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<blockquote data-quote="SuZir" data-source="post: 667688" data-attributes="member: 14557"><p>More or less, yes. Only way to end his contract prematurely would be that he and his team would make an agreement about it. That is usually done if player is not playing well enough. The employer pays certain part of remaining wages as compensation and player is free to find a new club. No one unable to play for longer time for medical reasons or with career ending injury would of course ever agree to that, not without being compensated fully (that happens mostly with foreign players, they can go home, club saves the housing costs and the player can start building their new life outside of sports.) Contract can be revoked without both sides agreeing only based on breach of contract. Player can revoke it, if he is not paid and club can revoke it, if player seriously breaks the contract (doesn't make themselves available for training and playing or behaves in way that gives the club permission to revoke - and that bar is quite high (doping, serious criminal activity, in-team violence, things like that.) And the clubs do not want reputation of treating their players badly, especially injured/medical leave players, because that would make it much more difficult for them to sign players they want. Every player does know that they can have career ending injury any time despite however good or professional or hard working they are.)</p><p></p><p>Disability benefits are considered occupational pensions around here and the amount is calculated like any occupational pension. Just with assumption that you would had worked till retirement age with similar salary you received before you became disabled. Though of course there is a minimum for those who do not have any work history. With that, one is just above the poverty line, but work earnings based disability benefits are bigger. And I did calculate what Ache's would be - while I desperately hope it will not come to that - and with that and assets he will inherit from us, he would be able to live a comfortable life.</p><p></p><p>But I so much hope it would not come to that. I'm seriously afrauid what would happen if he would be idle all days, especially now that he is in such a bad place. Now that he has to wake up at morning, attend practise, meet and talk with people and so on, he at least somehow stays in touch with reality. And someone also sees him everyday, talks with him everyday, would refer him, again, to doctor if there is turn to worse. In my mind so much better than ability for him to hide to his flat, eat take away and never come out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SuZir, post: 667688, member: 14557"] More or less, yes. Only way to end his contract prematurely would be that he and his team would make an agreement about it. That is usually done if player is not playing well enough. The employer pays certain part of remaining wages as compensation and player is free to find a new club. No one unable to play for longer time for medical reasons or with career ending injury would of course ever agree to that, not without being compensated fully (that happens mostly with foreign players, they can go home, club saves the housing costs and the player can start building their new life outside of sports.) Contract can be revoked without both sides agreeing only based on breach of contract. Player can revoke it, if he is not paid and club can revoke it, if player seriously breaks the contract (doesn't make themselves available for training and playing or behaves in way that gives the club permission to revoke - and that bar is quite high (doping, serious criminal activity, in-team violence, things like that.) And the clubs do not want reputation of treating their players badly, especially injured/medical leave players, because that would make it much more difficult for them to sign players they want. Every player does know that they can have career ending injury any time despite however good or professional or hard working they are.) Disability benefits are considered occupational pensions around here and the amount is calculated like any occupational pension. Just with assumption that you would had worked till retirement age with similar salary you received before you became disabled. Though of course there is a minimum for those who do not have any work history. With that, one is just above the poverty line, but work earnings based disability benefits are bigger. And I did calculate what Ache's would be - while I desperately hope it will not come to that - and with that and assets he will inherit from us, he would be able to live a comfortable life. But I so much hope it would not come to that. I'm seriously afrauid what would happen if he would be idle all days, especially now that he is in such a bad place. Now that he has to wake up at morning, attend practise, meet and talk with people and so on, he at least somehow stays in touch with reality. And someone also sees him everyday, talks with him everyday, would refer him, again, to doctor if there is turn to worse. In my mind so much better than ability for him to hide to his flat, eat take away and never come out. [/QUOTE]
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