priest Posted August 4, 2010 Share Posted August 4, 2010 I bid£1 million for Siphiwe Tshabalala. Accepted. Offer contract . Accepted . Work permit. Rejected. But just 2 weeks later Tshabalala is off to some European team, even after I appealed! It happened with Katlego Mphela too. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
StevoRobbo Posted August 5, 2010 Share Posted August 5, 2010 First off, get rid of the bold please. No need for it. Secondly, im guessing your a team in England, where a foreigner (non EU I think) needs to have a work permit. Obviously the European teams that they went to dont have any such rules regarding foreigners entering the country. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
BurakUeda Posted August 5, 2010 Share Posted August 5, 2010 Scout the foreign players before you try to buy. Scout reports says if you can get a permit or not. They even say you probably won't get permit in initial application, but high possibility of getting one if appealed. In my experience, they were correct like 95% of the time. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
priest Posted August 5, 2010 Author Share Posted August 5, 2010 actually in scotland but i take it same thing. Though S.Cabanas passed his work permit wihtout appeal. Tshabala has been capped before, is there a certain number needed? And are work permit appeals ever, succesful? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
priest Posted August 5, 2010 Author Share Posted August 5, 2010 ahh thanks Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
StevoRobbo Posted August 5, 2010 Share Posted August 5, 2010 actually in scotland but i take it same thing. Though S.Cabanas passed his work permit wihtout appeal.Tshabala has been capped before, is there a certain number needed? And are work permit appeals ever, succesful? Yes the work permits applies to Britain so Scotland will be the same. Players with a high reputation will often get a work permit even though they havent played the percentage of games for their country. You have to have played a certain percentage of games for your country within a certain time period. Say 75% of games over 3 years. Unless its some unknown kid its often you will get a work permit, even on appeal. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
StevoRobbo Posted August 5, 2010 Share Posted August 5, 2010 He must have played in 75% of internationals for his country in the two years before the application, while the player's country must regularly make the top 70 world rankings Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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