Old Trafford shatters another spending record

Edwin
Edwin  - CEO February 15, 2024
Updated 2024/02/15 at 11:38 AM
4 Min Read
United have become one of 15 English top-flight clubs recognised within the report as being part of a multi-club investment group. Credit PA Images
United have become one of 15 English top-flight clubs recognised within the report as being part of a multi-club investment group. Credit PA Images

Manchester United’s billion-pound squad breaks UEFA record

 

General view inside the stadium ahead of a Premier League match at Old Trafford
According to a UEFA report, Manchester United’s squad at the end of last season was the most expensively assembled on record. Credit: PA Images

According to a UEFA report, Manchester United’s squad at the end of last season was the most expensively assembled on record, ITVX reports.

 

The Red Devils’ squad at 2023’s financial year-end cost a collective 1.42 billion euros (£1.21bn) in transfer fees, eclipsing the figure of 1.33 billion euros recorded by Real Madrid in 2020.

 

The United squad at the end of 2022-23 included £82million Brazilian winger Antony, £80m England defender Harry Maguire, £73m signing Jadon Sancho and the £60m Brazil midfielder Casemiro.

 

Further recruits last summer, such as Mason Mount, Andre Onana, and Rasmus Hojlund, are not counted within the figures.

 

Antony cost United £82 million. Credit: PA Images

UEFA’s European Club Finance and Investment Landscape report found three other clubs’ squads – Manchester City, Chelsea, and Real Madrid – cost more than one billion euros in transfer fees in their most recently disclosed financial year-end figures.

 

Chelsea’s most recent figures go up to the year-end June 30, 2022, and therefore do not include their heavy spending in the summer of that year or the January 2023 window.

 

United has become one of 15 English top-flight clubs recognized within the report as part of a multi-club investment group, with the purchase of a 25% stake by Ineos founder Sir Jim Ratcliffe almost complete.

 

Ineos also holds majority stakes in French side Nice and Swiss club Lausanne.

In all, the report found that 105 top-division European clubs (13% of the total number) have a cross-investment relationship with one or more other clubs.

 

There were 31 purchases of majority stakes and seven purchases of minority stakes in 2023 by groups holding a stake in at least one other European club, according to the report.

 

However, the report found that, on average, less than one transfer per club is executed within the same multi-club structure.

 

Andrea Traverso, UEFA’s director of financial sustainability and research, said: “More than 300 clubs are part of multi-club investment groups, leading to an increased risk of seeing two clubs with the same owner or investor facing each other in the same competition, creating potential integrity risks at the European level.

 

“The current context demands strict enforcement of cost control regulations and more harmonization of financial rules between leagues. This practice is paramount to limit overspending, ‘creative finance,’ and rules circumvention.

 

“As long as differences on key regulatory matters continue between leagues, inflationary tensions will persist, contributing to imbalances and instability.”

 

Elsewhere, the report found spending on player wages dropped by 1.1 percent among the clubs with the 20 most enormous player wage bills, with United spending 88m euros (£75m) less on player wages in 2023 compared to the year before. Barcelona and City significantly increased player wage spending – 158m euros and 68m euros (£134.8m and £58m) respectively.

 

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