O'Neill: Players are in charge now

Former Aston Villa and Celtic manager Martin O'Neill admits that football clubs no longer possess as much power as players.

High-profile cases of player power have seen contracts renegotiated in recent years, while others have forced through transfers to a new club.

Wayne Rooney's transfer request is the most pertinent recent example and was raised in the Culture Media and Sport Committee's Football Governance inquiry.

The England international looked certain to leave Manchester United in October after handing in a transfer request but, days later, signed a new five-year deal with the club.

O'Neill believes the Rooney case is a prime example of the increasing power footballers hold over their respective clubs and the negative impact agents can have on the game.

"You would hope that if you sign a player, for instance, on a four-year deal that you would have some control [over their future]," he said.

"But really [I think] the control has left the football clubs and gone to the players and therefore the agents.

"I think that is one of the major changes I have seen to the game.

"When I started out, the player had no control whatsoever to the behest of the football club and now it has gone a full circle.

"I think that the players are in charge now, which is a bit of a shame really."

The 59-year-old also pinpointed the 1995 Bosman ruling as a change in power, where Jean-Marc Bosman won the right to move freely to another side at the end of his contract.

The European Court of Justice's ruling has had a profound effect on the transfers of players within the European Union and, although admitting the player "quite rightly" won his case, O'Neill pinpointed it as the catalyst to a somewhat negative change in football

"The fall-out from that there was extensive," he said. "So much so that we're possibly debating the idea that football itself could have its own rules.

"I think there is certainly a case for that because the minute there was a possibility of a player having a bit of difficulty with his contract suddenly he could go to European law and find a loophole that sorts things out.

"Clubs were finding out loopholes as they were going along.

"For instance, a player with two years left on his contract was in a position - by some sort of law made way back I think during King John's day - that he could actually get out of his contract.

"Certainly in his last year he could buy his way out and agents were using these to manipulate situations."

Former Reading and Crystal Palace boss Steve Coppell echoed O'Neill's sentiments, adding: "I think we can realistically say now that for most good players that a contract is actually at least 12 months shorter than the reality because you have to protect that asset.

"You [have to negotiate] at least 12 months before and that with the combination of increased TV income has made it increasingly inflationary."