Club bosses insisted in December they
would not be offering Evans a contract or an opportunity to train but it is
understood further talks have taken place since then.
Professional Footballers' Association
chief executive Gordon Taylor revealed a League One club will hold a press
conference on Monday in relation to the signing of 26-year-old striker Evans,
but would not name the club involved.
Evans wants to return to football after
being released from prison in October. He served two-and-a-half years of a
five-year sentence after being found guilty of raping a 19-year-old woman in
2011.
Oldham were not available for comment.
On December 1 the club had issued a statement saying: "The board of
directors would like to confirm that we will not be extending an invitation for
Ched Evans to train with Oldham Athletic nor will we be offering him a
contract. The club will not be making any further comment on this
subject."
Evans had an offer to train with former
club Sheffield United retracted in November following strong local opposition,
while Tranmere and Hartlepool also rejected the opportunity to sign the
26-year-old striker.
He was initially given permission by
the Blades to return to train with the club at the request of the PFA. But
following a backlash from Blades supporters, sponsors and patrons opposed to
Evans' return - 160,000 people signed a petition against it - the club
retracted the offer.
PFA chief Taylor said the players'
union had not asked any club to sign Evans but would support them doing so.
He told BBC Radio 5 Live's Sportsweek
programme: "The club are due to hold the press conference tomorrow and
I've made it clear to them that I cannot attend tomorrow.
"Bearing in mind what happened
with his release and then of course the furore that we had at Sheffield United
we feel that any club wishing to sign him needs to be 100 per cent committed to
signing him for proper and legitimate football reasons."
Any move to sign Evans is likely to
lead to public outcry, but Taylor is keen to avoid a similar situation to the
one that engulfed Sheffield United after they made their offer to the player.
"I don't want to create a
replica-type situation that we had at Sheffield (United) because I'm a little
bit concerned that we need a press conference and that will invite, of course,
many antagonists," he said.
Taylor said the PFA appreciated the
situation was "very sensitive", but reiterated its stance that Evans
deserved the chance to resume his career following his release from prison.
"We've made it clear in our statements that we feel he's been unable to say much because of the appeals process, but he has served his time and the job of society is to look to rehabilitate," Taylor said.
On Friday Maltese side Hibernians
revealed that they had made a contract offer to Evans for the remainder of the
season, although the BBC quoted a spokesman for Evans denying the player
received such an offer.
However, any move abroad is unlikely to
materialise given the UK's tough regime in managing sex offenders.
A Ministry of Justice spokesman said:
''We are determined to have one of the toughest regimes in the world for
managing sex offenders, to stop them re-offending and to protect victims.
''Probation officers must give
permission for sex offenders on licence to take up new jobs and this includes
ensuring they hold regular face to face meetings - this effectively rules out
working abroad.
''The offenders will also be subject to strict conditions such as exclusion zones, non-contact orders and having to attend sex offender treatment programmes.''
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