Sports

Man Utd’s staggering wage bill revealed despite reducing total by £52MILLION after Cristiano Ronaldo transfer exit

MANCHESTER UNITED’S staggering wage bill has been revealed – and it is eye-watering despite the fact it was reduced by £52MILLION after Cristiano Ronaldo’s exit.

The Portuguese star, 38, allegedly earned an eye-watering £510,000-per-week during his second stint at Old Trafford.

Cristiano Ronaldo’s exit helped Man Utd save £52m on the wage billCredit: Getty

Erik ten Hag’s team still had an annual wage bill of £331.4m last termCredit: Getty

His explosive departure last September after his infamous Piers Morgan interview helped United reduce their wage bill by £52.6m.

But the Red Devils still managed to make a £42.1m loss last season even though they enjoyed record revenues.

United have announced a total revenue of £684.4m for the 2022-23 campaign, which is the most-ever by an English team.

They also confirmed that owners the Glazer family and other shareholders will, for the first time in seven years, not receive a dividend.

According to The Times, they state that “analysts  believe the proposed sale of 25 per cent of the club to Sir Jim Ratcliffe would have made the paying of a dividend after such financial losses too sensitive”.

The release of the annual results mean that United no longer have the highest annual salary bill in the Premier League after it dropped to £331.4m from £384m.

And Manchester City, Liverpool and Chelsea are all widely-believed to be set to overtake them in wages paid for last season.

United’s saving was largely aided by Ronaldo’s departure via mutual consent, meaning that they did not have to fork out the £16m in wages remaining on his deal.

The North West club’s long-term debt remained at £507m while the cost of servicing that debt was £21.4m last term.

Following the release of the results, football finance author Kieran Maguire said: “The club is making losses still, but at least they are substantially lower than the £150m in 2021/22.

“The good news is that wages are only 51 per cent of income. The bad news is that other costs, especially player transfer amortisation, which is over £50m higher than two seasons ago, is not under such good control.”

However, after Erik ten Hag guided them to a top four finish and secured Champions League football this, he also warned supporters that the wage bill for this term will increase dramatically again.

Maguire added: “Wages will also rise significantly in 2023-24 due to participation in the Champions League.”

Soucre: thesun

Related Posts

De alumno a adversario: la personalidad tenística que se asombró ante la retirada de Rafael Nadal

Uno de los mejores tenistas del mundo todavía no puede creer que el español cuelgue la raqueta. Soñaba con un último intento. Tan solo resta una semana para…

Out & About After Shoulder Surgery…

The MLB’s best two-way player is down to just one arm for the time being … Shohei Ohtani had shoulder surgery this week — and as you can see, one of his…

Andy Farrell confident Ireland will bounce back against Argentina

In the last three seasons, one trait of Andy Farrell’s Ireland is that when they do lose, they tend to produce a response. Since they really clicked at…

Flicks and leaps defined Suaalii’s Wallabies debut – but numbers show where he must improve

Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii will never forget his debut, and neither will Australia, for the game he made his maiden appearance in is one of the best Wallabies games in…

The swing nations that could rock the World Rugby Council – and make or break Aussie’s bid to become chair

It’s barely made a drop in the ocean in recent days given the Wallabies’ stunning upset win over England – but over the next 24 hours, one of…

Ireland team winners and losers: Andy Farrell not handing out ‘sympathy caps’ as ‘exceptional’ rookies earn call-up, whilst ‘fantastic servant’ equals record

Following Andy Farrell’s Ireland selection to take on a resurgent Argentina in their second Autumn Nations Series Test, here are our winners and losers. Winners  Cian Healy Veteran…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *