English Premier League soccer clubs spent a record 835 million pounds ($1.4 billion) on hiring players during the summer transfer window as they reinvested cash from the latest round of broadcast deals. That total was almost double the 425 million paid out by teams in Spain's La Liga, the next highest spending country, according to figures released by business services group Deloitte on Tuesday.
The Premier League generates more money than any domestic soccer competition while Spain is home to Real Madrid and Barcelona, the two clubs who enjoy the highest revenues thanks to the way television cash is distributed. Manchester United, English champions a record 20 times, spent around 150 million pounds as new manager Louis van Gaal tries to ensure there is no repeat of last season's disappointing seventh place finish. Teams in Europe's main leagues had until late on Monday to finalise their squads for the next few months, leading to frenzied trading in the final few hours of the transfer window. Clubs cannot buy new players again until January.
"We continue to see the increased resources that Premier League clubs enjoy, as a result of improved broadcast deals, translate into investment in players," said Deloitte's Dan Jones. He warned clubs of the need to ensure they did not overspend in the quest for a place in the European Champions League or to retain their spot in the Premier League. "The key challenge remains pursuing their ambitions responsibly," he said. "We hope that while increased revenues continue to allow the league to attract top players, they will also result in a more profitable picture across the league in the years to come."
Competition in Britain between BSkyB and BT has driven up the value of television rights, while the Premier League also benefits from lucrative TV deals around the rest of the world. The average Premier League team received an additional 25 million pounds in TV money in 2013-14, the first fruits of a new three-year agreement. English clubs are confident that TV revenues will remain buoyant in future contracts and have spent accordingly.
"There is this feeling that they can spend today based on what they will get tomorrow," said Simon Chadwick, professor of sports business at Coventry University in central England. Two of the biggest headline makers from the World Cup moved to Spain, deals which helped to finance other moves in a ripple effect across the continent. Colombian James Rodriguez, top goalscorer at the World Cup, joined Real Madrid from Monaco for some 80 million euros ($105 million), while Uruguay's Luis Suarez, thrown out of the tournament for biting an opponent, moved to Barcelona from Liverpool for around 65 million pounds. Away from England and Spain, spending by teams in other top European leagues was more muted. It totalled 260 million pounds in Italy's Serie A, 250 million in the German Bundesliga and only 100 million in France's Ligue 1.