Ousmane Dembele’s
transfer to Barcelona in a deal worth up to €147 million (US$175 million),
making him the world’s second most expensive player after Neymar, is the latest
dizzying move fuelled by TV money and Gulf-based club owners.
AFP
report continues:
The
deal agreed Friday to bring 20-year-old French striker Dembele to the Spanish
giants from Borussia Dortmund was a direct consequence of Neymar’s shock €222-million
move to Qatar-owned Paris Saint-Germain that obliterated the world transfer
record.
To
further fill the gap left by Neymar’s departure, Barcelona are expected to make
a final push to sign Liverpool’s Brazilian playmaker Philippe Coutinho before
the transfer window slams shut within days.
PSG,
determined to mount a serious challenge for the Champions League, are also
reportedly about to secure the signature of Monaco’s teenage starlet Kylian
Mbappe for another stratospheric fee.
In
England, Manchester City’s Emirati owners have snapped up two of Mbappe’s
French title-winning Monaco teammates.
City
paid £52 million (€58 million, US$67 million), a world record fee for a
defender, for full-back Benjamin Mendy and another £43 million for midfielder
Bernardo Silva. They also added England international defender Kyle Walker for
£50 million as part of their summer spending spree.
Rocking
the boat
PSG
and City and their Gulf-based owners “have shaken up the established order”,
said Virgile Caillet, a marketing expert who heads the French federation of
sport and leisure industries.
“For
years a handful of clubs have shared out the best players, without criticizing
the system, and now they are facing a handful of new rivals and a bidding war
that they weren’t prepared for.”
In
the case of PSG, Qatar also appears to be seeking to exert its “soft power” at
a time that it is locked in a feud with its regional rivals.
In
the space of August, records set last year have been swept away, with the £89
million deal that took Paul Pogba to Manchester United in 2016 more than
doubled by PSG’s swoop for Neymar that broke up Barcelona’s “MSN” trio of the
25-year-old Brazilian, Luis Suarez and Lionel Messi.
Dembele’s
move for a fee of 105 million euros with add-ons worth another €42 million,
following Neymar’s Barca exit, comes as footballers’ union FIFPro has blasted
“transfer market madness”.
Neymar’s
move, it said, “is the latest example of how football is ever more the domain
of a select group of rich, mostly European-based clubs”. The sum paid for
Neymar is however “an exception”, Caillet argued.
“He
is one of the three best players in the world and he is only 25, while the
others (Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo) are in their thirties.” And in splashing
out on Dembele and his 18-year-old France international teammate Mbappe, clubs
are investing in the future.
“These
are investments in future superstars who have a high potential resale value. It
mustn’t be forgotten that clubs are commercial entities with investment
strategies,” Caillet said.
In
the Premier League, many managers are concerned that the spiralling costs for
the superstars, coupled with a huge cash injection for all the top-flight clubs
from a new TV deal, are inflating prices for players across the board.
Manchester
United manager Jose Mourinho said in July: “Players like Pogba, there are one
or two big transfers per transfer window. The other is where you have 100
transfers and, for me, that’s the dangerous area of the market… because now we
speak about £30 million, £40 million or £50 million in such an easy way.”
Accountants
Deloitte said Thursday that Premier League clubs’ spending had set a new record
for a single transfer window after reaching £1.17 billion — and that was with a
week of business still to go.
Widening
gap
However,
aside from the feverish activity at Barcelona in response to Neymar’s bitter
departure, it has been a quiet summer for Spain’s two other big guns.
Following
a recent move away from the club’s “Galactico” policy of big money signings,
Real Madrid have instead continued to promote their policy of signing the best
young and, by comparison to the rest of Europe, cheap talent in Spain.
Atletico
Madrid’s ban on registering new players has curtailed their plans, but most
importantly for a club about to move to a new stadium, they have maintained
their best players with Antoine Griezmann, Saul Niguez and Koke signing new
contracts.
Meanwhile,
if PSG do land Mbappe, they will at some point have to reckon with UEFA’s
Financial Fair Play regulations, supposedly designed to prevent clubs spending
more than they earn. That could lead to the club reluctantly having to sell one
of its other stars.
But Caillet, the French expert, says he fears the consequence of this heady summer will be that “the gap will grow even further between clubs which have the financial means and those forced to rely on developing players”.
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