James Musa has signed a five-month contract with Fulham but the deal nearly came unstuck because of concerns by the English Premier League outfit over the amount they needed to pay clubs in New Zealand for the player's development.
Fulham are a tier one club in the eyes of world governing body Fifa and guidelines suggest Fulham would need to pay up to a total of 720,000 to clubs Musa played for from the age of 12. But they understandably baulked at the potential cost, threatening to withdraw the contract offer when some in New Zealand wanted a significant slice of this, until a commonsense agreement was reached.
There needs to be a balance between getting some money for development for New Zealander footballers and ensuring this doesn't block a player's ability to be signed by an overseas club, which is still the best pathway for young players in this country. Fifa's compensation package is in place largely to ensure smaller clubs get reparation for when larger ones snaffle their best players.
It's understood Fulham will pay some remuneration to New Zealand clubs Musa played for, including the Wellington Phoenix, if they sign the centre-back beyond the initial five-month contract but it won't be anywhere near the money suggested.
Musa trialled with Fulham after the Olympics and flew to London on Thursday to be put through a medical before signing the deal, which was done before the European transfer window closed. Fulham also signed former Manchester United striker Dimitar Berbatov on the same day and Musa could make his debut for the club in a friendly against the Oman national side next week.