The summer transfer window has been incredible, as the top clubs around Europe spent millions to try to strengthen their sides.
According to Transfermarkt, clubs across the English Premier League spent a colossal €2.24 billion during the window — the most ever — and there were some huge moves, including Antony (€95m to Manchester United), Wesley Fofana (€80m to Chelsea), Darwin Nunez (€75m to Liverpool), Casemiro (€70m to Man United) and Erling Haaland (€60m to Manchester City.)
In Europe’s other top four leagues, things weren’t quite as busy, but Aurelien Tchouameni (€80m to Real Madrid), Matthijs de Ligt (€77m to Bayern Munich) and Raphinha (€60m to Barcelona) topped the list. Clubs across Europe, in Italy’s Serie A (€749m), France’s Ligue 1 (€557m), Spain’s LaLiga (€505m) and Germany’s Bundesliga (€484m), spent a total of €2.67bn.
But who did well? And who did poorly?
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Winners
Barcelona
Given that the club have been trapped under astronomical debt (at their highest, €1.35 billion as of March 2021) and newly imposed budget limitations and salary caps from LaLiga, it’s a miracle that Barcelona have managed to spend over €150m on signing the likes of Robert Lewandowski (€45m), Jules Kounde (€55m) and Raphinha (€60m.) Having restructured their debt to wipe out most of the short-term liabilities, signed a few free transfers (Franck Kessie, Andreas Christensen, Hector Bellerin and Marcos Alonso) and let 16 first-team players leave to free up room in the squad salary cap, they have finally registered all their players and can get back to concentrating on what’s happening on the pitch.
Their financial finagling has seen sizeable percentages of economical assets and future revenue (e.g. from TV and merchandising rights) sold off in return for liquidity today, while their long-term debt remains huge. The ethics of this modus operandi — basically, kicking the financial can down the road — can be discussed, but the squad look more competitive than in years. Having more or less gambled the club’s future on success, it will now need to start delivering.
Manchester City
The Premier League champions may have ended the transfer window with just one undisputable upgrade … but what an upgrade he was. With all due respect to Gabriel Jesus – who has started his Arsenal career impressively — or any false No. 9 that manager Pep Guardiola may have fielded up front, Haaland is a totally different proposition. Landing the best emerging centre-forward in the world from Borussia Dortmund for just €60m looked a huge scoop in May, and even better as the weeks pass with his nine goals in five Premier League games so far. The transfers of established first-team players to Chelsea (Raheem Sterling) and Arsenal (Gabriel Jesus, Oleksandr Zinchenko), plus moving on a number of U21 players for relatively high fees (including Gavin Bazunu and Romeo Lavia), means that Manchester City made around €200m from this summer’s transfer activities and only spent €160m.
North London
For clubs that have often been in a never-ending state of transition, doing last-minute deals, both Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur have operated the transfer market with sense, creativity and a bit of guile this summer. Led by sporting directors Edu and Fabio Paratici the North London clubs have slowly built well-balanced teams in which deficiencies or shortcomings have been continuously addressed. Both now appear to have a clear vision of their ideal way forward, and their sensible and timely activity in the transfer period demonstrates that they’re on the right track. As evidenced by their places in the Premier League table (Arsenal, 1st: P5 W5; Spurs, 3rd: P5 W3, D22.)
Bayern Munich
Though some long-terms doubts around the departure of Lewandowski remain, there are early signs that the €32m arrival of Sadio Mane — despite their different technical characteristics — will make up for the loss of Bayern’s relentless goal scorer. While the arrival of De Ligt (€77m from Juventus) should shore up their defensive stability for the foreseeable future, the signing of Rennes’ 17-year-old Mathys Tel — with his unpredictability, versatility and creativity in the last third — is likely to uphold their attacking fluidity in the years to come. Ryan Gravenberch, 20, a highly rated midfield prodigy (€18.5m from Ajax), is set for a great future too. From both an immediate and long-term perspective the German giants have recruited sensibly and strategically — to a net spend of just €34m — and with no other significant departures than Lewandowski their dominance shows no sign of waning anytime soon.