The Sun (Malaysia)

Why the EPL rich are feeling the squeeze

- BY MIGUEL DELANEY

WHEN it came to negotiatin­g Douglas Costa’s move from Bayern Munich to Juventus in the last week, there was very little fuss between the two clubs, and very little money asked.

The 26-year-old is going to Turin for a £5m two-year loan, with the option to then buy for a mere £35m.

Given his status as one of the more exciting and distinctiv­e wingers in the game, and how the average price for a fairly standard transfer deal in the Premier League this summer seems to be around £40m, the wonder is how much an English club would have been quoted.

The current landscape makes it feel like the fee would have been a lot higher, and that they wouldn’t have been able to agree anything close to the kind of convenient loan that Juventus did.

Part of that is of course down to the recent good relationsh­ip between the Serie A champions and Bayern in the transfer market and how much business they have done, but part of it is also down to the recent behaviour of Premier League clubs in that same market and – quite simply – how much money they can spend.

This is the flipside of the fact the English clubs collective­ly earn almost £2bn more per year than the next wealthiest league in Germany, one of the disadvanta­ges of the obvious benefits of being so sensationa­lly wealthy.

The sellers can see them coming and generally know what they want and – most importantl­y – what you can spend.

You could call it “the Premier League premium”, but it is precisely why all that money still hasn’t meant English clubs have been able to call the shots in the way they would have liked.

It is also why a source at one top side said that dealing with foreign boards this summer “has been a nightmare”, why another said they’ve “never known a

> Being the richest league in the world comes with certain drawbacks – ones which would make it impossible to compete with Juventus and Bayern Munich for certain players

window like it”, and why pretty much all of them have endured mostly unsatisfac­tory windows so far as they properly begin preparatio­ns for the new season. Only Everton have really had a satisfacto­ry window relative to what they wanted to do at the outset. Despite their best intentions, none of the top six are going on tour with anything really close to their idealised squad. Sure, Manchester United may have eventually got the goalscorer they need in Romelu Lukaku, Manchester City may have pulled off a real coup in Bernardo Silva, but they both still have so much they want and need to do – precisely like pretty much all of their main rivals. Actually getting it done, however, has been made hugely complicate­d by the fees that foreign clubs are fairly demanding for their players. They are understand­ably responding to English cash with a lot of canniness, and a very reasonable refusal to budge. A classic case is one of the centres of this summer’s transfer market, in Monaco. There had been widespread expectatio­n that the French champions would be “raided” and possibly lose up to seven primary players from their exhilarati­ng young team. While that may yet happen, they have so far only sold Bernardo Silva and that for an extremely persuasive prospectiv­e £61m price, reflecting just how difficult they have been to do business with. It won’t quite be a raid given how sturdy Monaco are proving, and how much they’ll get out of it. None of Tiemoue Bakayoko, Fabinho, Djibril Sidibe, Benjamin Mendy, Thomas Lamar or – above all – Kylian Mbappe have been allowed to go easily.

All have been subject to significan­t interest, but also protracted negotiatio­ns about how much they will cost, explaining why so many deals like Bakayoko to Chelsea have been at a stand-still.

One of the further frustratio­ns for English clubs is that personal terms have naturally been fairly easy to agree with players, because they can offer so much.

The exception has been Tottenham Hotspur, who have been reluctant to pay £100,000-a-week to targets this summer out of fear of disrupting their wage structure, but they were coincident­ally described by one Europe-based agent – along with Everton – as one of the clubs the continenta­l sides see as being less prone to ludicrous fees.

That has brought some of its own issues for Spurs, but it essentiall­y means that if the rest of the English managers want to get their squads to the level they would like, their boards are probably going to have pay to the level they can. It could yet see a lot of £40m-plus fees by the end of August.

The Premier League has been quite brash about its wealth and broadcasti­ng deals. That lends itself to a lot of easy lines about putting your money where your mouth is, but also the idea that, really, more money has so far just led to more problems. – The Independen­t

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