I then asked
What about is a player like my son who has fell out with his coach and wants go to another club. Or doesnt enjoy the culture or thinks there is a better pathway at a different club?
1. Players still have full freedom to move clubs
The rule
does not stop a player from leaving a bad environment.
A player can always:
- leave a coach he’s not aligned with
- leave a club culture he doesn’t enjoy
- seek better development, opportunity, or pathways
- transfer freely
There is
zero restriction on movement itself.
The only limit is:
- if the new club has already filled its 2 transfer spots for 1st Grade,
then the player may need to play lower grades for a period
until a spot opens (injury, rotation, form, etc.)
That’s not a ban.
That’s just part of the competitive framework.
2. Pathway improvement is still possible
If a player genuinely has a stronger development opportunity at a new club, he can still move — the new club just needs to assess if he fits into their two First Grade acquisition slots.
And remember:
- every club will prioritise true 1st Grade-level talent
- clubs will often reshuffle their “2 spots” for the right player
- injuries happen constantly
- selections change week to week
If a player is genuinely a 1st Grade-level athlete, another club
will make space.
So the idea that pathway is “blocked” is usually not accurate.
3. Culture misalignment — players are not stuck
If the culture is bad, or the coaching relationship breaks:
- the player can move immediately
- the player can still train with the new club
- the player can still play 2s, 3s, 4s
- and if they prove themselves, they will get stepped up
The rule gives:
- freedom of movement
- freedom to play
- a pathway to 1st Grade
It only stops a club from stacking 10 external 1st graders at once.
That’s governance, not restriction.
4. The rule doesn’t punish the player — it forces the club to prioritise correctly
If a player moves because of culture or pathway reasons, the responsibility falls on the
new club to decide:
- is this player good enough for one of our two spots?
- is he a priority over the other players wanting in?
- does he fit our 2026–27 build?
That’s normal selection management.
It’s not a punishment — it’s forcing clubs to be strategic.
5. The key thing players need to understand
A bad club environment is
not a reason to blow up governance rules.
It’s a reason to leave that environment.
Nothing in this rule stops that.
What the rule stops is:
- rich clubs buying entire teams
- instability
- stripping local talent
- creating artificial “super teams”
But it does
not stop a player from finding a better home.
6. The “fairness test” (how it holds up legally and practically)
If a dispute happened, the competition could defend the rule because:
- the player is still allowed to play
- the player is still allowed to move
- the player is still allowed to earn match payments
- the player’s pathway is not eliminated — only moderated by selection quota
- every club operates under the same restriction
Courts always look at
impact versus purpose.
Here, the impact is mild.
The purpose is strong.
So a court would uphold it.
7. How you should confidently explain this to players
You can tell them this, plain and real:
They will understand that instantly.