Summer 2022 Transfer Thread.

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Pretty much 😂 I imagine if he signs they’ll all continue to be relevant too.

Oh Harry, what nice teeth you have. And Deki I love what you’ve done with your hair.

Just worse than 1 in 3 as a starter which often plays as the number 9 v 2 players who have never been first choice and mostly players wide,

My point is more that if we’re spending that kind of money I’d rather go for someone who could genuinely challenge to start ahead of the others form dependent.

I don’t I ever suggested that. Wasn’t was my closing comment that I reckon Conte would love him so I’m leaning towards wanting him?

Levy has always looked to coulda, shoulda, woulda, players when to comes support (in particular) for Kane.

Spending 50 million on a quality young, PL proven forward who can score, and play across the front line is not excessive, plus at just twenty five can improve and eventually replace Son.

I don't think it will happen but we simply cannot be scouring Europe for another Jensen or Vinne especially as five subs can be used next season.

The time has come for Levy to shit or get off the pot.
 
Lukaku being 1 and Kane a 10 in regards to technical ability? Darwin is like a 3
oh dear... I suppose he's at least clinical/good at getting into shooting positions?

I've seen very little of him but he seems quite clinical and a big physical presence.
 
Very interesting!

I admire his determination to succeed.



Also heard that to help with his coordination Conte has ordered a pair of these for him in size twelve....

b43b837388830c0812cc89c4f8b8505c.jpg
 
He isn't a poacher. He's an extremely versatile, hard working modern forward with very good technical ability. His link up play is excellent (8 assists to go with that) and he's very good with the ball at his feet in general.

Woolwich would be upgrading massively if they got him. If we signed him I'd be pretty happy too. He's not a special player and never will be, but he's a very good one who steps up in bigger matches because he's such a mobile attacker.
I would love for us to bring Gabriel Jesus and Richarlison if we could sell Bergwijn and Lucas. I think that would give us great attacking options in terms of both style/skillset, coverage and quality.

However if it was one or the other, I would prefer Richarlison, as I think he would suit us more and cover both Son and Kane better.

Also, I would be more worried about Woolwich if they signed Richarlison, as I think he is exactly what they need up front, than if they signed Gabriel Jesus.
 
Also, I would be more worried about Woolwich if they signed Richarlison, as I think he is exactly what they need up front, than if they signed Gabriel Jesus.
Lucky that their scouting is worse than the old Spurs or it is more of an 'optics' move. their ideal player is sitting right under their nose(richarlison) but they prefer going after big names just to shut the fans up about 'spending on big players'.
 

Inter Milan refinances its spiralling debts – but pays a price​

Gareth Gore, Ed Clark
28 January 2022

Inter Milan
looks set to avoid a looming crunch point over its spiralling debt problem after securing €415m of financing in the junk bond market in a deal that buys the Italian champions vital time as its Chinese owners consider what to do with the club amid mounting financial problems back home.

It means that Inter now has the funds to pay off €350m of bonds that come due for payment in December. But the club was forced to pay a heavy price to secure the financing, offering investors a substantially higher interest rate that will heap further pressure on its already poor finances.

The 108-year-old club has come under acute financial pressure over the past two seasons, at one point being unable to pay its players. Its billionaire owner Zhang Jindong turned to distressed debt outfit Oaktree Capital last May to secure a €275m line of credit to keep the club afloat.

Zhang, who made his name with a chain of shops selling electrical appliances, is facing problems in China. His Suning business empire has been haemorrhaging cash, prompting him to close down Jiangsu FC, another club he owns, just three months after the team won the Chinese league.

While the fate of Inter is unlikely to be so dramatic, not least now that it has secured new financing, the Italian side still faces huge uncertainty. Zhang has already discussed selling his majority stake in the club, with Saudi Public Investment Fund, the new owners of perennial English underachievers Newcastle United, one name previously linked to a deal.

The self-made billionaire bought a majority stake in Inter in mid-2016 from an Indonesian consortium, boasting that the tie-up would be mutually beneficial for the club and his burgeoning business empire, which has expanded from white goods to include finance and real estate.

Spiralling costs​

His financial backing has brought results, with the club securing its first league title in 11 years last season. But its success on the pitch has come at a heavy price. Inter has racked up almost €440m in losses in the five seasons since the entrance of Zhang, and seen its debts spiral.

While the coronavirus pandemic has hit the club hard, forcing it to close its stadium to spectators for many months and robbing it of lucrative matchday income, it was already burning through money before Covid-19 hit.

But it appears that Zhang may no longer be willing – or able – to keep bankrolling the club’s losses. He has been holding talks about bringing in a new investor and last year was linked to talks with private equity firm BC Partners which later collapsed.

He has also brought Oaktree in as a lender. Its €275m loan comes with strict conditions that if breached could allow the distressed debt fund to take control of the club. Such a fate has already befallen arch-rivals AC Milan, which was taken over by Elliott Management after a similar deal.

The latest junk bond sale should buy Inter some time. The financing is secured against revenues from the club’s media rights and sponsorship income. Barcelona FC struck a similar private debt deal linked to its media rights last year after breaching covenants on a previous bond.

Issuing debt through a media rights subsidiary widens the appeal to investors, not least because the vehicle that issues it is shown to make stable profits. But the vehicle doesn’t include most costs associated with securing those rights such as paying the players or operating the stadium.

Investor pushback​

Pushback from investors on pricing could indicate that the structure, used by a number of teams in recent years, is beginning to fall out of favour. Inter was forced to pay a coupon of 6.75% on the five-year bonds, compared with 4.875% the last time it did an almost identical deal four years ago. That translates as an additional €7.8m of interest costs every year compared to the previous offering.

"Some people find these deals acceptable because you are taking a view on the club's ability to stay in the Serie A and retain access to the premium media rights,” said one banker. “Because investors essentially get first dibs from the media rights, some investors will view it as a structure play.

"That is all well and good, but it doesn't completely detach itself from the reality that if a company, or rather a club, is living way beyond its means it is more likely to go into administration, and then clubs can drop out of divisions."

Like Barcelona, which has had to sell a number of its top players to improve its finances, Inter is now likely to face pressure to do the same. On the investor call, cost cuts were mentioned. The side has seen its wage bill more than double over the last five seasons.

According to Andrea Accinelli, the club’s finance chief, that is in part due to a frozen player market. “The staff costs are due to a transfer market that is really stagnant … due to poor liquidity,” he told investors during the marketing call ahead of the bond deal.

Worryingly for investors, the club has also committed to another big expense over the coming two years – a brand new stadium to replace San Siro, the ground that it has shared with AC Milan since 1947. During calls with investors, management said more debt could be taken on to fund that project.

Inter Milan is not unique. Across Europe, many of the biggest football clubs are operating in a financially unsustainable way, only kept alive by the deep pockets of their owners – or the willingness, until now, of investors and banks to keep rolling over debts.

The club was one of the founders behind the proposed European Super League, a JP Morgan-funded breakaway competition that promised hundreds of millions of euros of extra revenues to the continent’s top clubs. After a backlash from fans, the competition was abandoned. But some clubs haven't entirely given up on the idea.

Goldman Sachs was lead bank on the issue.
 

Inter Milan refinances its spiralling debts – but pays a price​

Gareth Gore, Ed Clark
28 January 2022

Inter Milan
looks set to avoid a looming crunch point over its spiralling debt problem after securing €415m of financing in the junk bond market in a deal that buys the Italian champions vital time as its Chinese owners consider what to do with the club amid mounting financial problems back home.

It means that Inter now has the funds to pay off €350m of bonds that come due for payment in December. But the club was forced to pay a heavy price to secure the financing, offering investors a substantially higher interest rate that will heap further pressure on its already poor finances.

The 108-year-old club has come under acute financial pressure over the past two seasons, at one point being unable to pay its players. Its billionaire owner Zhang Jindong turned to distressed debt outfit Oaktree Capital last May to secure a €275m line of credit to keep the club afloat.

Zhang, who made his name with a chain of shops selling electrical appliances, is facing problems in China. His Suning business empire has been haemorrhaging cash, prompting him to close down Jiangsu FC, another club he owns, just three months after the team won the Chinese league.

While the fate of Inter is unlikely to be so dramatic, not least now that it has secured new financing, the Italian side still faces huge uncertainty. Zhang has already discussed selling his majority stake in the club, with Saudi Public Investment Fund, the new owners of perennial English underachievers Newcastle United, one name previously linked to a deal.

The self-made billionaire bought a majority stake in Inter in mid-2016 from an Indonesian consortium, boasting that the tie-up would be mutually beneficial for the club and his burgeoning business empire, which has expanded from white goods to include finance and real estate.

Spiralling costs​

His financial backing has brought results, with the club securing its first league title in 11 years last season. But its success on the pitch has come at a heavy price. Inter has racked up almost €440m in losses in the five seasons since the entrance of Zhang, and seen its debts spiral.

While the coronavirus pandemic has hit the club hard, forcing it to close its stadium to spectators for many months and robbing it of lucrative matchday income, it was already burning through money before Covid-19 hit.

But it appears that Zhang may no longer be willing – or able – to keep bankrolling the club’s losses. He has been holding talks about bringing in a new investor and last year was linked to talks with private equity firm BC Partners which later collapsed.

He has also brought Oaktree in as a lender. Its €275m loan comes with strict conditions that if breached could allow the distressed debt fund to take control of the club. Such a fate has already befallen arch-rivals AC Milan, which was taken over by Elliott Management after a similar deal.

The latest junk bond sale should buy Inter some time. The financing is secured against revenues from the club’s media rights and sponsorship income. Barcelona FC struck a similar private debt deal linked to its media rights last year after breaching covenants on a previous bond.

Issuing debt through a media rights subsidiary widens the appeal to investors, not least because the vehicle that issues it is shown to make stable profits. But the vehicle doesn’t include most costs associated with securing those rights such as paying the players or operating the stadium.

Investor pushback​

Pushback from investors on pricing could indicate that the structure, used by a number of teams in recent years, is beginning to fall out of favour. Inter was forced to pay a coupon of 6.75% on the five-year bonds, compared with 4.875% the last time it did an almost identical deal four years ago. That translates as an additional €7.8m of interest costs every year compared to the previous offering.

"Some people find these deals acceptable because you are taking a view on the club's ability to stay in the Serie A and retain access to the premium media rights,” said one banker. “Because investors essentially get first dibs from the media rights, some investors will view it as a structure play.

"That is all well and good, but it doesn't completely detach itself from the reality that if a company, or rather a club, is living way beyond its means it is more likely to go into administration, and then clubs can drop out of divisions."

Like Barcelona, which has had to sell a number of its top players to improve its finances, Inter is now likely to face pressure to do the same. On the investor call, cost cuts were mentioned. The side has seen its wage bill more than double over the last five seasons.

According to Andrea Accinelli, the club’s finance chief, that is in part due to a frozen player market. “The staff costs are due to a transfer market that is really stagnant … due to poor liquidity,” he told investors during the marketing call ahead of the bond deal.

Worryingly for investors, the club has also committed to another big expense over the coming two years – a brand new stadium to replace San Siro, the ground that it has shared with AC Milan since 1947. During calls with investors, management said more debt could be taken on to fund that project.

Inter Milan is not unique. Across Europe, many of the biggest football clubs are operating in a financially unsustainable way, only kept alive by the deep pockets of their owners – or the willingness, until now, of investors and banks to keep rolling over debts.

The club was one of the founders behind the proposed European Super League, a JP Morgan-funded breakaway competition that promised hundreds of millions of euros of extra revenues to the continent’s top clubs. After a backlash from fans, the competition was abandoned. But some clubs haven't entirely given up on the idea.

Goldman Sachs was lead bank on the issue.
I was listening to TalkSPORT on the way home last night & it appears that Inter have several players lined up to bring in but are desperate to raise the €€ , from what they were saying , there will be quite a bit of movement at Inter , perhaps later in the window
 
Every time I hear a story like this, or Salah devoting two rooms in his house to fitness and recovery, I can’t help but think of that fat, unprofessional oaf Rooney… complete opposite of such modern thinking
I thought it was known that Rooney went to see specialists to improve his peripheral vision.

Also, he clearly had mental health issues. Too much too soon. Too much media invasion.
 
Would you take DCL for £35m or Richarlison for £55m (if you HAD to take 1)?

I'd take them both for combined 90 mil, then sell them Winksy for 20 and ship off Berg for 25. This way we have improved our attack A LOT and made net investment of 45 mil EUR while keeping same HG numbers in the team as well.
Plus have another "specialist striker" in the team on top of Kane.

Easy.
 
Diaz is the one who will replace Mane while Núñez, who's much more of a CF type, will be replacing Firmino. Yes, I know that Núñez has also played out wide but his main position is CF.
This season Mane has bene Liverpool's central striker. Which probably is what Nabil is alluding to.

Firmino has been more or less relegated to the bench since last summer.
 
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