Some clarification on this hot-button topic seems in order.
FC Sochaux within rights to deny Charlie Davies’ medical clearance


There’s a little misinformation afoot regarding Charlie Davies’ French club, FC Sochaux, and the
A few people believe that U.S. Soccer had "rights" to Davies for a FIFA event no matter what officials at Sochaux said or did. I have to admit, I was under the same impression.
Typically, FIFA regulations do indeed stipulate that national teams can have their players for certain sanctioned dates without club consent. So, under normal circumstances, a national federation would clearly have the rights to a player during a World Cup.
All of this is relevant, of course, because Sochaux did not provide medical clearance for Davies to join the
As it turns out, there is a provision for medical exceptions. I talked to
Typically, a situation like this would arise if an important club match was in nearby conflict with an important national team date. So, if the club were to claim “injury” and not release someone to the national team, rules stipulate that the player is then unavailable to the club over a certain period. If the player were to “recover” miraculously and participate in the club fixture, the FIFA police would act through fines, sanctions, etc.
As I said, everyone is aware of the policies and they generally play nice.
So bottom line here: Sochaux did have the right to deny Davies’ release. Yes, U.S. Soccer could have pressed the case and insisted on its own medical examination. But given the uncertainty of it all, and based on personal evaluations done in late April by
In other words, if Davies is so far from being ready to contribute that Sochaux can’t even grant medical clearance, the chances that the young











