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https://www.est1892.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?p=4002484#post4002484
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Paul.S
Next season all clubs need minimum 6 players who's come thrue the youth system in a 25 man squad. Right?
No small toffees for feast tonight
Kopites party with tyrkish delight
José, Sir Alex... London press
All choking on sweet success
Money, not love, is your drive
But tell us...
Can you count to five?
Next season all clubs need minimum 6 players who's come thrue the youth system in a 25 man squad. Right?
The new rules, agreed by all Premier League club chairmen, state that clubs must name a squad of up to 25 players, with 8 of those being ‘home-grown’ players. Furthermore, no more than 17 of those players can be over 21 and not home-grown.
The term ‘home-grown’ has left many football fans confused into thinking it means players must be English and from their own clubs academy, but this is not necessarily the case.
The definition of a home-grown player according to the Premier League is a player that has been trained for three years under the age of 21 by somebody within the English and Welsh professional system.
Effectively, this new quota is not a foreign player limitation. There is nothing to stop a side fielding a team consisting of no English players, providing some of the foreign players were purchased from the age of 18.
Currently, every Premier League side’s squad for the 2009/10 season would meet the criteria for next season’s quota. Chelsea currently have the fewest home-grown players registered with 8, but that number is acceptable. Aston Villa possesses the most home-grown players under the new rules with a massive 24 players meeting the new regulations.
"The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
-- William Blake
The new rules, agreed by all Premier League club chairmen, state that clubs must name a squad of up to 25 players, with 8 of those being ‘home-grown’ players. Furthermore, no more than 17 of those players can be over 21 and not home-grown.
The term ‘home-grown’ has left many football fans confused into thinking it means players must be English and from their own clubs academy, but this is not necessarily the case.
The definition of a home-grown player according to the Premier League is a player that has been trained for three years under the age of 21 by somebody within the English and Welsh professional system.
Effectively, this new quota is not a foreign player limitation. There is nothing to stop a side fielding a team consisting of no English players, providing some of the foreign players were purchased from the age of 18.
Currently, every Premier League side’s squad for the 2009/10 season would meet the criteria for next season’s quota. Chelsea currently have the fewest home-grown players registered with 8, but that number is acceptable. Aston Villa possesses the most home-grown players under the new rules with a massive 24 players meeting the new regulations.
Thanks
No small toffees for feast tonight
Kopites party with tyrkish delight
José, Sir Alex... London press
All choking on sweet success
Money, not love, is your drive
But tell us...
Can you count to five?
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