Most expensive football transfers
Paul
Pogba’s proposed transfer from Juventus to Manchester United moved a
step closer to being finalised on Sunday when the two clubs confirmed
the Frenchman would have a medical at Old Trafford.
The fee for the transfer is expected to exceed £100m ($130.4m, €117.7m), making it a new world record.
Here are the current five most expensive transfers in football history:
- Gareth Bale (Wales) Tottenham Hotspur to Real Madrid £85.1m – 2013
Welsh forward whose performances for an attractive Spurs side
persuaded Real to bid for him.
The English side could not refuse such
advances and let their star man go.
He has built on his career at the
Santiago Bernabeu with two Champions League titles, scoring in the final
of the first of the two against Atletico Madrid.
His experience in La
Liga helped him lead Wales in their memorable run to the Euro 2016
semi-finals.
Bale also scored a stunning winner in the Copa del Rey
final against Real’s arch rivals Barcelona in 2014.
2. Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) Manchester United to Real Madrid £83.7m – 2009
Real Madrid came calling for the Portuguese master with what was then
a world-record bid.
Ronaldo was keen to join, and since arriving in the
Spanish capital he has become their all-time top goalscorer and
consistently set records in the Champions League, which he has won three
times in his career, twice with Real.
He has achieved all this despite
the hottest of competition from Barcelona’s Argentinian superstar Lionel
Messi, who still leads in the overall La Liga scoring charts.
3. Gonzalo Higuain (Argentina) Napoli to Juventus £75.3m – 2016
Juventus paid the biggest fee for a domestic transfer in history when
they matched Higuain’s buy-out clause of 90 million euros to bring the
Argentinian to Turin from Napoli last month. The 28-year-old former Real
Madrid striker top-scored in Serie A last season with a
record-equalling 36 goals as Napoli finished second to Juve.
Coach
Massimiliano Allegri led Juventus to a record fifth consecutive league
title in 2016, but he will be hoping that Higuain can help his side
improve in Europe, after following up their 2015 Champions League final
defeat to Barcelona with a last-16 exit at the hands of Bayern Munich.
4. Luis Suarez (Uruguay) Liverpool to Barcelona £75m – 2014
Barcelona didn’t hesitate to sign the striker despite his shame at
the World Cup finals when — for the third time — he bit an opponent,
this time Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini.
As a result Suarez was
unable to play competitively or train with them for four months, but
once his ban was over he repaid them in full.
No disgraceful incidents
have followed and he ended his first season with them by scoring in the
Champions League final win over Juventus.
His trident attacking
partnership with Messi and Neymar yielded a La Liga record for three
forwards of 122 goals that campaign.
Scored a hat-trick to seal the
league title for Barca last term and went on to complete the domestic
double in a season in which he grabbed a staggering 58 goals.
5. Neymar (Brazil) Santos to Barcelona £71.5m – 2013
Off the pitch alleged shenanigans over how much went to the player,
his family and to the selling club itself have dogged Barcelona over the
transfer of Neymar, who on the pitch has shone for them in their
brilliant three-pronged attack.
The Brazilian shrugged off an injury
that ended his 2014 World Cup campaign early to play a pivotal role in
Barcelona’s Champions League success.
Like Suarez, he scored in that
final against Juventus, and collected La Liga and Copa del Rey winners
medals.
There was no let-up last term either as he scored in the Copa
del Rey final against Sevilla.
Legal problems still hover over the
transfer despite a high court judge ruling that he didn’t believe it
could be pursued in the courts — as the prosecutor takes issue with that
decision.
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