Let’s say I hire you to play Fortnite and I will pay you $20,000 a year for 3 years.
You suck so I want to stop paying you. Or I suck so you want to play for someone else.
Most contracts have a buy out clause to allow this to happen.
In this example. Maybe I can pay $30,000 all at once and kick you out of my team.
Or maybe you or your new potential team can pay me $20,000 and I’ll release you before the 3 years are up.
Essentially it’s ended the contract by someone else buying the contract.
Let’s say I hire you to play Fortnite and I will pay you $20,000 a year for 3 years.
You suck so I want to stop paying you. Or I suck so you want to play for someone else.
Most contracts have a buy out clause to allow this to happen.
In this example. Maybe I can pay $30,000 all at once and kick you out of my team.
Or maybe you or your new potential team can pay me $20,000 and I’ll release you before the 3 years are up.
Essentially it’s ended the contract by someone else buying the contract.
Let’s say I hire you to play Fortnite and I will pay you $20,000 a year for 3 years.
You suck so I want to stop paying you. Or I suck so you want to play for someone else.
Most contracts have a buy out clause to allow this to happen.
In this example. Maybe I can pay $30,000 all at once and kick you out of my team.
Or maybe you or your new potential team can pay me $20,000 and I’ll release you before the 3 years are up.
Essentially it’s ended the contract by someone else buying the contract.
Contacts will typically have a timescale attached to them. A player may be hired with a contract that states they will be paid $25,000 a year, and that they will be employed for three years.
The problem comes when one side wants to change this agreement – maybe a team decide they don’t want the player on their side and want rid of them, or the player decides that they would rather play for a different team. In these situations they will be breaking the context they previously made, with one side gaining a benefit, and one side taking a loss, so naturally the losing side will want to say ‘no, we want to finish the contract as agreed’.
The idea of buying out a contract is that the two sides will come to an agreement on how they should break that contact in a way that is acceptable to both sides. Typically by ‘buying’ it from the losing side.
So if a good player wants to leave and join a bigger team, that bigger team may pay the previous team a sum of money equivalent to cover the losses they would expect to make without that player.
Or a team may want rid of a player, so instead of paying them $25,000 for another three years, they may agree to pay them more, but only for the current year (after which the player will be free to start a new contract with another team).
Some of this will be set out in advance in the contracts signed, while since of this will be negotiated at the time.
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