Realistic Transfer Targets

It appears whoever we sign,ludicrous basic wages,given previously,are a thing of the past.
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MAN CITY have slashed an incredible £643,000-a-week off their wage bill since the Spanish duo of Ferran Soriano and Txiki Begiristain started running the club.



Manchester City, wage bill, tevez, balotelli, juventus, saleABOVE:

Carlos Tevez was the latest high earner to go – £198k a week – when he was sold to Juventus for £10m last week.

CEO Soriano and Sporting Director Begiristain have also overseen the ­departures of another four major salaries from the player wage bill, since taking charge late last year.

The January sale of Mario Balotelli to AC Milan saved City £150,000-a-week, while three out-of-contract players have also been released.

Wayne Bridge and Roque Santa Cruz were on £90k a week, while Kolo Toure - snapped up by Liverpool on a free - was on an astonishing £115,000-a-week at the Etihad.

All that adds up to an annual saving of more than £33 million.

City became the Premier League biggest spenders following the takeover of the club by the Abu Dhabi Group.

But they are now addressing their finances to fall in line with Financial Fair Play rules.




City’s wages now are lower, with new contracts incentive based and enhanced by generous bonuses for success.

For instance, major new signings Fernandinho and Jesus Navas have basic deals of £90k and £70k-a-week respectively.

Further signings will be made following the arrival of new manager Manuel Pellegrini.

City in the market for a goalkeeper to cover Joe Hart, a left back, a left-sided centre back and a striker.

With the chances of signing Napoli’s Edinson Cavani receding, the latest striker being considered is Sevilla’s Alvaro Negredo, who would cost £15 million.

But there will be further City departures. They could include Joleon Lescott (£90k-a-week) and Gareth Barry, who has a £125k-a-week deal.

Midfielder Barry is being eyed by new Stoke boss Mark Hughes, his former City manager, but is looking to stay at the Etihad
 
Barry's wage shows why Txiki has made him available for transfer and no surprise Barry is digging his heels in for the last year of it on that much dosh. There are big names at top clubs on lower basics than he and Lescott are getting. Once we sell (or release) those two + Kolarov, I think the wage bill will be near enough sane with players generally earning what their level of player should do. Think Lescott may be sold this summer as a lot of Prem clubs want a good defender, but Barry will probably see out his contract.

I wonder where we'll rank on the top paying sports teams next year after coming #1 in 2013.
 
I guess the huge wages were an evil necessity in order for us to achieve the desired accelerated progress,and the reality is,it worked.

We attracted players of a calibre we would not have done otherwise,maybe one or two mercernary types,however,the job was done.

I cant see such happening again now we are stabilising and the need for rapid development has gone.
 
Blue Haze said:
Our owner was getting robbed blind by the previous management.
No he wasn't, he sanctioned those wages, and he did it for good reason, to get players in that made us trophy winners, it worked. Had we not paid the daft wages, we'd still be in 5th/6th, probably trophyless, and wouldn't have the profile we have now. The previous management didn't start it, several of the "ridiculous" earners were brought in under Hughes. We'd also likely have no chance of making FFP either.

He knew exactly what he was doing, and its worked/still working.
 
I can't believe no-one seems to have mentioned Benzema, best strikers I have seen for a long time.
 
cleavers said:
Blue Haze said:
Our owner was getting robbed blind by the previous management.
No he wasn't, he sanctioned those wages, and he did it for good reason, to get players in that made us trophy winners, it worked. Had we not paid the daft wages, we'd still be in 5th/6th, probably trophyless, and wouldn't have the profile we have now. The previous management didn't start it, several of the "ridiculous" earners were brought in under Hughes. We'd also likely have no chance of making FFP either.

He knew exactly what he was doing, and its worked/still working.

Disagree completely. Players like Bridge and Barry wouldn't have found those wages anywhere else. And if they had, what would we have lost? Dortmund won the BuLi and got to the CL final without spending money like we did on Barry.

Had we not squandered such a fortune, and instead spent it on players who deserved such wages, we'd have won more than 2 trophies since he took over. Let's be honest, that's actually not very good when you consider how much was spent.
 

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