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Topic: [2018-01-31] Turkish Football Team Buys Player with Bitcoin (Read 122 times)

legendary
Activity: 1232
Merit: 1091

It all starts small. There is an Eastern saying: "The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step!" - so here it is only necessary to create an example so that then hundreds and thousands for different reasons would do the same. In general, this will positively affect the markets of the crypto currency and thus expand the community of amateurs to indulge in bitcoins. ; D

I see it more as some sort of a publicity stunt rather than something that will keep extending further in the sports world. In that case, it did turn out to be somewhat of a success since they have seen their story get covered by news sites here and there. Overall, it's a refreshing article if we look at how much rubbish we have had to dig through in the recent months -- it's largely all negativity that we have seen despite Bitcoin's price still being up a lot. Time will tell whether or not we'll see more players get bought or even sold with Bitcoin (although in this article it was just a partial Bitcoin payment combined with fiat).
member
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I remember some years ago, a fax machine broke and a top player from Manchester United didn't join Real Madrid. Soon, will it be a club that didn't pay enough fees to have a fast validation on the blockchain before the end of the transfer window ?  Grin
full member
Activity: 294
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Alea iacta est

It all starts small. There is an Eastern saying: "The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step!" - so here it is only necessary to create an example so that then hundreds and thousands for different reasons would do the same. In general, this will positively affect the markets of the crypto currency and thus expand the community of amateurs to indulge in bitcoins. ; D

Your statement is accurate but at this point it's still at an extremely small scale. Think about it if only have the slightest idea of what professional football players on the highest level are going for these days you would be lauging at the price this amateur player was trasferred for.
full member
Activity: 490
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FRX: Ferocious Alpha

It all starts small. There is an Eastern saying: "The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step!" - so here it is only necessary to create an example so that then hundreds and thousands for different reasons would do the same. In general, this will positively affect the markets of the crypto currency and thus expand the community of amateurs to indulge in bitcoins. ; D
sr. member
Activity: 700
Merit: 250
Harunustaspor, a Turkish amateur football team, just bought a player using bitcoin.

The Bitcoin space might be struggling from a price and a sentiment perspective right now but that hasn’t stopped the flow of quirky news that’s become prevalent over the last six months or so, as the cryptocurrency and blockchain spaces have moved out from under the radar and into the mainstream.

The latest report of this type has come out of Turkey, which (as many reading will likely already be aware) has had something of a turbulent relationship with cryptocurrency over the last few months.

The BBC reported today that a Turkish football (soccer, for our North American friends) club has signed a new player using bitcoin.

At the top tier of football in Europe, when a club says they have acquired a new player through purchase or transfer, it normally means that the club in question has paid another club for the player that’s being transferred.

That’s not the case here, however.

We’re talking lower league teams – specifically, the Turkish amateur league – and the transfer and acquisition fee refers to the club having paid the player the funds in an attempt (and, as it seems, a successful one) to get him to join the ranks.

Specifically, the team is called Harunustaspor and the player who has been bought is a 22-year old footballer named Omer Faruk Kıroglu.

A Combination of BTC and Fiat

As per the reports, Kıroglu has picked up 0.0524 BTC (which amounts to a little over $520 at current pricing) and 2,500 Turkish lira (around $665 right now) to join the club, which competes in the Turkish Sakarya First Division Group B.

And the club hasn’t been coy about the justification for the decision to pay BTC for Kıroglu.

Here’s what club chairman, Haldun Sehit, said about the move:

We did it to make a name for ourselves in the country and the world.

And, to give credit where credit is due, it’s working.

The news is being reported across the globe through numerous top-tier outlets and is likely introducing not just this team, but the league in which it plays, to a brand new global audience.

Whether Harunustaspor will pick up any new fans on the back of its dabble with bitcoin remains to be seen.

http://bitcoinist.com/turkish-football-team-buys-player-bitcoin/

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