The NINE key elements behind any transfer fee

Earlier in the season I wrote a blog commenting on how ridiculous it was that so many people, fans and journalists alike, were comparing the transfer fees of James Milner to Manchester City and Mesut Ozil to Real Madrid when there were a number of extenuating circumstances. And predictably enough, as a new transfer window swings into action, we get the same shock, horror and outrage at the fee being discussed for the transfer of Darren Bent from Sunderland to Aston Villa. Yet again people are all too keen to point out other transfer fees as some sort of proof that he is overpriced.

Why is it so black and white with some people when discussing transfer fees? Every transfer is unique – so many factors come into play that decide what that fee is, that the actual skill of the player becomes the tip of the iceberg. And what is a market value for a player? Well the fact is there isn’t one. There’s no manual available, no graphs to check to see what a player is worth, no complex formula – it is a figure that cannot be determined – what is the worth of a human being to a football club? Almost impossible to say. And there are other costs as well of course – wages, signing on fees, payments to agents and so on. The transfer fee is just the beginning, and it often includes add-ons that will only be paid if the player is successful anyway, plus sell-on clauses, image rights, and so much more.

So it might be stating the obvious, but what are the factors?

Do the selling club need to sell? If the selling club are desperate to sell, this puts the buyer in a better position to haggle a good price.

Do the selling club want to sell? If the buying club is after a player the other club had no intention of selling, then the price will inevitably rise. The favourite quote of those shocked at the Bent fee over the last 24 hours has been to mention that van der Vaart only cost £7m. Good value for sure, but then he wasn’t wanted by Madrid, was languishing on the bench, and thus probably wanted out anyway, and Madrid were a few hours from being stuck with him for at least another 4 months. Any potential buying club was in a very strong position.

Does the player want to leave? If he is angling for a move, it of course helps the buying club to come to a deal on their terms. If there is one criticism of Villa’s fee that I personally would make, it’s that Bent wants to leave – but of course Sunderland could make him stay if they so wished, though the player usually gets his own way in the end.

How good is the player? Quite important consideration I guess!

Continue to PAGE TWO for more factors…

In what position does the player play? Quite simply, strikers cost more than anyone else, a simple fact of life. Every world record transfer fee of the last 10 years has been for a forward/attack-minded player – Zidane is the nearest to an exception. The seven highest ever fees show a similar pattern.

What nationality is the player? Yes there is a premium on English players in English leagues. I imagine there is for French players in France too. In a world where success is demanded instantly and a club is never more than 3 games away from a crisis or a manager 3 games away from the sack, their worth in being able to adapt and settle instantly should be apparent, and their experience in the league in question should not be underestimated either. Familiarity breeds high prices.

How long does he have left on his contract? The Bosman ruling changed everything, not just in snapping up free transfers, but in shaping transfer fees too. Any player can be purchased much more cheaply if he is near the end of his contract than if he has years left to run. And this is the crux of why Ozil cost less than Milner, in addition to some of the factors previously mentioned. Ozil was nearing the end of his contract – he had told his club he wasn’t going to sign a new contract, so the club had two options – keep an unhappy player and lose him for nothing at the end of his contract or sell him on the cheap (relatively speaking). Real Madrid signed Khedira under similar circumstances. And this is of course why Steven Pienaar is available for £3m.

Are there a number of clubs after him? Always useful for the selling club to instigate a bidding war.

Age? No need to explain this one. Bent has a good seven or eight years left in him, fitness permitting, maybe more.

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The factors listed above are just some of the reasons. There will be more that I haven’t mentioned – injury history, attitude, lifestyle – the player might have a release clause – as I said, every deal is unique. But the facts are that Darren Bent is the 3rd top scoring player of the last 18 months in the Premier League. He has scored consistently for years, and not in one of your “Top 4” teams. In the last 5 years he has scored one less goal than Rooney or Drogba. Those statistics suggest to me that he also is not too injury-prone. He is English, under contract, and Sunderland were not looking to offload. Yes, it probably is still too high a fee when looking at that set-in-stone market value, but the fact is that we won’t know how good value the fee represents until he has stopped playing for Villa – if he is the difference between staying up and getting relegated (not that I think they will anyway), then he will have been worth every penny.

In the end, only time will tell.

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He may forever rue the day he quits Villa Park

With James Milner on the verge of a big money move to Manchester City, his days at Villa Park seem to be numbered. However, James Milner would be wise to resist the overtures of City’s millions and stick with Aston Villa, given that he is guaranteed a first team place and an integral role in the development of Villa’s future.

Under Martin O’Neill, Milner has become the fulcrum of Aston Villa’s midfield, becoming a dynamic and reliable presence in the middle of the park. His ability to link the play and provide assists has become a trademark of his game. Milner’s contribution of seven goals and twelve assists certainly proves his value to the attacking play of this current Villa side.

Along with his attacking prowess, Milner’s versatility is another great asset to the squad. Milner is naturally a winger by trade but his ability to adapt to different positions has proven invaluable to Martin O’Neill.

Milner has played in a number of different positions for Villa this season from right back to winger to his current position of central midfield. By incorporating different facets from each position that Milner can play to his new central role, Milner is able to bring unparalled nous to a hugely important role.

His displays in Villa’s claret and blue have resulted in Milner being crowned the PFA Young Player of the Year 2010, ahead of Cesc Fàbregas and Wayne Rooney. Unfortunately for Villa, the PFA weren’t the only ones to notice Milner’s potential as Manchester City declared their interest in signing the playmaker as part of Roberto Mancini’s new-look midfield.

With the promise of megabucks for Milner to sign on the dotted line, the temptation for Milner is certainly high. But he would be well-advised to steer clear of the Eastlands revolution as he would find himself near the bottom of the pecking-order at the City of Manchester stadium.

Mancini already boasts a wealth of midfield talent at his disposal with the likes of new signing Yaya Touré, Nigel De Jong, Patrick Vieira, Steven Ireland and Lord Voldemort himself Gareth Barry all vying for a few places in the centre of midfield. If Milner were to join Manchester City, he would be hard pressed to command a regular first team place with the amount of competition for a limited number of spots in the line-up.

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Similarly, on the wing, Mancini has the likes of David Silva, Adam Johnson, Shaun Wright-Phillips and Craig Bellamy battling it out for two places in the team.

Given the ferocious competition for places in the Manchester City squad, Milner would be foolish to join. If he did so, he would most probably find himself warming the bench and in so doing, severely damaging his chances of cementing his place as an England regular in the years to come.

Unless Manchester City match Villa’s £30 million valuation, Milner is going nowhere. And that is absolutely fine by me.

Injury boost for Tottenham

Tottenham attacker Rafael van der Vaart has confirmed that he is fit and available for selection for this weekend’s trip to take on Stoke at the Britannia Stadium, but understands why he was only on the bench against Bolton last Saturday.

The Netherlands international had been sidelined with a persistent hamstring injury, and Harry Redknapp preferred to partner Jermain Defoe with Emmanuel Adebayor in the White Hart Lane side’s 3-0 win over The Trotters.

Redknapp faces a selection dilemma with two in-form players vying for the one position, and Van der Vaart has stated that he is ready to play.

“With regards to my injury I can say it feels pretty well, up to 100 per cent fit. I just have to keep up the hard work this week and hope I start next game,” he told the club’s official website.

Despite at times displaying temperamental behaviour, Van der Vaart understands and accepts his omission from the Spurs team that beat Bolton.

“I fully understand I had to start on the bench. I could only train once with the group. Then there are some more players the manager can pick, so of course I had to start off the bench,” he concluded.

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By Gareth McKnight

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Rangnick gets Schalke job

Former Hoffenheim boss Ralf Rangnick has been appointed as Felix Magath’s successor at Bundesliga club Schalke.Despite steering the club into the Champions League quarter-finals, Magath was sacked by Schalke on Wednesday due to their poor domestic record, which sees them sit in 10th place in the Bundesliga, just seven points above the relegation zone.It will be Rangnick’s second spell at the club after season-long stint in which he guided the side to the German Cup final and a second place in the league.A statement on the club’s official site read: “FC Schalke 04 have a new head coach in Ralf Rangnick and he will be presented at the Royal on Monday March, 21.””The 52-year-old signed a contract at Schalke until June 30, 2014 and his first game in charge will be away at FC St. Pauli on Friday April 1, 2011.”Rangnick stepped down as Hoffenheim boss in January after the club sold midfielder Luis Gustavo to rivals Bayern Munich against his wishes.The 52-year-old guided Hoffenheim from the lower reaches of German football in to the top-flight during his four years at the Rhein-Neckar Arena, and has also coached Stuttgart and Hannover.

Roberto Martinez blast for beaten Wigan

Wigan Athletic boss Roberto Martinez accused his players of lacking courage and commitment following their season-opening defeat to Blackpool.

The Latics lost 4-0 at the hands of newly-promoted opposition and afterwards Martinez pulled no punches.

"The first half was unacceptable," he said."When you play against a team that is newly promoted you know they are going to be ready for the battle and we were a yard off.

"We were very slack and sloppy and Blackpool took advantage of that. Then after that everything that could go wrong did go wrong.

"At the start of the Premier League you need to be ready. That's nothing to do with any football issue.

"You need to be ready to earn the right to be on the ball and we didn't do that.

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"We allowed Blackpool too much space and we thought having the ball would be enough to win a football game and that's what cost us."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

Three Newcastle players Rafa Benitez should bring with him to West Ham

According to reports in The Telegraph, Newcastle United manager Rafa Benitez is one of the preferred candidates for the vacant West Ham United job after they announced on Wednesday that David Moyes would be leaving the club following the expiry of his contract.

The east London outfit came close to appointing the Spaniard three years ago before he made a last-minute u-turn and joined Real Madrid instead, and now they want him again after Moyes failed to impress the fans and the board enough for them to keep him on.

Meanwhile, the former Liverpool boss enjoyed a fine campaign with the Magpies after leading them to a 10th-place finish in their first season back in the Premier League, but his relationship with owner Mike Ashley continues to be fractious and unless he gets the backing he wants, he could easily walk away.

The 58-year-old may well decide that enough is enough and a move to London to link up with the Hammers, whose fans on Twitter are loving a link to another 45-year-old candidate, could be tempting, and he would likely want to take some of his top flight heroes from this term with him down south if he did get the gig.

Here are three Newcastle stars Benitez should bring to West Ham with him, if he is appointed…

One of the new West Ham manager’s priorities this summer is almost certainly going to be bringing a new centre-back to the club, with Jose Fonte leaving for China in February, James Collins set to leave when his contract expires next month and Winston Reid being hampered by injuries.

The east London outfit ideally need at least one – and probably two – central defenders this summer with an upgrade for Reid top of the agenda, and there is no doubt that if Rafa does arrive at the London Stadium that he should make every effort to bring his captain at St James’ Park – Lascelles – with him.

The 24-year-old was brilliant throughout the campaign and showed his leadership skills in the backline, and he will probably count himself unlucky to have not made England’s World Cup squad.

Like Lascelles, the midfielder will feel hard done by that he wasn’t considered to be part of Gareth Southgate’s squad following the World Cup announcement on Wednesday, following a fine season in the middle of the park for the Magpies.

It didn’t look as though it was going to well when the 26-year-old was sent off on the opening day of the campaign against Tottenham Hotspur, but he bounced back well and quickly gained the trust of Benitez again.

There is no doubt that the former Liverpool man would add a new dimension to the Irons in the middle of the park, and he would be a great addition for them with Mark Noble and Cheikhou Kouyate both enduring difficult years.

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Joao Mario is looking unlikely to return to the London Stadium on a permanent basis following his loan spell from Inter Milan in the second-half of the season, and while he was certainly neat and tidy he probably didn’t make the required impact in terms of goals and assists – he got two goals and one assist in 14 appearances in all competitions.

If Rafa does take on the West Ham job, he could look to bring Ayoze Perez with him to play in the role behind the centre-forward for the east London outfit.

The Spaniard was a regular this term despite struggling for form at some points, but he ended the campaign with six goals and an assist in his side’s final eight Premier League matches, showing the quality he has in his locker.

Do you agree, West Ham fans? Let us know below.

The key questions for Mauricio Pellegrino to answer ahead of Spurs visit

Under Mauricio Pochettino and Ronald Koeman, Southampton gradually got better.

Finishes of eighth, then seventh, then sixth showed that the Saints were back in business as a truly exciting Premier League outfit, the living proof of which is the sacking of Claude Puel after a League Cup final appearance and another eighth place finish.

The harshness of the sacking can be debated, but the fact the St Mary’s outfit decided to part company with their manager based on style rather than substance tells you what you need to know about Southampton’s ambitions: they want to do things the right way at the very least.

That’s why it must be a severe kick in the teeth for Saints fans to look at the league table right now and see their club just a point and a place above the relegation zone.

This weekend it gets no easier as Tottenham Hotspur come to town, with the visitors aiming to close the gap on the top four and set themselves up for a momentum building second half of the season. Indeed, it’s just a few short weeks since Southampton visited north London to face Spurs, and came away with a 5-2 thumping on a dismal Boxing Day.

Biggest goal threat

The return of Mauricio Pochettino to St Mary’s this weekend brings with it a sense of foreboding. On Boxing day the question posed to the current manager Mauricio Pellegrino was how to set up a team for the counter-attack when your striking options are Manolo Gabbiadini – who lacks pace and is off form – and Shane Long who hadn’t scored in months.

Since then Long has managed to find the net, but it mattered little – Saints are without a win in 10 league games and find themselves in the same position they were in on Boxing day with regards new signings. Having seen their interest in Theo Walcott and Daniel Sturridge fail to materialise.

That means the pace of Nathan Redmond or Sofiane Boufal would be the Saints’ most potent threat on paper, but neither are in good form and both seem out of favour with the manager. Indeed, the boss seems reluctant to play both at the same time.

Last week away at Watford, James Ward-Prowse started on the right wing and scored two goals whilst making more tackles than any other Saints player. He is probably the most likely threat to Pochettino’s side this weekend, but that says much about the position his former club are in at the moment.

Biggest fear

Tottenham are in fifth place in the Premier League at the moment, but the congestion between Manchester United in second and themselves is marked, with only six points between them.

Three points behind the top four, and having scored 15 goals in their last five league games, Spurs are clearly a team on fire, and Harry Kane seems to be a source of constant, industrial grade fuel for it. The forward has scored ten goals in his last five starts, including two hat tricks.

When he scores, he seems to do it multiple times these days. The last time the England man scored just one goal in a game was November.

Kane is on 20 Premier League goals already this season, whilst Saints have scored just 23 as a team, but perhaps they’ll fear Dele Alli even more: in just four games against Southampton in his fledgling Spurs career, the attacking midfielder has scored five times and assisted a further four.

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It could be a long afternoon.

Most likely formation

4-2-3-1 seems to be the formation of choice for Pellegrino, with Oriol Romeu partnered in midfield by Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg and playing behind Dusan Tadic in each of the last four games.

The last time that changed, though, was against Tottenham on Boxing day when the manager opted for a three-man midfield with Mario Lemina joining Romeu and Hojbjerg. That might have hinted tantalisingly at a tactical switch to get more men in the middle this week if it weren’t for the fact that it failed so miserably last time.

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A confusing turn of events at Tottenham?

Tottenham saw plenty of possession but created little.

That description could be applied to a number of games over the season so far, particularly the last two Premier League games against Hull and Everton.

The early-season hope has been extinguished – and if it hasn’t, it should. The top four isn’t beyond Spurs, but the league title is. It doesn’t matter who you are, titles aren’t won off the back of one transfer window.

But it was easy to see why there was so much excitement generated at White Hart Lane. The majority of Spurs’ acquisitions this summer had been attack-minded players, each looking to play their own part in replacing the output of Gareth Bale. And why not? How often is one better than four or five?

Spurs, however, haven’t struck a balance yet. It may be all well and good to talk up the team’s current position in the league table. With 20 points, they’re currently one ahead of free-spending Manchester City, albeit with a greatly inferior goal difference. Though that is obviously owed to City’s hammering of Norwich on the weekend.

The point is, Tottenham still have some way to go. If other teams are sitting in a precarious position, whether it be due to a lack of depth or an inexperienced manager, why does the same rule of thinking not apply to Tottenham’s inability to convert possession into goals?

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It’s November. I, like many I’m sure, explored the reasons for Erik Lamela’s omission from the starting XI in the past. The Argentinean is yet to start a Premier League game, despite being the club’s record transfer. Soldado, too, needed some defence for the fact that only one of his Premier League goals didn’t come from the penalty spot. But as I said, it’s November; how much longer do the excuses wash?

Tottenham’s inability to create isn’t a problem that stretches into the realm of the tactically fluent. Quite simply Spurs don’t have a playmaker. In the absence of one last season, namely Luka Modric, Gareth Bale became the difference maker. This time, we’re struggling to see anything similar.

Against Everton, Lamela and Christian Eriksen remained on the bench. Prior to the reintroduction of Aaron Lennon, it was questioned whether he’d replace Andros Townsend on the right flank. Instead, Andre Villas-Boas opted for both, fielding two wingers who would now look to cut inside onto their favoured foot instead of providing needed width. If Everton was seen as too much of a tricky away tie to field a creative outlet over one of the two wingers, then what exactly is the point of a double-pivot in Sandro and Paulinho?

Bayern Munich formed a double-pivot with Bastian Schweinsteiger and Javi Martinez last season, allowing them to capture the treble. But both of those players offered far more than Tottenham’s duo, whoever it may be.

There’s no bridge from the midfield to the attack. Isn’t it slightly odd that Jan Vertonghen, a defender, offered some of Tottenham’s best moments in front of goal? As for Lewis Holtby: he’s good, he offers another option and a more than capable body, but he’s not the midfielder who will dictate play and carve out chances for forwards.

Villas-Boas has been praised numerous times for being tactically progressive. He’ll tinker with the team’s setup far more than his predecessor. But why is there such a reluctance to go for the win? On the two recent league games alone, Tottenham scored once, and that came extremely late in a game via a penalty. You simply can’t get by with that mentality. Tottenham may be defensively disciplined, but others will outscore them, whether it’s in a game or on the league table.

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Some may say that this is just the beginning and when it falls into place Spurs will kick on. Well that’s the point of this: when do they find that balance and kick on?

Lamela is the most gifted attacker in the Tottenham squad. If he had remained at Roma, he’d be one of Rudi Garcia’s integral pieces and a regular starter. There is no reason, from a tactical perspective, to keep him out of the team. Above all, he’ll offer a good deal of excitement to what has been a handful of tedious games.

Have Spurs’ performances been a worry?

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Reading 1-3 Tottenham Hotspur – Match Review

Tottenham won their first game under Andre Villas-Boas with Jermaine Defoe scoring twice as they comfortably saw off Reading at the Madjeski Stadium.

Despite being just three games into his reign as Spurs boss the pressure was already mounting on Villas-Boas to deliver maximum points against the newly promoted Royal’s who struggled to shake off the rust from a 25 day interval since their last Premier League fixture against Chelsea on 22 August.

Manager Brian McDermott handed a top-flight debut to goalkeeper Alex McCarthy after first choice Adam Federici was ruled out with injury whilst Villas-Boas kept faith with 41-year-old Brad Friedel between the sticks opting to leave new signing Hugo Lloris on the substitutes bench.

And it was the Reading shot stopper who was busiest during the first half making early double save to deny Gareth Bale and then Jan Vertonghen. Spurs dominated the opening exchanges and their supremacy was rewarded in the 18th minute as Defoe swept home Aaron Lennon’s low drag back after he was played in down the right by Gylfi Sigurdsson.

McCarthy was called into action again to keep out Sigurdsson’s vicious long range strike before Defoe poked wide from a good position after showing excellent control and poise to take a long ball into his stride. Spurs took their foot off the gas after the break as they once again looked unable to close a game out from a dominant position.

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It wasn’t until the 71st minute that they could breathe easy when Gareth Bale doubled their advantage scuffing home from 12-yards after good work from Kyle Walker before Defoe made sure of the points three minutes later with a superb solo goal. Reading did manage a consolation in stoppage time with Hal Robson-Kanu stretching to turn Adam Le Fondre’s deep cross into an empty net.

Arsenal fans hail Monreal following Spain call-up

You have to be pretty good to make the Spain squad.

Indeed, the quality that was left out of La Roja’s squad for the 2018 World Cup was staggering, and it goes to show the difference between the likes of Spain and England.

Chelsea forward Alvaro Morata was amongst those to be left out of the Spain squad for this summer’s tournament in Russia, but there was a position at the back for Arsenal defender Nacho Monreal.

Monreal was arguably Arsenal’s most consistent player during what was a disappointing 2017-18 campaign for the Gunners, and the left-back will have the chance to add to his 21 Spain caps this summer.

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That said, Barcelona’s Jordi Alba would probably have to get injured for Monreal to feature.

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The Arsenal fans showed their love for Monreal throughout the 2017-18 season, and the club’s supporters were delighted that the 32-year-old was handed a spot in his international squad for the 2018 World Cup.

A selection of the Twitter reaction can be seen below:

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