經紀人跟掮客的分別
http://sport.independent.co.uk/football/comment/story.jsp?story=568019
這文章很長,簡而言之就是:Agent有兩種,一種是代表球員的agent,叫做經紀人;
另一種agent,是純粹利用個人人際網路去讓買賣雙方接頭的,不屬買方也不代表
賣方跟要轉會的球員更沒關係,這種叫做中間人(或是掮客,middleman, broker)。
David Conn: What is it exactly that agents do for their money?
02 October 2004
With the revelation that they paid £5.5m to agents last year, Manchester
United have creaked open a door which was always locked, bolted and
boarded up; however, as our eyes grow accustomed to the light, we're
beginning to realise how dark and murky it still is inside.
United's new practice of publishing payments confirms the huge sums dished
out: the £1.2m United agreed to pay Ruud van Nistelrooy's agent, Rodger
Linse, for negotiating the Dutch striker's five-year contract in January,
on top of £468,000 they still owe him for doing the last one, was the
most eyecatching in a startling table of figures.
With this little knowledge, though, we want to know more, most obviously:
how many outlandish millions are other Premiership clubs paying agents?
We don't know because not one is prepared to follow United's lead and
tell its fans. Left to pick over United's figures, they pose one particular
puzzle: what are the agents actually doing to be paid so much?
If you talk to agents and clubs, it soon dawns that to negotiate a way to
any answers, we must throw out any outdated ideas of the agent as a
gnarled, streetwise, older guy, negotiating for a naive young player with
football clubs which have a shameful history of exploiting their labour,
the player paying his agent 10 per cent for the service.
United still host a character from those very early days when footballers,
only freed from the illegal maximum wage in 1961, gradually took on
agents to help lift their earnings. Harry Swales was one of the first,
being Kevin Keegan's commercial agent in the Manchester City manager's
playing heyday of perms and Brut adverts. Swales is still there today,
representing Ryan Giggs, Old Trafford's first young star of the Nineties'
moneyed era.
One element was probably true back then but still needs clarifying:
clubs pay agents. Players don't pay them, even for negotiating their
contracts. The agents sit down opposite the clubs, negotiate massive
packages from them, then the clubs pay the agents for the service.
That is not all. Even the idea of what an agent is needs reclassifying.
United published only a list of players they signed, such as Kleberson,
Christiano Ronaldo, Eric Djemba-Djemba and others; those whose contracts
were renewed, such as van Nistelrooy and Darren Fletcher; and players
who were sold, such as Diego Forlan and Juan Sebastian Veron. In every
case, an agent was paid, but United do not say what for.
Two of the deals involved more than one agent. The Argentinian defender
Gabriel Heinze, signed for £6.9m, generated £525,000 to two agents: Robert
Rodriguez, representing Heinze; and the French agent Bruno Satin,
working for United in negotiations with Paris St-Germain. When United
signed Louis Saha from Fulham in January, they paid Saha's own agent,
Branko Stoic, £250,000 for negotiating Saha's contract, and gave
£500,000 to the Israeli agent Pini Zahavi, the embodiment and apparent
maestro of modern agents.
Still called an agent, Zahavi, whose first deal brought Avi Cohen from
Maccabi Tel Aviv to Liverpool in 1979, in fact represents few players
here, only Rio Ferdinand, Aiyegbeni Yakubu and Eyal Berkovic. Zahavi
makes his real money being paid by clubs as a middle man to put transfers
together. The details of this are generally closed, but I can shine some
light on the Saha deal.
When Saha and Stoic began to agitate for a move late last year, Mohamed
al-Fayed, Fulham's chairman, was adamantly opposed to selling Fulham's
star striker and refused to talk to David Gill, United's chief
executive. Gill called on Zahavi, who has built a career on treating
football as a global business of human talent flows, an industry in
which building and nurturing relationships is all.
The Saha transfer was smoothed with the involvement of Philip Green,
the Monaco-based owner of British Home Stores, who is a friend of
Zahavi's. Sources close to the deal told me that Zahavi worked on
Fayed to open a door. Saha was in a public strop, wanting away, he
would be a free agent before too long, Fulham were in debt, and slowly
talks began. If he were to even think of letting Saha go, Fayed wanted
plenty of money, so Zahavi negotiated with United to see how many
millions were available.
After six or seven weeks, the parties were prepared to look at each
other. Philip Green flew David Gill to Monaco in a private jet; there
Gill met Fayed and the deal was done: £12.825m in total from United.
For his services, Zahavi was paid £500,000.
Manchester United confirmed that David Gill had flown to Monaco in
Green's jet; Fulham dismissed the story as inaccurate. Green told me:
"I talked to David Gill and to Pini and took David to Monaco when
Mohamed was there. I didn't know where they'd got to in the deal,
but I helped them to finish it up."
One agent told me: "People think chairmen call each other and agree
deals. It isn't like that. There is often deadlock, because of ego,
the price, whatever. Agents open the doors - but remember, we are
only paid for success, and many deals don't come off."
Jon Holmes began representing players at his local club, Leicester
City, in 1972 when just a handful of men, like Ken Stanley, acting
for George Best, were starting to ply this trade. Holmes rose to
prominence with the sometime Leicester hopeful, Gary Lineker, and is
now a partner in SFX, one of England's leading player agencies, with
Michael Owen among its clients. A traditional agent representing
players, he is exasperated by many aspects of what he calls the "wild
west", weakly regulated, agents' free-for-all, including the
involvement of middle men who emerged here when international
transfers became more widespread.
"They are brokers, not agents, and shareholders and fans should really
ask clubs what these people do and why somebody cannot be employed at
clubs to approach other clubs and do deals."
Yet even where a single agent is involved, clubs, it turns out, very
often make two payments, one for "facilitating" a deal and one for
negotiating the player's contract. United paid Paul Stretford, Wayne
Rooney's agent, £1m, rising to £1.5m, partly for negotiating Rooney's
deal and partly for bringing his player to United.
This may look a blatant breach of the rules maintained by football's
world governing body, Fifa, that agents must act for only one party
to a transfer, but, as I reported then, the Football Association told
me the rules are not interpreted to forbid such twin payments.
When Alan Smith joined United from Leeds in May, his agent, Alex Black,
was paid £750,000 for "acquisition of the player and negotiation of
his contract".
Black, one of a new breed, a graduate with a Masters in sports management,
confirmed this week he was indeed paid twice by United: "We worked
for United to help negotiations with Leeds. Then we sat down and
represented Alan Smith on his deal. As long as the payments are separate,
there is no conflict of interest."
This, though, is a somewhat artificial distinction, even if United
are making it assiduously. At many clubs, agents conclude a deal and
are simply paid a fat fee.
In recent years, the Inland Revenue has taken a very keen interest
in agents' fees, arguing that as the agent has worked for the player,
the player is receiving a taxable benefit if the club picks up the
payment for him. United are at pains to accept that and state that
their players will pay tax on that part of the fee. However, at other
clubs, where no tax has been declared, the Inland Revenue's Special
Compliance Unit is understood to be in deep discussions with players,
agents and the clubs themselves about the possibility of back tax
being owed to them.
This little we know now: football agents are paid mighty commissions
on huge sums of money, often earned as middle men, because chairmen
won't, or don't, talk to each other. Players' agents are paid by clubs
simply for agreeing to sit down and extract millions from them, then
paid for that too.
United published the figures after it was caught in the crossfire over
the Rock Of Gibraltar racehorse between Sir Alex Ferguson and his
Irish former friends, the United shareholders John Magnier and JP
McManus, who lobbed in 99 questions attacking United's payments to
agents, including Ferguson's son, Jason.
Publication invited us to pile in, and this week we duly did,
ridiculing the country's richest club for outrageous waste, challenging
Gill to justify his own handsome salary if it does not include handling
all aspects of transfers. This, however, is progress: at least United,
alone, admit it now.
--
"We will try, but football is not self service - you put the
coins in and get out a bar of chocolate, it is not like that.
It is a hard effort and what we can do is try our best and
keep a desire to improve."
- Arsene Wenger
--
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