Summer Football Transfers

Sky Sports News are reporting tonight that Joey Barton is signing for Newcastle for 5.5m.

They said he had constructive talks with them earlier today and then left St. James’ Park as he was due to speak to West Ham in the morning after Manchester City had also accepted a bid from them.

However, he then decided to turn around and sign for Newcastle having been particularly impressed with Freddie Shephard’s plans for the club.

The deal is apparently worth 70k a week to Barton and SSN are saying what a coup it is by Shephard to get his man without him having even spoken to West Ham.

Hardly a coup to pay 70k a week for somebody with as much baggage as Barton in all fairness though.

They’re also after Klose and might well get him. The rumours a few weeks ago were that they had Van der Vaart pretty much signed as well. They’ve decided to spend big to recapture the top spot in Germany. They could well end up with a cracking team. Ribery for Hargreaves isn’t a bad swap at all.

No, they’re in the UEFA.

Yeah St Pauli went up as champions. They’ve done well to recover because they looked like they were in freefall a couple of years ago. I think they got confidence from their 2 good cup runs.

Wigan have snapped up that titan of a defender Titus Bramble.

Chelsea are really splashing out in the past few days :):

Jacob Mellis from Sheffield Utd
Danny Philliskirk from Oldham
Claudio Pizarro from Munich on a Bosman

I’d say the first two signings are designed to get homegrown players in so they fulfill their obligations to UEFA’s new rules. They really need to start bringing players through.

Pizarro will be useless for them I think.

It’s the only plausible explanation alright

I see Roberto Carlos has signed for Fenerbahce as well. He must be on a packet there.

Rumours earlier today that Sissoko would be leaving Liverpool for Juventus for maybe 10m. I presume most/all Liverpool fans would take 10m for him.

Scott Parker to West Ham for 7 million, interesting move, I’m looking forward to seeing how he works out there

yeah, i would. he’s a good player but mascherano does a similar job and is better than him.

Ribery seems to have signed today. Good signing for them.

Bayern splashing the cash even though they are in the uefa cup next season. And they are close to signing Klose too.

Viduka to Newcastle. Stays fit he could be a good signing and Ben Haim could be on his way too. He could be the defender they need to shore things up at the back with Taylor.

Another weird signing today.

Sunderland buying Greg Halford from Reading for upwards of 3m. He joined Reading for 2m from Colchester in January but made no impact there. I don’t understand how his value has appreciated since then but I have never seen him play and know nothing about him.

I’d never even heard of him. I suppose Keane would have seen him at Colchester but Reading don’t seem to have been too impressed if they’re cashing in already.

Neil Lennon has signed for Forest. Thought he’d have gone to the Championship at least but hope he does well there.

When Darren Bent is offered a 17m transfer to West Ham worth 75k a week you know there’s something seriously wrong with football. What a ludicrous amount of money that is. I think the EPL is on a road to ruin with money like that. There’s been periods of inflated fees before but that was proportionate across clubs. Now everyone is selling up to foreign investors who are coming in and spending absolutely silly money on overhyped, overrated mediocre talent. The fools, the fools, the fools.

This Darren Bent story is fooking amazing stuff.

Then there’s lads who have become so immersed in this overhyped English Premier League culture and how Sky Sports will tell you their young talent is superior to all other countries that they actually believe getting Bent for that kind of fee and salary represents value for money.

I watched Italy play England off the park in the U-21 European Championship on Thursday night which would suggest otherwise.

That fee is about 4 times what the guy’s worth.

Agree with all that Bandage. More worrying is that Liverpool have been linked with him. Reckon he’ll go to Spurs though.

I think he’s holding out for Spurs too. Still don’t understand why/how they’ve become a fashionable side to want to join although I know you rate them cc.

This links into the Bent fee/wages. Background information on the crazy money now floating around in England from The Times today:

Players’ salaries: As wages in English football soar Michael Walker looks at who the finger is pointing at.

It will be dismissed as anecdotal but within English football, and specifically among agents, the following story is circulating and generating huge excitement.

A player from a third-tier club who moved recently to a Championship club - one not so long ago in the Premiership - has seen his basic 1,500-a-week salary increase not five times, nor 10, but 15 times. The player’s agent did not demand this sum; it was the club’s opening gambit.

The belief that wages in football are soaring uncontrollably is understandable.

In April, a Professional Footballers’ Association survey found that the average annual salary of a Premiership player is now 676,000 - 13,000 a week - a rise of 65 per cent on 2000. The accountancy firm Deloitte puts the figure much higher.

It is repeated continually that agents are driving this inflation, and numerous chairmen and directors will support that theory. What is acknowledged less often by these chairmen is that clubs have long contributed to the situation.

Behind the scenes now, however, some Premiership chief executives are very anxious about wage escalation.

“There’s a little bit of fear out there at the moment,” Nicky Hammond, Reading’s director of football, said. “Everyone seems to be keeping their powder dry. The numbers being talked about this season are well in excess of last year in terms of both wages and transfers.”

Although no one has gone public - yet - the club many are pointing the finger at is West Ham United. Their chairman, Eggert Magnusson, is now being branded “Father Christmas” by some rivals and, perhaps more worryingly, “Ridsdale” by others.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that West Ham have had an effect,” says a senior figure at another Premiership club.

Annoyance stems from an open-wallet approach to the market, demonstrated on January 22nd when Blackburn’s Lucas Neill walked into Upton Park on a free transfer.

Sources close to the deal have confirmed that Neill, by no means a star player, earns 72,000 a week in east London. He had the option to go to Liverpool but his wage there would have been “a fraction” of what he gets at West Ham.

Within boardrooms the Neill deal is being regarded as a landmark transfer.

When asked on Tuesday about the Australian, the Middlesbrough chairman, Steve Gibson, said: "I don’t know the details of Lucas Neill other than what I read. What I can comment on are the demands we have suffered from in the last three or four weeks.

“That would suggest agents are trying to push the barriers again. But that’s the business and I am a businessman. But I have seen some of the deals that have gone through in recent weeks and I’m glad we haven’t been involved in them.”

Gibson is in a slightly tricky position. Middlesbrough, because of fashion and location, have had to pay sometimes exorbitant wages and Tuncay Sanli, whose signing was confirmed this week, is believed to be on 60,000 a week after his free transfer from Fenerbahce.

He may be Middlesbrough’s big glamour signing, whereas at West Ham and elsewhere the water-carriers are also being lavishly rewarded.

One agent recounted a tale of another West Ham player - who is less regarded generally than Neill - having his wages trebled a few weeks ago.

Harry Redknapp knows the market better than most and the Portsmouth manager - formerly at West Ham - lamented: “Craig Bellamy would do for us. But West Ham want him and would double his wages to 100,000 a week. How do you compete with that? We’ve got no chance of getting Bellamy. We’re all looking for strikers but the market’s gone crazy.”

A new television deal is one explanation of the sharp rise in wages but new owners are also a factor. The Icelandic owners’ fortune underwrites West Ham but even so the comparison is being made with Peter Ridsdale’s Leeds United. It was only this January that Ken Bates revealed that Gary Kelly’s weekly wage at Leeds since 2001 has been 46,000 a week.

“Twelve million pounds over five years,” said the chairman. “I worked out that all the money that Leeds earned getting to the semi-finals of the Champions League was handed to Kelly with his new contract.”

Five years on, Leeds are in the third division. By 2012 they may still not have recovered. But Gary Kelly will still be a multi-millionaire. As will Lucas Neill.