São Paulo found the club keen on Arboleda that halted contract termination | OneFootball

São Paulo found the club keen on Arboleda that halted contract termination | OneFootball

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·6 May 2026

São Paulo found the club keen on Arboleda that halted contract termination

Article image:São Paulo found the club keen on Arboleda that halted contract termination

Well, that was true.


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Sources from São Paulo’s top brass told the report that Arboleda and his camp wanted to get out of their ties with the Morumbi club because they were in talks with Athletico-PR.

According to Tricolor executives, the Paraná club was close to agreeing salary terms to sign the defender as soon as he secured his release from São Paulo.

Now, as planned, São Paulo’s directors are waiting for contact from Athletico to release Arboleda at the opening of the new transfer window, in July.

For now, the information coming from Morumbi is that the Curitiba-based club is monitoring the situation. There is talk that the Paraná side sees room to invest and put money into the deal, but it will wait to see the Ecuadorian’s behavior over the next few days.

THE CASE

Sources from São Paulo’s top leadership told the report some of the reasons why the plan to terminate the Ecuadorian’s contract, which runs through the end of 2027, was abandoned.

“We are prioritizing financial protection and disciplinary control over an immediate breakup,” said one of the people consulted.

After reporting back to the Barra Funda training center accompanied by his representatives, the Ecuadorian was formally reprimanded by the football department leadership, made up of Rui Costa and Rafinha, who made clear their dissatisfaction with his unjustified absence.

As an administrative punishment, the player suffered a severe cut to his pay, equivalent to one month’s salary, and remains subject to further fines under the club’s internal regulations.

But the refusal to terminate the contract is based on a technical risk assessment. Legally, dismissal for cause was weakened by the player’s return before the 30-day period that characterizes job abandonment, which could drag the club into an uncertain and costly legal dispute.

Without completing 30 consecutive days of disappearance, Arboleda has grounds—especially before FIFA—not only to win a legal case against São Paulo, but also to secure compensation. “People look only at Brazilian labor laws, but forget that this is an international case,” said a club source consulted.

On the other hand, a mutual termination was ruled out because it was considered a strategic contradiction: besides generating no financial compensation, it would allow the defender to strengthen direct rivals at no cost, turning an act of indiscipline into a direct benefit for the offender.

“He never hid that his goal was to leave São Paulo. Clearly there is no atmosphere for him to stay. But authorizing his departure as if nothing had happened, besides granting his wish, would create a dangerous precedent for other players who may want to do the same. There is still one year left on his contract. And São Paulo cannot afford that luxury,” he said.

Given this scenario, São Paulo adopted a productive isolation plan for the player. Arboleda will undergo a full battery of clinical exams and performance tests to assess the impact of the period of inactivity, followed by an individualized physical reconditioning schedule.

First and foremost, this is intended to show interested clubs that the defender is fully fit for a transfer. “This is a stage of physical and disciplinary recovery, whose ultimate goal is to keep the player in market condition so that he can be transferred or included in swap deals as soon as the next transfer window opens,” summarized a source consulted by AMT.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.

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