loosecharm
loosecharm
loosecharm

Nope, never. She is DEAD to me, before ever being alive. It’s her legacy as far as I’m concerned.

OMG yes!!!

Nerd.

Your username and reply seem to be in direct dichotomy.

... or the bible. Or contemporary pop music. Or theatre. Or physics. Or almost anything else.

I knew all 5. But am old, and a Minnesota Vikings fan to begin with.

Hate to be that guy...

If not travel and ticket emails, what else do you use email for?

He makes MAAAANY claims in the article that require some validation. Poorly executed article.

Who gave you a computer? Give it back, you suck at it.

These days, the draft and NCAA soccer is basically only used to augment the back half of the roster, and isn’t deemed the vehicle to “improve US Soccer”. A couple players occasionally come through these routes that exceed roster filler, but its considered rare.

You wrote: “These kinds of team options are a common feature of contracts in American sports; FIFA, though, has ruled against the validity of them.”

Oh good, another “well since no one can prove that votes were manipulated, then Russian interference doesn’t matter!” people.

It’s only talking about 62 percent of millennials. Apparently you aren’t one of them. Big deal. Stop thinking everything is about you... Like all millennials. 

Now playing

His role in The Pope of Greenwich Village is to-this-day my favorite single performance by any actor in any motion picture that I have ever personally seen. No joke.

That all sounds like a “you” problem to me.

The link you provided says that while unilateral extension options may be unenforceable in specific countries, overall in Europe its regarded as “complicated”. The article doesn’t address the issue in the US.
In Belgium, Spain, Austria and Italy: It depends on the collective bargaining agreement. I believe MLS plays

“I don’t know.” 

The contract, between the Canadian player & an American team must have meant something, as Beşiktaş paid at least $2.3 million to not make it an issue. 
Maybe my mentioning US labor Law isn’t exact, but a contract is still a legal document, and isn’t going away just because FIFA theoretically says so.

I highly doubt its as cut & dried as you are presenting. If that were 100% the way it is, then why would Beşiktaş have given Orlando anything, since the player is in Turkey, and training?
When Larin signed the contract, it had to fulfill some American labor laws, I doubt that FIFA can roll in and be all “naw dawg” to