The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Levy slams ‘unsustaina­ble’ spending

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LONDON: Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy has slammed the “unsustaina­ble” spending of Premier League clubs during a frenzied summer transfer window.

At least £800 million ($1.04 billion, 896 million euros) has been spent by English top-flight clubs in the current transfer period and Levy believes the exorbitant spree is bad for the sport.

Manchester United paid a British record £75 million for Everton striker Romelu Lukaku and Manchester City broke the world record fee for a defender with their £52 million swoop for Monaco’s Benjamin Mendy.

City alone have spent over £200 million on six new players, while Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal have all made club record signings since the end of last season.

The Premier League’s spending is on course to break the record £1.2 billion mark for a single window, but Tottenham have opted out of the lavish deals, so far failing to make a single signing.

Defending Tottenham’s ultraconve­rsative approach, Levy claimed the other 19 Premier League teams were putting their financial health at risk.

“We have a duty to manage the club appropriat­ely,” Levy said.

“Some of the activity that is going on at the moment is just impossible for it to be sustainabl­e.

“Somebody spending £200 million more than they’re earning, eventually it catches up with you. And you can’t keep doing it.”

With Tottenham having to spend up to £800 million on the current redevelopm­ent of their White Hart Lane stadium, Levy acknowledg­ed it was prudent to be more cautious in the transfer market at present.

But he denied the stadium costs would stop boss Mauricio Pochettino getting a player he wants as Tottenham look to improve on two successive nearmisses in the Premier League title race.

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