Football: Premier League leads record transfer spree in Europe

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Football: Premier League leads record transfer spree in Europe
Paul Pogba

Paris - Spending by England's 20-club Premier League alone was expected to bust the one billion pounds

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Published: Wed 31 Aug 2016, 9:50 PM

Last updated: Wed 31 Aug 2016, 11:54 PM

The cash-loaded English Premier League led a record-breaking raid for talent by Europe's top clubs before the transfer window slams shut on Wednesday, with Arsenal alone paying 62.1 million pounds for German defender Shkodran Mustafi and Spanish striker Lucas Perez.
More big names were lined up for moves Wednesday with Liverpool's outcast striker Mario Balotelli having a medical at French club Nice. England midfielder Jack Wilshere was expected to leave Arsenal on loan.
The Premier League's TV riches have fuelled transfer inflation across the continent, with Inter Milan and Barcelona paying top dollar for Brazil's exciting Olympic gold medal-winning striker Gabriel 'Gabigol' Barbosa and Valencia goal-scorer Paco Alcacer respectively.
About 50 million euros were spent on the pair and most analysts predict European spending will easily be the highest yet when the two-month transfer window closes - between 1600 GMT for the Bundesliga and 2200 GMT for the Premier League.
Spending by England's 20-club Premier League alone was expected to bust the one billion pounds (1.17 billion euros, $1.3 billion) barrier after Manchester United set a new world record with the 89 million pound purchase this month of French midfielder Paul Pogba.
Arsenal defender Serge Gnabry returned to Germany with Werder Bremen. Inter Milan confirmed the signing of Barbosa on Tuesday.
Other big-name deals are likely as top players seek a regular game in increasingly competitive squads. Chelsea let French international striker Loic Remy go on loan to Crystal Palace for one season.
Palace and AC Milan are also among contenders to take Arsenal's Wilshere on loan.
Manchester City's out-of-favour England goalkeeper Joe Hart was set to complete a move to Torino in Italy. But the English Premier League's £5.14bn (6.9 billion euro), three-season television deal has set a pace that few other championships can keep up with. - Agencies
Christian Heidel, sporting director for German club Schalke said the Premier League has forced up prices everywhere.
"If English managers are on the phone, then the (transfer) sums are automatically higher," Heidel said on a talk show for Kicker magazine.
"If the negotiations are within Germany, then it is often difficult to exclude the higher sums from England."
Schalke this month sold Germany winger Leroy Sane, 20, to Manchester City for a reported 43m euros. With additional fees, the figure could rise to 50 million for a player who had made just 47 Bundesliga appearances before City signed him. 
 


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