Fabio Vieira made another substitute appearance for Porto at the weekend, perhaps influenced by a clause in his loan deal from Arsenal.
For the third game in a row, Fabio Vieira came off the bench for Porto on Sunday.
The Arsenal loanee returned from injury the previous week, coming on as a substitute for 21 minutes against Arouca. He then played 12 minutes against Manchester United in midweek, before his latest 21-minute showing against SC Braga.
In many ways, the appearances are nothing too unusual. Vieira is adapting to a new team after an injury, so it makes sense he’d play a limited role from the bench at first.
Yet it could also be a sign of Porto’s unwillingness to pay the penalty clauses in the player’s deal.
When Porto agreed the loan for Vieira, Fabrizio Romano reported that there was a clause in the deal that would mean the Portuguese club owe additional money if the player doesn’t play 50% of their matches.
That obviously incentivises Porto to throw him on even if they don’t specifically need him, such as in the Braga game.
Porto were already winning 2-1 against Braga, who have scored the fourth-most goals in the division so far this campaign.
A logical move might have been to try and shore up the defence, something Vieira’s introduction was unlikely to achieve. His substitution was more of a like-for-like swap, arguably even an attacking change.
It was the same story against Manchester United, with Porto winning 3-2 when Vieira came on.
It could certainly be argued that Porto are simply building up Vieira’s fitness, and that the chance to play some minutes against one of Portugal’s stronger sides and Manchester United would help him on that front.
But it’s one to keep an eye on after the international break. If Vieira continues to make substitute appearances with 20 minutes to go regardless of the sporting circumstances, those cameos start to seem financially motivated.