Independent. Outcome-driven.
Forceful.
Four practice areas in professional sport — each conceived as an integrated whole, not sold as a standalone product. The boutique firm is deliberately narrow: what is handled here is handled in depth.
Contractperformance.
A contract is the architecture of a career — not its protocol.
Rightscontrol.
Those who don't know their rights forfeit them. Those who know them but cannot enforce them lose them.
Transactionsecurity.
A transfer is not a decision. It is a negotiation sequence with thirty moving parts.
Enforcementpower.
Holding a claim is not holding a cent. Enforceability is a discipline of its own.
Depth in counsel emerges not through breadth.
It emerges through repetition.
A boutique firm lives off encountering the same constellations again and again — player contracts in extension negotiations, terminations under transfer pressure, CAS appeals on tight deadlines, marketing rights in multi-year licensing-chain negotiations. Repetition turns knowledge into experience.
The four practice areas are therefore not four separate business lines, but four axes of the same market. A transfer almost always touches employment law, marketing rights, and potentially dispute resolution. What separates the pages is the entry perspective — not the depth of counsel.
If you have a concrete constellation — let us talk.
Engage counsel →