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Premier League wage bill hits record £4bn – with hapless Man Utd's bloated budget revealed…where does your club rank?

Premier League wage bill hits record £4bn – with hapless Man Utd's bloated budget revealed…where does your club rank?

The Irish Sun24-05-2025

PREMIER League wages hit a record £4billion last season, a new study has discovered.
It means the 500 stars who make up Britain's top league pocketed an average of £8million a year during 2023/24.
3
Erling Haaland is city's top earner after negotiating a deal worth £500,000 a week in January
Credit: Getty
3
Mo Salah has pledged his future to Liverpool in a new deal
Credit: Getty
And
The figures have been collated by football blogger Kieron O'Connor, who runs The Swiss Ramble football finance blog.
He says striker
Liverpool came runners-up in the pay stakes, with the Anfield squad taking home £377million.
Read More on Sport
Mo Salah is the club's top earner and recently banked a pay rise after committing his future to Anfield, taking him to £400,000 a week.
All Premier League clubs have revealed their accounts from the 2023/24 season, with the figures showing the post-Covid pay bubble continues to climb.
The clubs' combined wage bill has jumped from £2.9billion in just six years, the equivalent of 38 per cent.
The wage bills also show the Big Six became the Big Five, with a huge gap opening up between the highest-paying sides.
Most read in Football
Kieron reveals City and
Arsenal wages 2024-25 revealed
This year's FA Cup winners
Man Utd underachieved, finishing eighth, despite having the third- largest wage bill.
The three clubs with the lowest wage bills were relegated last season —
Luton's wage bill was the lowest in the league, paying out £57million to its squad.
The figures were released before today's final round of games, with
3
'A bit crazy'
While Haaland himself admitted his salary was 'a bit crazy' when his new ten-year deal was announced in January, wages of the best Prem stars are well below that of other sporting stars around the globe.
A study by Forbes magazine put Haaland 27th on the list of top earners when comparing him with greats such as
And his money pales into insignificance when compared to NFL's Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who signed a £410million deal in 2021.
And last December the New York Mets baseball team agreed to pay slugger Juan Soto £628million for a 15-year deal.
Clubs must remain vigilant as there is still much work to be done to restore pre-pandemic profitability
Aleksander Ceferin
Haaland's outgoing teammate Kevin De Bruyne has previously told how he believes top footballers are underpaid, despite earning £400,000 a week.
When asked in 2022 if he got paid too much, the Belgian linked with a move to Serie A winners
'There are millions of people watching the football on TV, there's 60,000 watching the games, the income of a club is £500million to £600million. Yeah, it's a lot of money, but is it too much?
'If the club can afford it, it's not too much.'
In March, figures revealed player wages across Europe had reached £15.1billion in 2023/24, up by 6.5 per cent on the previous year.
Following the release of the latest Uefa Club Licensing Benchmarking Report, the governing body's president Aleksander Ceferin warned teams about paying excessive amounts to their players.
'Players are the stars'
He said: 'While most clubs appear to be managing player wage increases responsibly, other costs are rising rapidly, putting greater pressure on operating margins than ever before. Clubs must remain vigilant as there is still much work to be done to restore pre-pandemic profitability.'
Premier League clubs have to pay within Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) each year or face punishment.
Everton and Nottingham Forest faced points deductions for breaching the rules.
In February, it was reported the
Clubs voted last year to explore the introduction of a spending cap from the start of the 2025/26 season as part of a new system of financial controls.
It will limit clubs to spending 85 per cent of their total revenue on wages, transfer payments and agent fees.
Sponsorship consultant Nigel Currie said: 'The players are the stars, they are the talent and the reason millions tune in every week and buy the kits.
'The Premier League is hugely successful, the wealthiest football league in the world, and that will continue.
'There will continue to be massive financial implications for players. Sponsorships will go through the roof in terms of value.'
SAUDIS UP SALARIES
DESPITE earning a fortune, the salaries of Premier League stars are nowhere near what is on offer in the Saudi Pro League.
Here is what the big names earn each week at their clubs there.
Cristiano Ronaldo,£3.2million, Al-Nassr
Karim Benzema, £1.6million, Al-Ittihad
Riyad Mahrez, £850,000, Al-Ahli
Sadio Mane, £650,000, Al-Nassr
Ivan Toney, £490,000, Al-Ahli
N'Golo Kante, £400,000, Al-Ittihad

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Much changed Ireland slump to dour draw with Luxembourg
Much changed Ireland slump to dour draw with Luxembourg

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Much changed Ireland slump to dour draw with Luxembourg

LUXEMBOURG 0 IRELAND 0 In the city of free transport, Ireland's journey towards World Cup optimism was slowed by Luxembourg. Twice they came close to winning the stalemate by striking the woodwork – Nathan Collins in the first and substitute Jack Taylor three minutes from the end – but the hosts were probably deserving of their draw. Thankfully, it didn't cost vital dropped points and there's the consolation of knowing that the rested trio of Josh Cullen, Finn Azaz and Mikey Johnston will return for the opening September qualifiers against Hungary and Armenia. Taylor will be the player across this double-header who advanced his claims for inclusion but others can't complain if birthday boy Heimir Hallgrimsson sticks with the tried and trusted. It's almost four years since Ireland concluded a lame World Cup qualifying campaign with the solace of a 3-0 win here but none of that team were in from the start of this rematch. Hallgrimsson promised changes and giving Jake O'Brien an audition in the right-back position he's made his own at Everton was an interesting plotline for an end-of-club-season friendly. Troy Parrott and Evan Ferguson were the other newcomers of the five, along with goalkeeper Max O'Leary, who was handed his debut, and Killian Phillips in for his full debut following an impressive cameo on Friday. Sustaining the tempo from that showing against Senegal, when they came within 10 minutes of beating the 19th best team in the world, was the primary challenge for Ireland. Whereas they began brightly at home, replicating it against a side 52 places behind the Senegalese proved a struggle. Parrott was the livelier of the two forwards. Ferguson's paucity of gametime over the season, a total of three Premier League starts at two clubs, appears to have stalled his gallop, for he was off-colour. Not once in the first half did the tall striker win an aerial duel while his ground game wasn't slick either. Although there was a gradual improvement in the second half, a booking incurred while tracking back encapsulated an evening which ended by making way for Adam Idah with 15 minutes left. Robust attention by three home centre-backs was particularly meted out to Parrott. His retaliation for Seid Korac's shirt tug early on almost got him in bother but approaching the break another foul led to Ireland's only attempt at goal of the opening half. Robbie Brady's threat from set-pieces was curtailed by a calf injury which forced him off after 21 minutes but there was an able replacement in Will Smallbone. His free-kick was telegraphed to the endline where Dara O'Shea flicked his header back goal. As rehearsed, his central defensive partner Collins timed his run to connect, unfortunately nodding his effort off the upright. That aside, Ireland's attack was hampered by an absence of cohesion. A concoction of overhit passes and teammates being out of sync highlighted the difficulties in gaining consistency on the international stage. With experimentation does come the requirement for tolerance. Where the manager will be concerned was the frequency of counterattacks Ireland coughed up. The elimination of being caught on the break constitutes a hallmark of the Icelander's creed and the progress made on the front against Senegal regressed here. When Jason Knight's 35th-minute stray hook into the box was easily cleared, Luxembourg broke at pace through Aiman Dardari and it took Kasey McAteer scampering back to negate the danger by conceding a corner. Six minutes earlier, a turnover triggered their clearest opening. Ferguson's layoff to Phillips went awry when the receiver slipped, allowing Danel Sinani to advance at pace and crack a right-footer from 25 yards that O'Leary expertly tipped around the post. That was his main contribution to his clean sheet. Luxembourg did have Gerson Rodrigues leading their line, despite the continued protests over his continuity following an 18-month suspended sentence. Unlike the hostile reaction to protests at Friday's defeat to Slovenia, no banners were confiscated. The biggest of them said 'Red Card For violence against women' while his every touch was booed by the Irish travelling support. All that the striker who scored the 2021 winner in Dublin could fashion was a sole wayward shot. This wasn't a night for the forwards on either side to flourish. Eight minutes into the second half, Parrott found himself three yards out from goal when McAteer headed a delivery by Brady's replacement Ryan Manning back across goal. In keeping with the evening of imperfections, Parrott neither controlled the pass nor swept it home, enabling his shadow Korac to smother the threat. Knight's heel deflected a Laurent Jans shot out for a corner, O'Leary repelled a narrow shot from substitute Vincent Thill and Dardari rifled over but Ireland shaded the second half on the chance count metrics. Much of that stemmed from the introduction of Taylor. His surging run from midfield led to a through ball for Parrott to lob the advancing goalkeeper Tiago Pereira. Whether it was a delay in the pass or urgency of the run but the offside flag ruled the 66th minute goal out. Once Taylor's piledriver rebounded off the crossbar, Ireland were content to see it out for only their second shutout of the manager's 10-game reign. Hardly a one-way ticket to America, Mexico and Canada next year but not a setback either. This wasn't the match nor the result Ireland desired for their final friendly yet they'll take it as a pitstop. LUXEMBOURG: T Pereira; E Dzogovic, L Jans (V Thill 63), S Korac, D Carlson (L Gerson 89), F Bohnert (M Pinto 62); A Dardari, L Barreiro, D Sinani, T Moreira Cruz (E Duarte 89); G Rodrigues (E Veiga 82). IRELAND: M O'Leary; J O'Brien, N Collins, D O'Shea, R Brady (R Manning 21); J Knight (JP Finn 90), K Phillips (F Ebosele 56); K McAteer (M Doherty 76), W Smallbone (J Taylor 56), T Parrott; E Ferguson (A Idah 76). Referee: Stefan Ebner (AUT). Attendance: 6,312.

England 1 Senegal 3: Thomas Tuchel loses first match as manager as visitors deservedly punish sub-par Three Lions
England 1 Senegal 3: Thomas Tuchel loses first match as manager as visitors deservedly punish sub-par Three Lions

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

England 1 Senegal 3: Thomas Tuchel loses first match as manager as visitors deservedly punish sub-par Three Lions

WELL, Thomas Tuchel can surely forget about putting that second star on England's shirt. Just qualifying for America next summer will be a decent achievement on this evidence. 4 Harry Kane opened the scoring in the 73rd goal for England 4 Crystal Palace star Ismaila Sar levelled the scores before half-time Credit: Getty 4 While Habib Diarra nut-megged Dean Henderson to put the visitors ahead Credit: PA 4 England looked tired and toothless Credit: Getty There is no way on Earth the Three Lions are going to win the World Cup with defensive options as poor as these. As England suffered their first-ever defeat by African opposition - in their 22nd match against nations from that continent - the Tuchel experiment is beginning to look seriously troubled. Coupled with Saturday's dire 1-0 win over the muppets of Andorra, this has been a thoroughly deflating international break. Harry Kane's early opener was overturned by strikes from Ismaila Sarr, Habib Diarra and Chiekh Sabaly as England suffered their first defeat under Tuchel against the first half-decent opposition they had faced. READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS Trevoh Chalobah and Kyle Walker were at fault for the first goal, Dean Henderson, Myles Lewis-Skelly and Levi Colwill should all have done better for the second. And with no world-class defensive midfielder either, why did Tuchel ever even walk into this job boasting that he intended to win the World Cup? The truth is England over-achieved significantly in eight years under Gareth Southgate and this is nearer to their natural level. The German, who waited for three months before he even started the job, missing the November international break as a consequence, seems to have little idea what his best team is. Most read in Football CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS There have been too many square pegs in round holes, especially against Andorra, and it seems as though he didn't do his due diligence on his back-up striker Ivan Toney, who wasn't introduced until the dying minutes of this international break having failed to impress the manager in camp. Much more of this and England might not even make the World Cup. A visit to Serbia in September is looming large for Tuchel - and this whole situation could turn very messy if his side do not improve significantly before then. Tuchel selected a stronger starting line-up than he had for Saturday's debacle against Andorra - and, unlike in that World Cup qualifier, he at least selected everybody in their correct positions. If it wasn't a particularly exciting fixture for most of us then it was a memorable night for Trevoh Chalobah, who earned his maiden cap seven years after his brother Nathaniel made his single England appearance. England had never lost in 21 previous meetings with African opposition - yet Senegal were probably the strongest team Tuchel's side will meet this year. And despite Kane's early opener, the visitors were the more impressive team early on. When Everton's Iliman Ndiaye skinned Conor Gallagher - who still doesn't really look like an international footballer - Dean Henderson stuck out a foot to repel Nicolas Jackson's shot. Still, England were soon in front with a neat move, involving Eberechi Eze and Gallagher, who fed Anthony Gordon for a weak shot which Edouard Mendy spilled, allowing Kane to stab home. Senegal continued to play most of the football - Henderson making an unconvincing save from Diarra's long-ranger at the second attempt and then plunging low to push out a Sarr header. Gordon ought to have doubled England's lead but shot wide at the far post from Kyle Walker's low driven cross. The Newcastle man misses a lot of chances. Yet Henderson had to be alert after a neat turn and shot from Idrissa Gueye. And it was little surprise when Senegal equalised before the break - the first time England had conceded in the Tuchel, although this was the first opposition to show any serious attacking intent. Gueye's lofted ball over the top allowed Jackson to nip in behind his Chelsea team-mate Chalobah and cut back for Sarr who outpaced Walker to poke home. Walker used to be rapid, Sarr still is. Before half-time Walker was booked for a meaty late challenge on El Hadji Malick Diouf. Only four short of a century of caps, it feels unlikely that the 35-year-old will gain too many more. Early in the second half, Diarra spurned a close-range chance and soon Tuchel decided he'd seen enough. Gallagher and Gordon were hauled off with Kane given a breather before the Club World Cup. On came local hero Morgan Gibbs-White, Curtis Jones and Morgan Rogers - Tuchel preferring Rogers and Eze as false nines, to Ivan Toney, who clearly hasn't impressed him around the England camp. Then, Senegal took the lead - and it was totally merited. Kalidou Koulibaly's searching pass left Myles Lewis-Skelly and Levi Colwill horribly exposed, allowing Diarra to cut in from the right and nutmeg Henderson at his near post. England were close to a swift equaliser, Chalobah's ball over the top locating Eze who teed up Gibbs-White with a saucy back-heel only for the Forest man to shoot too close to Mendy. Eze was England's one real bright spark and he soon teed up Bukayo Saka for a shot which Mendy turned round the post. Bellingham almost proved Tuchel's saviour when he lashed past Mendy, only for the effort to be ruled out for handball against Colwill when the Chelsea defender met a Noni Madueke corner. Then late in injury-time, Jones lost possession, Lamine Camara centred for Chiekh Sabaly to lose Chalobah and stick home the third to a chorus of sustained boos.

Who is Senegal vs England referee Stephanie Frappart?
Who is Senegal vs England referee Stephanie Frappart?

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Who is Senegal vs England referee Stephanie Frappart?

STEPHANIE FRAPPART is refereeing England's clash with Senegal tonight. France's Frappart was selected as a group of female match referees to 5 Frappert lining up before officiating Juventus vs Dynamo Kiev in the Champions League Who is Stephanie Frappart? The Frenchwoman also acted as a fourth official at Euro 2020, making history by doing so. And She officiated the Group G clash between Juventus and Dynamo Kiev in Turin. The 41-year-old was also in the middle for the In October 2020 Frappart refereed her first Europa League game - overseeing Frappart has reffed sixteen times this season in the French Ligue 1, showing 62 yellows at an average of 3.88 per game. She has sent off just one player in the league this season. 5 Frappert officiated the 2019 Super Cup final between Chelsea and Liverpool that the Reds won 5-4 on penalties. 5 Frappert showed three yellow cards in the UEFA Super Cup game between Chelsea and Liverpool Who is Stephanie Frappart? Born - Herblay, France Age - 37 years old Debut - 2011, French men's third tier April 2019 - First female referee in Ligue 1 December 2020 - First female referee in the Champions League June 2021 - First female referee at a men's major tournament 5 Stephanie Frappart poses with her medal after refereeing the 2019 UEFA Super Cup After officiating the 2019 Super Cup between Chelsea and Liverpool Frappart told CNN: Most read in Football "It was a pretty special feeling when you walked out in the stadium and the crowd were actually cheering for us, I've never experienced that and in such a big, big match. "In the warm-up I looked around and I was like, the other teams aren't here so they have to be cheering for us." "When you looked up at the crowd, I normally don't engage with the crowd, they were looking at us and a few were waving and giving us thumbs up and congratulations. I thought that was pretty special." 5 Euro 2020 gets underway on June 11 at the Stadio Olimpico in Rome as Turkey take on Italy

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