jmh
win or lose, we booze
Re: World Soccer X: Duh, duh, duh, duh...The Champions!
And I mean, if Johndoealdinho plays his club soccer domestically for Cruzeiro, and then he gets called up to play for Brazil in the World Cup and scores seven goals in six games, and he gets sold for 20 million pounds to Madrid or Inter or whoever, Cruzeiro collects a massive windfall due to the fact that the player was called up to play internationally. The CBF can't then go to Cruzeiro and say that they're responsible for that gain. So why is it that the national team should bear the financial risk of injury or poor performance, if the club is the financial beneficiary of good performance?
But it's not a cop requisitioning the car for the police chase (which is a much more abnormal event than a high-level soccer player being called up to play internationally), it's more like your father using the car to make a shopping trip to Costco and bringing you back a bunch of groceries that you didn't have to pay for. Yeah, sometimes he gets in a fender-bender, but most of the time you come out ahead.1) Why does anyone else own the player besides the club? Does the USA for other sports also have joint ownership?
2) I don't know where to go with that analogy, except that you buy a car knowing a cop might requisition it for a police chase.
3) Not necessarily true, the car might depreciate in value due to the fact that they use it.
And I mean, if Johndoealdinho plays his club soccer domestically for Cruzeiro, and then he gets called up to play for Brazil in the World Cup and scores seven goals in six games, and he gets sold for 20 million pounds to Madrid or Inter or whoever, Cruzeiro collects a massive windfall due to the fact that the player was called up to play internationally. The CBF can't then go to Cruzeiro and say that they're responsible for that gain. So why is it that the national team should bear the financial risk of injury or poor performance, if the club is the financial beneficiary of good performance?