The loan of a player to another club does not interrupt the continuing training period of the player. As a consequence, the club, which transferred the player on a loan basis to another club, is entitled to training compensation for the period of time during which it effectively trained the player, however excluding the period of time of the loans to the other club.
Facts/Procedure
The Player S. is of Croatian nationality and was born in 1992. The Player was registered as a non-amateur player with FC Lokomotiva Zagreb from 15 July 2009 until 22 January 2010. During this period, from 15 November 2006 until 12 July 2013, he was registered as a non-amateur player with FC GNK Dinamo Zagreb and from 2 August 2006 to 4 October 2006, as an amateur with FC GNK Dinamo Zagreb.
In July 2013, the Player was transferred from GNK Dinamo Zagreb to Genoa on a permanent basis and was registered with the Italian club as a professional on 31 August 2013.
On 3 October 2014, FC Lokomotiva initiated proceedings with FIFA requesting from the latter to order Genoa to pay in its favour an amount of EUR 31,135.84 as compensation for the training of the Player. In its decision of 2 September 2015, the FIFA Dispute Resolution Chamber...
Why not join us?
Football Legal is an independent media publishing football law contents on a daily basis dedicated to all football law practitioners (lawyers, clubs, federations, intermediaries, football stakeholders, etc.).
Register today and stay tuned to the latest legal news.
Get started