It is not about the contracts, just an illustration how his demands compare to the real world.
Since Freeman signed, he has played maybe 30 times, has often been poor, and has not justified what he earns, but he has a contract that must be adhered to that means he gets probably £12,000 a week paid in to his bank account after tax irregardless of performance,
If he doesn't like his employers, all the evidence does go to suggesting that he doesn't like it here, the forum member
Freeman alluded to that on several occasions, then it is still his right for him to sit on his contract and get every last penny that is due to him, but then if he has an opportunity to go elsewhere on reduced terms then we can allow him that, but what I don't agree with is that we would have to pay his contract up.
What I would prefer for us to do is allow him to move without paying his contract up on a free transfer, let him go for a fee that will cover the value of the rest of his contract, or let him sit on his contract away from first team football until it expires, risking the potential value of any future he might get. Let him take the gamble to see where it takes him
In a few years time he could be sat in his house (I'd imagine anyone that age on those wages with half a brain would have a decent house with the mortgage paid early) saying I've bought and paid for this house, but without achieving anything of note in the world of professional football, or he could also be sat in the same house with a League 2 winner medal from next season that he won with Portsmouth, and the enduring respect of the Pompey fans for being part of the team that took them out of the bottom their, with his house paid for, money in the bank, and something other than material wealth to show from his career.
There was a player a few years we had, he came in on big wages and took a wage cut to join us, his performances were typical of a player over the hill and on the slide. A few months in to his contract, he admitted he wasn't up to it, tore up his contact and walked away joining Chester City where he wound down for a few months before retiring, Danny Higginbotham, remember him? His legacy he left at the Lane could have been one of a player who sat on his contract bleeding every last penny out of his contract that he could, but he didn't, she showed a bit of professional dignity, and I respected him for that,