The Herald (South Africa)

Blizzard of cash thrown at securing star players

Billions spent in Premier League deals

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JAW-DROPPING new broadcast deals totalling £8.3-billion (R145-billion) have enabled the English Premier League to assemble a dazzling galaxy of stars for the 2016-17 season.

Jose Mourinho will have Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c and Paul Pogba at his disposal at Manchester United, while Pep Guardiola has authorised a splurge of more than £100-million (R1.75-billion) since becoming Manchester City manager.

With Chelsea and Liverpool also spending big and Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur looking to build on positive campaigns, Leicester City’s odds of repeating May’s fairytale title success are only 33-1.

Claudio Ranieri’s men famously defied odds of 5 000-1 to win the title in May, but he has warned: “We know very well we are the champions, but we are the underdogs.

“There are six big teams who want to win. They want to kill us.”

England’s 20 elite clubs took a month to break through the £500-million (R8.73-billion) barrier in transfer spending and they are tipped to surpass the £1-billion (17.5-billion) mark by the time the window closes on August 31.

The beginning of the Guardiola era at City, who finished fourth last season, has heralded a rejuvenati­on of the League Cup holders’ playing squad.

Young talents such as Leroy Sane and Gabriel Jesus have arrived for combined fees exceeding £100-million (R1.75-billion).

After two years of stagnation under Louis van Gaal, United’s board has tasked Mourinho with restoring the club to former glories.

He will be assisted by Ibrahimovi­c, whose late goal sank Leicester in Sunday’s Community Shield, and Pogba, who is poised to complete a worldrecor­d return from Juventus costing about £90-million (R1.57-billion).

Former Italy manager Antonio Conte has been brought in to pick up the pieces at Chelsea, who recovered to finish 10th under Guus Hiddink after Mourinho’s dismissal last December.

Chelsea have prised N’Golo Kante from Leicester for £30-million (R524millio­n) and spent a similar amount to sign Belgium striker Michy Batshuayi from Marseille.

Leicester, Tottenham, Arsenal and Liverpool are trusting in the formulae that worked for them last season. Ranieri has lost Kante, but talisman Jamie Vardy has committed to a new contract and Riyad Mahrez remains a Leicester player.

Mauricio Pochettino’s young Tottenham players, among them Harry Kane and Dele Alli, now have the experience of a title race under their belts.

In a show of faith to the team that challenged Leicester last season, the north London club have been content merely to add depth to their squad with the acquisitio­ns of Victor Wanyama and Vincent Janssen.

Down the road at Arsenal, Arsene Wenger approaches his 20-year anniversar­y as manager facing the same old doubts about his capacity to inspire the team to a first league title since 2004.

Arsenal pipped Spurs to second place last season, but with Swiss midfielder Granit Xhaka the only major signing to have arrived at the Emirates Stadium and injuries already biting, fans are anxious.

Liverpool, beaten finalists in the League Cup and Europa League, are looking more and more like Jurgen Klopp’s team, bolstered by the acquisitio­ns of Sadio Mane and Giorginio Wijnaldum.

There are also new managers, with Ronald Koeman succeeding the sacked Roberto Martinez at Everton and Claude Puel taking the Dutchman’s place at Southampto­n.

David Moyes has replaced new England manager Sam Allardyce at Sunderland, while Walter Mazzarri has succeeded Quique Sanchez Flores at Watford. – AFP

 ??  ?? CLAUDIO RANIERI
CLAUDIO RANIERI

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