Transfer deadline day: Premier League spending reaches £1.165bn

Premier League clubs spent more than £155m on transfer deadline day as the summer window outlay reached a record £1.165bn.

Teams had already spent a combined £1.005bn as of 08:30 BST on Wednesday, shattering last year's record £870m.

Thirteen top-flight teams broke their own transfer records.

The 20 clubs in the Premier League have benefited from a record £5.1bn television deal which came into effect this season.

"The increases in broadcast revenue, with the 2016-17 season being the first of the new broadcast deal cycle, is the principal driver of this spending power," said Dan Jones, a partner at financial analyst Deloitte.

This graphic below illustrates the gradual increase in spending by Premier League clubs over the past 10 January and summer transfer windows.

This graphic illustrates the gradual increase in spending by Premier League clubs over the past 10 January and summer transfer windows

Other key findings (source Deloitte):

  • The average gross spend for a Premier League club in the 2016 summer window was about £60m.
  • The total of £155m spent by Premier League clubs on deadline day broke the previous record of £140m set during the summer 2013 window.
  • The four Premier League clubs competing in this season's Champions League - Arsenal, Leicester City, Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur - had a combined gross transfer spend of about £385m - representing about a third of the aggregate gross transfer spend by Premier League clubs.
  • Since the introduction of the transfer window, gross transfer spending has exceeded £8.6bn, with more than 80% spent in the summer window.

Spending reaches phenomenal levels

The Premier League's record transfer window

While this year's figure of £1.165bn easily broke the record set 12 months ago, it dwarfed the £215m spent during the first window in the 2003-04 campaign.

Such financial strength owes much to the record £5.136bn domestic TV deal, which was more than £2bn larger than the previous contract from 2013 to 2016.

Former England winger Trevor Sinclair said: "There's so much money in it for a reason - supply and demand. People demand to see the Premier League."

He added that the players would be the chief beneficiaries.

"If anyone is going to get the financial gain, surely it has to be the players," said Sinclair. "They are the ones who make it happen."

Below is a list of the biggest fees spent by Premier League clubs during the 2016-17 summer transfer window:

The list of the biggest fees spent by Premier League clubs during the 2016-17 summer transfer window

Clubs flex financial muscle

The clubs who broke their transfer records
Manchester United: Paul Pogba (£89m)Bournemouth: Jordon Ibe (£15m)
Liverpool: Sadio Mane (£34m potentially rising to £36m)Sunderland: Didier N'Dong (£13.6m)
Crystal Palace: Christian Benteke (£32m)Hull: Ryan Mason (£13m)
West Ham: Andre Ayew (£20.5m)West Brom: Nacer Chadli (£13m)
Leicester: Islam Slimani (£29m)Watford: Roberto Pereyra (£13m)
Southampton: Sofiane Boufal (£16m)Burnley: Jeff Hendrick (£10.5m)
Swansea: Borja Baston (£15.5m)

The two Manchester teams each spent more than £150m in the window.

Manchester United, under new boss Jose Mourinho, ended what was becoming a protracted saga by signing Paul Pogba for a world-record £89m.

They also added Armenia midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Ivory Coast defender Eric Bailly, both at a cost of about £30m.

City, who also have a new manager in Pep Guardiola, brought in midfielder Leroy Sane from Schalke for £37m and then paid Everton £47.5m for defender John Stones.

After a season that could be classed as terrible by their standards, Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich gave another new managerial recruit - Antonio Conte - extra spending power.

In an effort to rejoin the Premier League's top four, the Blues spent £120m, including £34m on bringing back Brazil defender David Luiz from Paris St-Germain and £33m on Belgium striker Michy Batshuayi from Marseille.

Elite clubs loan out elite players

Jack Wilshere
Jack Wilshere, 24, began his career at Arsenal at the age of nine

This was also a window when clubs vying for a top-four spot sent players out on loan who, only last season, were seen as first choice.

About £153m worth of talent, based on the fees paid for them, found temporary homes in this window.

Manchester City led, with keeper Joe Hart, midfielder Samir Nasri, striker Wilfried Bony and defender Eliaquim Mangala shipped out. They have a current estimated market valueexternal-link of about £62m.

Chelsea loaned out 38 players - five more than this time last season. Midfielder Juan Cuadrado, who cost £23.3m, signed up to another season at Italian champions Juventus, and £6m forward Lucas Piazon will spend his 2016-17 season at Fulham. It is the fifth club the Blues have loaned the 22-year-old to.

Chelsea defender Nathan Baxter, 17, will play for Metropolitan Police in the Isthmian Premier League - the seventh tier of English football - until January.

Meanwhile, West Ham's £12m forward Enner Valencia will be at Everton this season and Arsenal's England midfielder Jack Wilshere, who has made more than 100 appearances for the Gunners, has relocated to Bournemouth.

Championship heavyweights spend big

Ross McCormack
Villa's new signing Ross McCormack has cost clubs more than £34m in transfer fees and has never played in the Premier League

There was a record £215m gross spend by Championship clubs, more than twice the previous record.

However, the disparity of wealth between last season's relegated clubs and seasoned Championship campaigners was once again highlighted.

Newcastle and Aston Villa made use of the £64m parachute payments - guaranteed after dropping down a division - and spent more than £110m between them during this window.

Villa's outlay was more than £60m.external-link It included £11m on striker Jonathan Kodjia from Bristol City, which might rise to a Championship-record fee of £15m, and the £12m paid to Fulham for forward Ross McCormack.

The Magpies finished the window with a net profit of more than £30m, despite spending more than £54m on players.

That was largely as a result of the Championship-record £30m deadline-day sale of midfielder Moussa Sissoko to Tottenham.

Norwich City, who lost a year's worth of parachute payments having stayed in the Premier League for only one season, spent about £15m.

Wolves, under new Chinese ownership, paid a club-record £7m for Monaco forward Ivan Cavaleiro, bringing their total spend on 13 players to £14m.

By contrast, league newcomers Burton Albion spent a club-record £300,000 on midfielder Jackson Irvine from Ross County.

The English Championship was the fifth-biggest spending league in Europe, beating the amount spent by France's Ligue 1.

The graphic below shows the order of the amount spent by Europe's 'big five' leagues. After the Premier League, the next highest spender was Serie A, with a gross spend of £590m. Then came the Bundesliga with a spend of £460m, followed by La Liga (£400m) and Ligue 1 (£165m).

A graphic showing the biggest spending European top-flight leagues. After the Premier League, the next highest spender was Serie A, with a gross spend of £590m. Then came the Bundesliga with a spend of £460m, followed by La Liga (£400m) and Ligue 1 (£165m)

How social media reacted

Brazil defender David Luiz was the star attraction following his return to Chelsea from Paris St-Germain.

His move generated around 330,000 tweets, followed by about 180,000 for Arsenal's Jack Wilshere, who joined Bournemouth on loan.

Other hot topics were:

  • Joe Hart, who moved on loan to Torino from Manchester City;
  • Tottenham's new signing Moussa Sissoko;
  • And Samir Nasri, who joined Sevilla on loan from Manchester City.

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