- Progression of British football transfer fee record
The progression of the British football transfer fee record tracks the increases in the record for the highest transfer fee paid or received by British
association football clubs. A transfer fee is the sum of money paid by one club to purchase the contract, and therefore the playing services, of a professional footballer. Fees are not generally formally disclosed by the clubs involved, and discrepancies can occur in figures quoted in the press.Trevor Francis , for example, is regarded as Britain's first £1m player but was officially transferred for £975,000. The generally reported figure of £1.18m includedValue Added Tax , fees tothe Football League and Francis' signing fee. [cite web|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/news-and-comment/landmark-pound1m-fee-for-francis-was-no-big-deal-for-clough-756961.html|title=Landmark £1m fee for Francis was no big deal for Clough|author=Nick Harris|publisher=The Independent|accessdate=2008-03-10|date=2004-02-04] Discrepancies may also occur due to deals which involve additional sums to be paid at a later date after a player has made a certain number of appearances, joint fees for two or more players, or deals in which one player is exchanged for a sum of money plus another player.The earliest recorded transfer fee record was the £700 paid by Newcastle United in 1904 for
Andy McCombie . The following yearAlf Common joined Middlesbrough for the first ever four-figure fee, a sum which caused a national sensation and outrage amongst the football authorities.cite book |last=Davies |first=Hunter |title=Boots, Balls and Haircuts: An Illustrated History of Football from Then to Now |isbn=1-8440-3261-2 |date=2003 |publisher=Cassell Illustrated|pages=p75 ] The £5,000 mark was first reached in 1922 when Falkirk paid that amount for West Ham United'sSyd Puddefoot , and six years later Arsenal paid the first ever £10,000 fee to acquireDavid Jack of Bolton Wanderers. After theSecond World War , the spending power of clubs in mainland Europe outstripped that of British clubs for the first time, resulting in several substantial jumps in the transfer record.John Charles became the first British player to command a fee of £50,000 when he joined Juventus in 1957, and four years laterDenis Law joined Torino in the first £100,000 transaction involving a British club.The 1970s saw an unprecedented level of increase in transfer fees.
Martin Peters became the first £200,000 player in 1970, but by 1977Kevin Keegan 's move toWest Germany 'sHamburger SV had taken the record to £500,000. In January 1979 David Mills became the first player to be purchased for £500,000 by a British club, but just one month later Nottingham Forest paid twice that amount to acquire Birmingham City'sTrevor Francis . In 1981Bryan Robson cost Manchester United £1,500,000, but fees paid by British clubs lagged behind those paid by clubs inItaly ,France andSpain to take British players abroad until 1995, when Manchester United paid Newcastle United £7,000,000 forAndy Cole . The fees paid by thePremier League 's top clubs began to increase at a rapid rate, withAlan Shearer commanding the first £15,000,000 fee in 1996, and the new millennium heralding the first £30,000,000 transfer, although sources differ as to whether this barrier was broken byRio Ferdinand 's move to Manchester United in 2002 orAndriy Shevchenko 's transfer to Chelsea four years later. On 1 September 2008, Manchester City agreed a fee forRobinho , reported at £32,500,000, which became the latest British record.Record progression
References
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