NEGOTIATIONS between clubs over a transfer fee for a player could soon be a thing of the past as Fifa threw the door open for COMPUTERS to determine them out instead.
Despite this latest transfer window barely even getting going, both the January and summer signing sprees have become common place each year.
GettyJEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA – DECEMBER 21: FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks on stage during FIFA Football Summit 2023 on December 21, 2023 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Harold Cunningham – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)[/caption]
GettyFifa chief Gianni Infantino is open to the idea of transfer fees being determined by AI[/caption]
And there is always usually at least one long-and-protracted move that tends to dominate the headlines as two teams haggle over the fee.
However, Fifa president Gianni Infantino has now suggested that an algorithm could be used in the future to determine football transfer fees.
And that introduction would help to increase transparency in the $10 billion market.
Infantino, speaking at Fifa’s annual law conference in Tokyo, said: “Now more than ever it is fundamental for us to talk about these and other topics.
“For example, to discuss about the possibility to use an algorithm to estimate the fair value of transfer fees in order to increase transparency in the transfer system and help the football stakeholders.”
It is unclear how such plans would get to be Fifa-approved and if they would be accepted by clubs, who would have their selling options limited by this introduction.
And it is also uncertain how the AI plan would comply with competition law in the European Union.
This comes after one of the driest January’s ever since the introduction of the transfer window system.
CASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO WELCOME OFFERS
Premier League clubs have been gripped by fear of Financial Fair Play measures and those Profitability and Sustainability Rules have proved to be a major buzzkill.
Tottenham’s £25m deal for Romanian star Radu Dragusin from Genoa was the biggest deal from January.
The three windows previous to this, including the summers of 2022 and 2023, were all record-breakers in English football.
But just £97million was spent in January – the lowest total in a non-Covid season for 12 years.
And that is a whole lot less than the record £815m outlay 12 months ago.
TRANSFER NEWS LIVE: All the latest transfer deals from around the world this January