1. I believe the AFL integrity dept have a broad range of powers as agreed to by players union and would be in any contract signed.piedys wrote:Well perhaps they have to mathematically, in order to justify the cap payments.MJ23 wrote:They actually have to. Especially first year.Pies4shaw wrote:Bit of a pity Martin didn't say "Sorry guys, a contract is a contract" and compel the Blues to stick with it.
Presuming this table does in fact have to be submitted to AFL for validation, the 2021 balance sheet may very well read:
J.Martin - $1,500,000.00
and the other players listed to comprise the remainder of total cap tally.
However, there is nothing to stop both player, manager and club settling on say $700,000.00 for 2021, behind closed doors?
That remaining balance of $800,000.00 would be swallowed up by players showing a lower wage [unders] on that 2021 spreadsheet.
Basically the same shenanigans that got us deep into the shit over the last few seasons, until we calculated ourselves into a corner.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the AFL has no authority to demand to investigate the bank accounts of players or their families?
Thus they would never know what any player was actually paid, in any given year?
I'm sure the ATO would have a record of the exact figures on group certificates etc, BUT doubting the AFL has access to that information either?
There's always ways around these scenarios; but it's when it all unravels down the track, like it did with us, that things become problematic...
2. This is the very definition of cap and draft tampering even though TPP might not be breached.
3. Risk versus reward - why would you do all of that, trust a whole heap of people plus need a second set of books where the club can be searched / audited without any notice for one player when the penalty could be - loss of premiership points, loss of players, loss of cash and potential loss of draft picks ?