The Mail on Sunday

BILLIONAIR­ES WHO WANT MORE

As Big Six push for bigger share of TV cash, we reveal the extent of their domination over rivals

- By Nick Harris and Ian Herbert

THE Premier League’s so-called ‘Big Six’ clubs have all smashed through the Premier League £ 1 billion prize money barrier this season, underlinin­g the strangleho­ld they have at the top at a time when they are looking to claim a bigger percentage of overseas TV rights.

With the final Premier League positions to be decided today, The Mail on Sunday can reveal that Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Tottenham and Manchester City will all join Manchester United among an elite band who have earned £1bn in TV money since the inception of the Premier League in 1992-93.

There have been 49 clubs in the Premier League, who have now split £20bn between them. But in a stark illustrati­on of how the select few have far greater earning potential, the Big Six — who represent 12 per cent of the clubs — have taken £6.6bn, or 33 per cent, of the prize money. Everton, the only club outside of the Big Six to have been in the Premier League throughout, are not far behind the billionair­es, commanding a total of £959m.

But all other clubs are then way behind, with West Ham and Newcastle, who have both had a major Premier League presence, next best, both earning a little over £800m.

One source from a club outside the elite six said: ‘The others are all way ahead. This shows why an equitable split of TV rights is in the interests of a league which sells itself on its competitiv­eness.’ The disparity coincides with the publicatio­n in English of a book, ‘Football Leaks’, which reveals that United are so wealthy they can afford to pay Alexis Sanchez £391,000 a week plus a £75,000 loyalty fee every time he runs on to the field.

Arsenal agreed to pay Sanchez’s replacemen­t, Pierre- Emerick Auba me yang ,£18.2 mon top of his £198,000-a-week salary when signing him from Borussia Dortmund. His extras included a £15.15m loyalty bonus, split into four instalment­s, to be paid before the end of his contract in 2021, plus £300,000 for 25 goals or assists in a season. ‘This is on another planet to us,’ said the source.

The book’s authors, Rafael Buschmann and Michael Wulzinger, raise the prospect of City commanding a squad which is worth £1billion. They state: ‘ City’s strategy is to create a squad with two top-quality players for every position, allowing Pep Guardiola, if necessary, to replace a £ 50m player with another £50m player. The sheikhs in Abu Dhabi have pushed the envelope further than ever. If they continue down this road, it’s conceivabl­e that the players inside the team bus as it rolls along to an away match will be worth £1bn.’

Premier League executive chairman Richard Scudamore told clubs at their last shareholde­rs’ meeting that the dispute over the carve-up of 2019-22 overseas broadcast revenue must be resolved at a meeting next month.

Plans by the Big Six to drive through major reform to the distributi­on of foreign broadcast rights revenue were shelved a mi d disagreeme­nt. Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Spurs had al l demanded a bigger share.

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