzic and probably some signing bonuses.These idiots are really gonna risk their son/clients futur over 300k...
We should really just walk away fuck em....
most balkan shit ever
Same as a guy who said that PiF is buying Inter.
Actually it isn't as uncommon as people may think. It's just those cases usually end up in court and they don't attract a lot of media attention. In fact we already have a similar case in the squad.This is fucking ridiculous. Never seen anything like this. His fatcunt father should make up his mind and stop wasting our time any longer. Either sign the deal or fuck off.
De Vrij Wins Lawsuit Against Former Agent
“My advice to other players, rely upon independent sports lawyers who only work for you”
A Dutch court has awarded €4.5 million in damages to Netherlands international footballer and Inter Milan centre-back Stefan de Vrij after he sued his former representative Sports Entertainment Group (SEG) for not informing him of their own financial interest in De Vrij’s transfer from Lazio to Inter Milan in 2018.
The court found that during the negotiation of the transfer fee and De Vrij’s salary, SEG were negotiating on behalf of both Inter Milan and De Vrij personally. This is known as dual or multiple representation and is common practice in the football industry... for now.
You are probably thinking – how can one agent represent the interests of two parties in the same negotiation? In the legal profession it would not be permitted, as it represents a clear conflict of interest. However, dual representation in football agency is permitted.
The Dutch court ruled that SEG had not informed De Vrij that they were acting for both parties in these negotiations. SEG received €7.5 million in commission, as well as an additional €2 million for the transfer, which De Vrij said he was never told about. The agency also failed to mention that it would receive 7.5 percent of a possible future transfer fee. SEG clearly had a disclosure obligation to De Vrij which was not met.
De Vrij rightfully claimed that he had been disadvantaged by the actions of SEG because he argued that Inter Milan would have paid him a higher salary if SEG truly had his best interest at heart during the negotiations.
De Vrij was a free transfer to Internazionale: since his contract had expired, any other club could sign him without a transfer fee. However, Inter’s 2017/2018 annual report shows that it paid out €7.5 million for him. That money disappeared into SEG’s pockets, in three installments, according to confidential documents seen by Follow the Money. The documents state that SEG only represented the interests of Internationale in this deal – not those of De Vrij. De Vrij discovers this after the deal has been closed.
The same documents show that SEG would be paid €200,000 for every six months that De Vrij would be playing for Internazionale. If he was to transfer elsewhere, the company would receive a 7.5 percent resale fee. Inter’s 2018/19 annual report states that money was paid to agents that season, including those of De Vrij.
According to the documents, SEG’s fee was conditional on two things: De Vrij must sign with Internazionale, and he is not to earn more than €50 million from his five-year contract. SEG negotiated a salary that is significantly lower.
De Vrij knew nothing about the agreement between SEG and Internazionale. The company apparently told him only that it earned a 12 percent commission on his salary, and that the signing fee was incorporated into this salary.
One prominent former agent at SEG – we’ll call him Vex – told Follow the Money: ‘Inter was probably the right choice for De Vrij. But if it hadn’t paid SEG that much money, he wouldn’t have gone there, and SEG would have found another club for him. They paid SEG enough, so that’s where De Vrij went, even if he hadn’t wanted to.’
Another former SEG agent, whom we’ll call Ingo, says of the transfers: ‘What happened was dishonest. There was no transparency towards the players. At the same time the players agreed, because SEG was acting on their behalf. I’m not defending the company, but what they did was permissible. The players agreed to be represented by SEG, and it just cost them commission. The relationship is based entirely on trust: the players thought they could trust their agent, but when it came down to it, they couldn’t.’
Transparency
Former agents say other information is regularly withheld from players, including the amount of commissions and signing fees. ‘The players know what’s going on with the negotiations, but not how much commission is negotiated under the table,’ says one. ‘When push comes to shove, and the player finds out, they leave, like Vermaelen and De Vrij did.’ Other ex-agents tell similar stories.
In De Vrij’s case, it’s clear that essential information was neer part of the picture – for instance, the contract between Internazionale and SEG. De Vrij was not allowed to see that. ‘That contract is confidential,’ Vos and head legal Jeroen Hoogewerf explain to Follow the Money. But, they claim, its content has most certainly been explained to him, although not on paper. What is on paper, is that SEG represented Internazionale. Hoogewerf shows Follow the Money the Italian document on his computer, that states that SEG is acting on behalf of Inter and that De Vrij is not represented by anybody. The document is signed by De Vrij.