
"Footballers could decide against playing for their home nation because doing so could reduce their chances of ever making it to the Premier League. "Meanwhile, transfer fees go up: foreign players are worth more to British clubs because you need to make sure you make the most of those four slots, and the best British players become more valuable, and so more expensive, too.
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That could mean the overall quality drops, and that means the TV money goes down. "All of a sudden Championship-quality players are moving into the Premier League to fill up slots. "If you only had four non-UK players per squad, that's going to make things difficult," Jacobson said, explaining the potential impact on the game. There's also the possibility of limiting the number of non-UK players British clubs are allowed from anything as high as 17 to as low as four. "That's two of last season's three best players." "If we already had these rules in place, players such as N'Golo Kante and Dimitri Payet would not have been able to gain work permits to move to the Premier League," Jacobson said. Obviously hard Brexit makes Football Manager 17 harder, because it has implications on who would be eligible for a move into the Premier League.


A year later there's a news bulletin that details the extent of Brexit, with three main scenarios: soft exit, footballers are granted the same special exemption that are currently given to entertainers and hard brexit. At some point in the game between two and 10 years in, the player is told trade negotiations have begun.
