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Martial move: French amateur club hits jackpot

Paris - Anthony Martial's record-breaking move to Manchester United will not only catapult the teenager onto the world's biggest footballing stage, it will also transform the finances of a tiny sixth-tier club in the Paris suburbs.

The striker's departure to the Premier League will be a game changer for Martial's first club, CO Les Ulis, based in a southwestern Paris suburb about 20 kilometers from the French capital.

The 19-year-old Martial, who became the most expensive teenager in the history of football after United agreed to pay Monaco a reported fee of £36 million, learned his skills at Les Ulis from 2001 to 2009.

Created in 1977, the amateur club is also famous for having nurtured the likes of former Arsenal star Thierry Henry and Patrice Evra, another Frenchman who wore United's famous red jersey.

Under FIFA rules, clubs that help to develop youngsters who are later transferred are entitled to compensation for all the training and education provided over the years. The so-called "solidarity mechanism" works between the seasons of the player's 12th and 23rd birthdays.

Martial left Les Ulis when he was 14 to join Lyon's renowned training academy, meaning that the club will receive three years of development fees, representing 0.75 percent of his transfer to United, worth an estimated £270 000.

It's manna from heaven for a team playing four divisions below the professional leagues.

"It will cover up to four or five years of our budget," coach Mamadou Niakate told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "We are always struggling to make ends meet. This money will help us secure existing jobs and renew our equipment. At the football school, we've been using the same footballs and training shirts over the past four years."

A small town of about 25,000 people that was built at the end of 1970s and then hit hard by economic recession, Les Ulis is mainly known for its football school and its big housing projects. After years of social tension related to poverty, the city council has launched a rehabilitation scheme aimed at diversifying the housing supply and promoting greater social cohesion.

"At the club, we also want to create social links, we try not to turn down anyone and we contribute to the mixing of populations," Niakate said. "We try to instil a proper football culture while insisting on school attendance at the same time."

Niakate, who is also coaching at the football school, said Martial's transfer to United will bring much more money into the club's bank account than those of Henry and Evra combined.

"Thierry was just an 11-year-old boy when he left, so we did not receive anything because the solidarity contribution does not work if the player leaves the club before his 12th birthday. He later paid for an artificial pitch for the club, though," Niakate said.

"With Evra, we received about 38,000 euros in player development fees. But this is not just about the money. Our main satisfaction is that someone from Les Ulis is able to join such a prestigious club as Manchester United."

Since the news broke of Martial's departure to the most widely-watched league in the world, the 750-member club has been coping with a plethora of new registration requests, with dozens of children flowing to the Stade Jean-Marc Salinier to sign up.

"Hopefully there will be other great players among them," said Niakate, who has been working at the club since 1987 and is coaching Martial's older brother Dorian.

"Anthony was really above the rest," Niakate said. "On the very first day he registered with us, I could tell he had something special. But that's still a long way from saying he would one day join United for 80 million euros."

While the fee United paid for Martial, who has made just 29 senior starts in spells at Lyon and Monaco, has left many football fans perplexed, Niakate is adamant the comparison with Henry is not premature.

"Look at them at the same age, they are very similar. They are both powerful, share the same technical and physical qualities, and have more speed than the rest of the field," Niakate said. "And like Thierry, Martial has the stuff of champions."

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