​ Juventus chief executive Giuseppe Marotta claims the club does need not to insert an unmatchable release clause in the contract of Paulo Dybala to keep the Argentine at the club.





Release clauses are added to ward off unwanted interest from clubs, and most big stars have astronomical release clauses added in their contracts. Neymar, who had a release clause of €222 million set by Barcelona was still lured away by Paris Saint-Germain in the summer.





Paulo Dybala: “I asked ter-Stegen after the game: How did you see the ball?”pic.twitter.com/ZVyUyZkibW — Cruyffista (@BusquetsLegacy) November 25, 2017





The Catalan giants have responded by setting Lionel Messi's buyout clause to €700m in the latest deal signed by the star forward on Saturday. Manchester City, who reportedly were closely following the superstar, will have to keep the clause in mind before holding talks with the Argentine.





Dybala has been linked with a move to join Messi at Barcelona and may also find himself the subject from other heavyweight clubs across Europe.





Dybala doing it dirty on Busquets pic.twitter.com/Vau75W1zL6 — William Phil (@WilliamPhil_) November 27, 2017





But Marotta, when asked about the future of the 24-year-old Juventus star, feels the Serie A holders would not benefit from inserting a humongous release clause as Barcelona, as he believes it on the player to take the final decision, and no amount can keep someone against his will.





"I am against the [release] clauses, because when a player wants to leave, he does everything to achieve that goal and breaks that fundamental trust [necessary so that] the relationship can continue," he told Mediaset Premium, quoted ​FourFourTwo.





Dybala is widely considered to be one of the best young players in the world and has scored 56 goals in 114 appearances of Juventus in all competitions since moving from Palermo in 2015.

