Premier League clubs have already broken their spending record for a summer transfer window with the deadline still a week away, according to analysis from Deloitte.
Gross spending in the top flight stood at ยฃ1.5billion at the start of Thursday, exceeding 2017โs record of ยฃ1.43bn spent in a summer window.
It is also more than the ยฃ1.44bn spent in the whole of last season and, with the all-time record for a Premier League season standing at ยฃ1.86bn โ also in 2017-18 โ it is not out of the question that the summer window alone could surpass that mark.
Chris Wood, assistant director in Deloitteโs Sports Business Group, said: โThe record levels of spending that weโve seen in this summer transfer window so far provides a sign that the business models of Premier League clubs are rebounding post-Covid.
โWhilst this is encouraging, the importance of clubs establishing responsible and sustainable spending policies cannot be overstated. Clubs must balance their desire to be competitive on-pitch with the need to protect long-term financial and operational viability.โ
Premier League clubs have signed 135 players this summer, already more than in the 2019 or 2020 summer windows and closing on last Augustโs 148. Two-thirds of those have seen a fee paid, including 14 separate players moving for reported fees in excess of ยฃ30million.
That list is topped by Darwin Nunezโs ยฃ85.5m move to Liverpool, while Chelsea have spent a reported ยฃ60m on Marc Cucurella, ยฃ47.5m on Raheem Sterling and ยฃ34m on Kalidou Koulibaly.
Manchester United, Manchester City and Arsenal have each spent two fees over ยฃ30m and Tottenham laid out ยฃ60m to bring striker Richarlison from Everton, while Newcastle, West Ham and Wolves have also contributed to the figure. Morgan Gibbs-Whiteโs move from the latter to Nottingham Forest could join the list if he triggers the add-ons in the deal.
The record 2017 window included Romelu Lukakuโs ยฃ75m move to Manchester United and Chelseaโs ยฃ60m capture of Alvaro Morata, while Manchester City spent big on Kyle Walker, Bernardo Silva, Benjamin Mendy and Ederson. The January window then included big-money moves for centre-backs Virgil van Dijk and Aymeric Laporte to Liverpool and City respectively and striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to Arsenal.