This leads me to a question about European soccer players...what rights do the players themselves have? Are they free agents, able to sign with whichever team they wish, regardless of who is offering the most for them? Are they allowed to veto a sale to a club they don't want to play for? Or is it like baseball's reserve system where a player is bound to the team he signs with, and said team is allowed to trade, sell, loan, borrow, demote, etc players at will?
There is a players union (at least in England, and I'd be gobsmacked if the French didn't have one). However, players are signed to individual teams, and not drafted as such, which is why contracts have to be bought and sold between clubs as there is no overriding organisation. Every club will run some form of development program, involving schoolboy and reserve teams, where those players are under some form of contract. When that contract runs out, they're free agents able to sign with whomever they choose. After the
Bosman ruling, European players are free to move around the leagues in EU countries as they see fit. I don't know the details of the contracts, but the player does have some say about "transfers", as they are known, hence the compensation built into most transfers whereby the player gets a slug of the fee paid.
I would suggest, therefore, that soccer players have much more say over where and for whom they play. If they're good. There's certainly no pre-set time period where they are indentured to an individual club other than what is laid out and agreed in the individual contract they signed. If they're crap, they take whatever shitty contract they can get from
Crystal Palace whatever shitty team will offer it. Or go and
sell Lady Kenmores open a pub.