Manchester United Players Earn Half a Million More than Manchester City Rivals
First-team
players at Manchester United are earning on average half a million pounds a
year more than Premier League champions Manchester City, according to the Global
Sports Salaries Survey.
United
players are also picking up almost double what Tottenham are paying their
first-team squad.
Meanwhile,
Barcelona have become the first sports team to pay an average yearly salary of
more than £10m.
Real Madrid,
Juventus and Manchester United are also in the top 10 spenders.
The other
six clubs in the top 10 all come from the NBA.
Clubs in the
Premier League are paying, on average, more than top-flight football clubs in
any other country per game, although cricket's Indian Premier League and
American football's NFL top the spending on a per-game basis.
Manchester
City may have won the Premier League last season, but they come in behind
Manchester United this term on wages with the Old Trafford club paying an
average of £6,534,654 per year to first-team players.
City's
yearly bill comes in at £5,993,000, followed by Chelsea (£5,020,004), Liverpool
(£4,862,963), Arsenal (£4,853,130) and Tottenham (£3,515,778).
Everton and
West Ham follow closely behind Spurs, while Cardiff, Huddersfield and Burnley
make up the bottom three - the Bluebirds are the only Premier League club to
come in under £1m for the year.
That said,
despite Burnley's average annual first-team wage of £1,603,197 placing them
third-bottom of the Premier League pile, the Clarets are still paying more than
the likes of Ligue 1's Monaco and Bundesliga side RB Leipzig.
"The
two Manchester clubs, United and City, remain clear of the rest in basic pay
terms according to our calculations," say Sporting Intelligence, who
conduct the survey.
"We
thought last year that whichever of the pair achieved the most on the pitch
would end up with the larger of the two overall wage bills (all staff) for
2017-18.
"In
fact City won the league and had wages of £260m and United faltered but paid
out £296m."
City
finished as champions ahead of United, but while Pep Guardiola's side top the
league again this campaign Jose Mourinho's outfit have slipped to seventh.
Sporting
Intelligence says this was largely down to United's return to the Champions
League, but do point out some of Manchester City's wage bill appears under the
City Football Group.
Not only
have Barcelona become the first sports club in the world to pay an average of
more than £10m a year to first-team players, the Spanish giants have also
broken the £200,000-per-week barrier for the first time.
On average,
first-teamers at the Nou Camp earn £10,454,259 a year, which translates to an
average £201,043 per week.
European
champions and La Liga rivals Real Madrid are second on the list with a yearly
average of £8,089,582, with Italian side Juventus the third-highest paying
football club at £6,726,615 on average per year.
Despite
Barca and Real's dominance on the pay scale, the average Premier League yearly
salary remains 36% higher than that of La Liga and almost double the amount
paid to players in Italy's Serie A.
Basketball's
Oklahoma City Thunder are the highest-paying non-football club, closely
followed by Golden State Warriors, while outside of football and basketball it
is Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs who lead the way as the 30th
highest-paying sports team.
With just 14
games per season, the IPL tops the charts for the average pay per player, per
game at £274,624, while the NFL comes in at £138,354 over 16 games.
In
comparison, Premier League teams are paying their players an average of £78,703
per match during a 38-game season.
"Two
notable things happened with IPL wages in 2018: they got bigger, and the outlay
by different teams got closer together," says Sporting Intelligence.
"A new
five-year TV rights deal, concluded last year for £1.96bn for 2018-2022, has
come on stream. That guarantees the medium-term future of an event that has
often struggled for certainty.
"Uniquely,
IPL salaries are pro-rated from weekly pay to annual pay because, again
uniquely, IPL players typically have multiple different professional employers
concurrently.
"The
vast majority of other teams in other leagues contract their players for at
least a year at a time. You simply don't get NFL stars playing a season in the
USA then another in Germany in the same year; or a Premier League player
appearing freelance for six different teams in a campaign."
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football
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