Premier League clubs spent £ 372.8 million on new signing sessions during the winter transfer window.
This article was last updated on 4 February at 1.20 am and is updated when dealing sheets are confirmed.
The publication represents a triple increase compared to last year, when Premier League clubs only £ 116.2 million expenditures after the profit and sustainability rules (PSR) of the Premier League (PSR) the purchasing power of clubs.
The expenditure during the window was largely incremental, with remarkable peaks on January 23, when Manchester City £ 63 million splashed on Eintracht Frankfurt Vooruit Omar Marmoush and Deadline Day.
Who has spent the most?
Ten Clubs Signed Players for Disclosed Fees, With Manchester City Shelling Out a League-Topping £ 176.1m on Marmoush, Nicolas Gonzalez (£ 50m from Porto), Abdukodir Khusanov (£ 33.5m Palmeir from Lens) and Vorror Travel ).
The Cityzens also broke Juma Bah and Christian McFarlane for non -known costs of Real Valladolid and New York City respectively.
Wolves spread £ 42.6 million on Emmanuel Aggbadou (£ 16.6 million from Reims), Marshall Munetsi (£ 16 million from Reims) and Nasser Djiga (£ 10 million from Red Star Belgrade), while Brighton £ 40 million spent on Stefanos Tzimas (£ 20 m from Nuremberg), Diego Gomez (£ 11 million from Inter Miami) and Eiran Cashin (£ 9 million from Derby).
Meanwhile, Manchester United (£ 29.6 million), Aston Villa (£ 26 million), Ipswich (£ 24 million), Spurs (£ 12.5 million), Crystal Palace (£ 12m), Bournemouth (£ 8.1 million ) and Leicester (£ 1.9 million) also recruited players for registered costs.
Villa still registered a profit of £ 68 million during the window after the sale of Jhon Duran to Al Nassr (£ 64 million), Jaden Philogene to ompswich (£ 20 million) and Diego Carlos on Fenerbahce (£ 10 million) – while he Only a quarter of that income spends Donyell Malen from Borussia Dortmund (£ 20 million) and Andres Garcia from Levante (£ 6 million).
Three other clubs registered profit, including Chelsea (£ 12.5 million profit), Newcastle (£ 11 million profit) and Leicester (profit of £ 8.1 million).
Which players cost the most?
Marmoush's £ 63 million deal was the most expensive signing during the window, while new teammates Gonzalez, Khusanov and travel also appear in the top five – with Patrick Dorgu in fourth place after his £ 29.6 million switch from Lecce to Manchester United.
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In terms of expenditure, Villa Duo Duran and Philogene filled the treasure chest of the club with a cool combined £ 84 million alone, while another four players left for eight figures.
Total permanent and loan movements
In total there were 45 signing sessions for reimbursements, about loans or as free agents.
Wrestling Manchester City drew a competition of six players for permanent deals – as a result of the needs of the club to revise the team and replace aging superstars.
Bournemouth insured four permanent income, while Ipswich mediated two permanent signing sessions and two loan agreements to maintain their chances of retaining the Premier League status after back-to-back promotions of League One-in addition to the calling of George Edmundson from a loan period at Middlesbreoth .
In the meantime, Aston Villa Manchester United was signing Marcus Rashford and Paris Saint-Germain Vooruit Marco Asensio in Blockbuster loan agreements. Bayern Munich -young Mathys Tel joined Spurs on loan with an option of £ 45 million to buy in the summer and Crystal Palace broke Chelsea Exile Ben Chilwell for the rest of the season.
In terms of departure, Brighton permanently loaded six players, Aston Villa shipped 10 players on loan and Brentford and Manchester United both sanctioned nine temporary departure.
What about Saudi Arabia and the other top competitions in Europe?
In general, Premier League clubs registered a net spending of £ 242.1 million, which exceeded the totals of Europe's other top seven competitions and Saudi Arabia, according to data from Transfertmarkt.
Saudi clubs generated a net expenditure of £ 117.7 million, followed by the Italian Serie A (£ 35.5 million) and the German Bundesliga (£ 29.6 million). Four of the eight competitions registered profit, led by the Portuguese Primeira League at £ 112.8 million in black.
Saudi teams Al Ahli and Al Nassr, who shelled by clubs, both registered a net spending in the £ 50 million region, followed by RB Leipzig (£ 46.1 million), Como (£ 40.9 million) and Renne (£ 37.2 million).
Porto generated £ 81.6 million profit from their transfer company, followed by Napoli (£ 57.3 million), Eintracht Frankfurt (£ 41.1 million) and Lens (£ 38.8 million).
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