DD-Sport > Football > Paris Saint-Germain reveals the real reason why Donaluma leaves

Paris Saint-Germain reveals the real reason why Donaluma leaves

Paris Saint-Germain strategic adviser Luis Campos recently publicly admitted that the fundamental reason why the team sold Italian national goal Donaluma this summer is that the player salary requirements conflict with the club's new salary system.

Manchester City signed the world-class goalkeeper for a transfer fee of £26 million before the summer transfer window closed. The deal is considered to be cost-effective, and Manchester City took advantage of the negotiation advantage of only one year left in the player contract. The

incident began on August 12, when Donnarumma was replaced by new aid Shevalier and missed the roster. The player publicly stated at the time: "Someone decided that I no longer belong to the team." Coach Louis Enrique then admitted that this was a tactical choice, saying that goalkeepers with different characteristics were needed.

Campos revealed to RMC Sports: "The club is higher than anyone else. Donarumma's departure is the result of the combined effect of multiple factors. The salary level he requested is in line with the past Paris, not the current Paris." Campos emphasized that the club's new contract system will replace high basic salary with performance bonuses as the core. "Our policy focuses on performance, and can only earn higher income when performing well and get opportunities to play."

Donarumma's agent Enzo Raiola raised objections. He said the players had accepted salary cuts in negotiations last season, but the club changed the rules of the game after the Champions League final, and the contract renewal negotiations that were originally scheduled to restart suddenly changed in early August.

Campos finally emphasized: "The salary policy applies to everyone. Club stability will not change due to the special requirements of individual players. In Paris, whether you can start does not depend on past qualifications, but on current performance. This is our basic principle."