The Star Early Edition

Clubs commit R84bn to salaries

Not surprising­ly, Spanish players earn the most – way above the profession­al global average of R6-million a month

- MATT LAWTON

CLUBS NOW spend more on player salaries than transfer fees – with £4billion (about R84bn) a year paid in employment contracts across the global game, an official Fifa report on the internatio­nal transfer market has revealed.

For the first time the Fifa Trans- fer Matching System (TMS) report into players moving between clubs in different nations, has included player salaries and has uncovered what the report claims are some ‘staggering’ results.

The report shows that clubs committed £4bn in salaries over the duration of the contracts signed in 2014 compared to £2.7bn in transfer fees, with a further £154million spent on intermedia­ry (generally agents) commission­s.

That amounts to a total spend of £6.76bn, with the salaries for players increasing by 33 percent from £2.95bn to that £4bn figure between 2013 and 2014. The current salary spend for this year stands at a mindboggli­ng £3.91bn and TMS analysts see a rise of two percent on the figure at this point last year.

Interestin­gly, only 13 percent internatio­nal transfers involved the payment of a fee, with more than 70 percent of players out of contract when they moved.

As the report states, the Fifa figures are reliable as clubs enter all salary informatio­n into the Internatio­nal TMS. The details will cover the full length of the new contract, although not bonus payments.

The average salary quoted across global football is £262 000, with Spanish players commanding the highest salaries — an average of £563 000. English players are not ranked in the top 10 because few move between nations.

English clubs still spent more in the last transfer window than any other country, the report adds. At £652m the spend was more than double any other country and roughly 10 percent of the internatio­nal market.

The Premier League also buys more players from other top-five European leagues than any other, with those players three times more expensive than those recruited from elsewhere.

The report also reveals that since 2013, Uefa clubs have been responsibl­e for 80 percent of the total salaries in global transfers — with AFC (Asia) close behind. It adds: “Average salaries tend to grow with age, often peaking at 28”.

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? SOMETHING TO SAY: Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal reacts during his nations Euro 2016 qualifier against Albania in Elbasan, Albania. Portugal won the tie 1-0.
PICTURE: EPA SOMETHING TO SAY: Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal reacts during his nations Euro 2016 qualifier against Albania in Elbasan, Albania. Portugal won the tie 1-0.

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