Khel Now logo
HomeSportsIPL 2024Live Score

Football

The Premier League transfer window in numbers

Published at :September 1, 2016 at 10:45 PM
Modified at :September 1, 2016 at 10:45 PM
Post Featured Image

Khel Now


A record-breaking summer of spending has produced some mind-boggling figures...

£1,175,230,000 – The total amount spent by Premier League clubs this summer. £170m - The amount of money reportedly spent by Premier League clubs on deadline day Wednesday. 13- Sunderland broke their transfer record on deadline day for Didier Ndong, while Spurs equalled theirs in signing Moussa Sissoko, meaning 13 Premier League clubs have made record buys in this window. £95m- The combined value of Joe Hart, Wilfried Bony, Samir Nasri, Eliaquim Mangala and Jason Denver who left Manchester City on loan in one day. 17- Hull City were the Premier League's lowest spenders having spent just over £17m on Ryan Mason (£13m), David Marshall (£3m), Will Keane (£1m) and James Weir (undisclosed). 12 - Middlesbrough were the busiest Premier League side as they made 12 signings. 4 - Manchester United may have been one of the biggest spenders but they brought in the least amount of players. 38- Chelsea broke their own previous record for players out on loan. Matt Miazga to Vitesse was the 38th player to leave the club on a temporary basis. 172- There were 172 Premier League loan deals altogether with Henriksen's move to Hull being the last one to go through.

Editorial by Khel Now-Feature Columnist Chaitanya Lekhwani, He is a content creator and a writer. A devout Manchester United supporter and loves the good, bad and the ugly side of the beautiful game. Favourite player: Ronaldo 'Fenomeno' Nazario de Lima You can follow him on Twitter.

[KH_RELATED_NEWS title="Related News"][/KH_RELATED_NEWS]
Advertisement
Advertisement

TRENDING TOPICS

IMPORTANT LINK

  • About Us
  • Home
  • Khel Now TV
  • Sitemap
  • Feed
Khel Icon

Download on the

App Store

GET IT ON

Google Play


2024 KhelNow.com Agnificent Platform Technologies Pte. Ltd.