Wilfried Bony could be Manchester City’s most expensive January transfer window signing ever
Manchester City are understood to be on the verge of signing Ivorian striker Wilfried Bony from Swansea City, but may need to break their January transfer window record in order to seal the deal.
Bony will reportedly cost the reigning Premier League champions upwards of £30m, even though he is soon to jet off on international duty for the Ivory Coast at the Africa Cup of Nations for at least three weeks.
Despite their reputation for spending big on new recruits, only once before have City spent more than £30m on a single player during the January transfer window; in 2011 Edin Dzeko arrived at the club for a fee of £32.56m.
But will breaking or equalling a club transfer record on Bony represent good value for City? Manuel Pellegrini’s current options in forward areas include Sergio Aguero, Edin Dzeko and Stevan Jovetic – all of whom have scored more regularly in the Premier League since Bony’s arrival at the beginning of last season.
Since the club was taken over by Sheikh Mansour in 2008, City have spent more than anyone else in the January window having splashed out £91.34m on midseason recruits in that time. In fact, only Chelsea have spent more in the January window since it was introduced into English football in 2003.
Yet City’s January business has often been limited to adding one or two fresh pairs of legs to their squad rather than building a new squad of Galacticos. When you have the resources to do that every summer, there’s little need to repeat the trick in the winter.
City have only spent transfer fees on seven players in January since they’ve had Mansour’s millions to play with. Four of those came in January when Craig Bellamy, Shay Given, Wayne Bridge and Nigel De Jong arrived at the Etihad Stadium for a combined £48.84m.
To further explore how City and every other Premier League club has spent their cash in the January transfer window, use our interactive below.>
Now 12 years old, the January transfer window has evolved into one of the most important months
in the football calendar, and the source of frenzied excitement for fans.
Approximately £1.3bn has been spent in January windows by Premier League clubs since Fifa legislation shut
off teams from buying new players from September to January and February to June. When once clubs could
add new recruits at any stage during the season, they must now wait for their month-long Black Friday every
January when players once again become available.
More money was spent last summer than in any previous transfer window, as Premier League clubs splashed almost
£1bn on new players ahead of the current season. Never before has so much been spent across a full
season, never mind a single window.
With more time to plot, plan and purchase during the summer, it should be no surprise that on average only 19 per
cent of transfers take place during the January window.
Yet that doesn’t mean big deals shouldn’t be expected this month. In the last two seasons over £100m has been spent
in January. Furthermore, two of the 10 biggest January deals came last season (Nemanja Matic was a £22m buy
for Chelsea, who sold Juan Mata to Manchester United for £39.4m), even after what was then the biggest summer window of all time.
- José Antonio Reyes (2004)
£17,600,000 - Andrey Arshavin (2009)
£14,520,000 – - Theo Walcott (2006)
£9,240,000 - Nacho Monreal (2013)
£8,800,000 - Emmanuel Adebayor (2006)
£8,800,000
Not a fan of the January window, Arsene Wenger has often been more reluctant to spend as much as his contemporaries in the period.
Since the window came into existence, seven clubs have spent more in January than the Gunners.
Perhaps it’s no wonder Wenger is cautious in the market at this time of year. His two biggest January window signings – Jose Antonio
Reyes and Andrey Arshavin – enjoyed patchy Arsenal careers at best.
Arsenal have already spent around £90m this season – their biggest transfer outlay ever – but as they still look in need of
reinforcements at the base of midfield and in defence, Wenger may feel the need to increase that total during the window.
- Darren Bent (2011)
£18,920,000 - Ashley Young (2007)
£11,620,000 - Jean II Makoun (2011)
£5,460,000 - Emile Heskey (2009)
£3,260,000 - Eric Djemba-Djemba (2005)
£2,240,000
Since the January window of 2011, when Aston Villa made Darren Bent the club’s record purchase, American owner Randy Lerner
has reined in the spending at Villa Park.
Villa are unlikely to return to the high-spending approach that defined Lerner’s early years at the club, yet as the lowest
scorers in the league so far this season, they may well be on the lookout for increased firepower up front. Just so long as it
comes at a cheaper cost than Darren Bent.
- Danny Fox (2010)
£1,850,000 - Leon Cort (2010)
£1,580,000 - Charlie Austin (2011)
£1,230,000 - Andy Gray (2006)
£968,000 - Ade Akinbiyi (2007)
£968,000
In their entire history, Burnley have spent £45m on transfers. Chelsea spent more than that on Fernando Torres in January 2011.
So don’t expect too many explosive deals to emerge from Turf Moor this month.
After winning promotion last season, the club decided to keep things low-key in the transfer market, limiting spending to under £10m.
After a tricky opening spell, the club have now pulled themselves to within sight of an unlikely survival. Could the Clarets go
for broke in January?
- Fernando Torres (2011)
£51,480,000 - David Luiz (2011)
£23,760,000 - Nemanja Matic (2014)
£22,000,000 - Nicolas Anelka (2008)
£15,840,000 - Mohamed Salah (2014)
£14,520,000
The biggest January spenders in Premier League history, Chelsea have spent a massive £271.54m since 2003.
Some of those signings have been undoubted successes; David Luiz, Nemanja Matic, Branislav Ivanovic, and some
high-profile failures; Scott Parker, Mohamed Salah and, of course, Fernando Torres.
Chelsea usually spend biggest in January when they’ve not been at their best in the half of the season leading up to it.
The Blues could do with another striker in the summer to replace the aging Drogba, but for now Jose Mourinho’s squad looks
pretty well-stocked all over.
- Wayne Hennessey (2014)
£3,210,000 - Joe Ledley (2014)
£3,080,000 - Jason Puncheon (2014)
£1,940,000 - Scott Dann (2014)
£1,610,000 - Paul Ifill (2007)
£990,000
Palace obliterated their January spending record last season, forking out £9.84m having only once before spent more than £1m
in the window after years of dipping into and skirting around administration.
New manager Alan Pardew will undoubtedly want a repeat this year, with Palace currently languishing in the relegation zone.
Yet as the South London club have already spent around £2m to poach Pardew from Newcastle, he may not find he has too much to play with.
- James Beattie (2005)
£7,920,000 - Nikica Jelavic (2012)
£5,810,000 - Tim Howard (2007)
£3,700,000 - John Stones (2013)
£3,080,000 - Lee Carsley (2003)
£2,510,000
The Toffees smashed their transfer record in the summer with the £31m purchase of Romelu Lukaku.
Yet both the player and the team have failed to progress as expected this season – Everton are currently positioned in the
bottom half of the league.
Chairman Bill Kenwright has been reticent to spend in January in the past, and may prove even more unwilling to do so after their biggest-ever
outlay in the summer.
- Shane Long (2014)
£7,480,000 - Nikica Jelavic (2014)
£6,860,000 - Jimmy Bullard (2009)
£4,660,000 - Robbie Brady (2013)
£2,200,000 - Kamil Zayatte (2009)
£2,200,000
Hull have only spent three full seasons in the Premier League since 2003, yet have spent more in the January window
(£31.3m to be precise) than some of clubs who have been in the top tier every season.
In fact, of clubs not involved in European competition, only Southampton have spent more than Hull since they won
promotion in 2013. Yet despite the £64.37m spent, the Tigers are currently only teetering above the relegation zone.
- Steve Howard (2008)
£1,980,000 - Chris Wood (2013)
£1,080,000 - Wes Morgan (2012)
£990,000 - Ben Marshall (2012)
£968,000 - Danny Drinkwater (2012)
£792,000
After winning promotion last season, Leicester’s Thai owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha said he wanted the Foxes to be a top
five club within five years and was prepared to spend £180m to get there.
Nigel Pearson will be hoping for an advance on some of that cash this January, with his side cut adrift at the foot of the table.
Leicester spent just £12.24m to reinforce their squad in the summer.
- Andy Carroll (2011)
£36,080,000 - Luis Suárez (2011)
£23,320,000 - Daniel Sturridge (2013)
£13,200,000 - Martin Skrtel (2008)
£8,800,000 - Coutinho (2013)
£8,800,000
Last season’s runners up spent a gargantuan £133m in the summer, yet have regressed since. The market nous of Brendan Rodgers
and the club’s “transfer committee” has been criticised, with many of the new signings such as Dejan Lovren and Mario Balotelli having
failed to improve the first team.
The question this January is to what extent Rodgers and co will be entrusted to spend further in January in order to fix the
team’s ailments.
- Edin Dzeko (2011)
£32,560,000 - Nigel de Jong (2009)
£15,840,000 - Craig Bellamy (2009)
£13,640,000 - Wayne Bridge (2009)
£11,440,000 - Robbie Fowler (2003)
£8,620,000
In the last three seasons, City have spent just £2.9m in the January window. After making big purchases every
summer, the club has rarely looked in need of reinforcements come the midpoint in the season.
The Premier League holders’ most expensive January actually came back in 2009, when £45m was spent on players
such as Craig Bellamy, Wayne Bridge and Shay Given. The calibre of City’s transfer targets have improved a bit since.
- Juan Mata (2014)
£39,360,000 - Louis Saha (2004)
£15,400,000 - Wilfried Zaha (2013)
£10,340,000 - Nemanja Vidic (2006)
£9,240,000 - Patrice Evra (2006)
£7,040,000
United spent £170m this summer – more than any English club has ever spent in a single window. That followed United’s biggest
January ever, when they made Juan Mata the second-biggest January signing in Premier League history with a £39m fee.
After all that, they surely can’t be expecting to buy more players this month, can they?
According to recent share prospectus issued by the Glazers, they may be planning to do just that.
- Jonathan Woodgate (2003)
£11,880,000 - Papiss Demba Cissé (2012)
£10,560,000 - Jean-Alain Boumsong (2005)
£9,940,000 - Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa (2013)
£7,040,000 - Mathieu Debuchy (2013)
£5,460,000
The Magpies’ third-biggest January under the notoriously thrifty Mike Ashley actually came in the January transfer
window (2012/2013) when then-manager Alan Pardew was allowed to spend around £20m to fix a severely depleted squad.
With Newcastle currently sitting comfortable in mid-table, Pardew’s replacement is unlikely to be permitted such
a big kitty this year. Fans will arguably be more concerned with holding onto Moussa Sissoko than any potential
additions this January.
- Christopher Samba (2013)
£13,200,000 - Loïc Rémy (2013)
£9,240,000 - Bobby Zamora (2012)
£5,100,000 - Djibril Cissé (2012)
£4,400,000 - Nedum Onuoha (2012)
£4,140,000
Two years ago QPR spent £22.44m in a desperate bid to secure survival in the Premier League. It didn’t work, and
cost the club dearly after relegation to the Championship.
Will chairman Tony Fernandes be so cavalier this January? He will likely be given a number of targets from manager
Harry Redknapp, who has spent over £100m in January windows since they were introduced in 2003.
- David Prutton (2003)
£3,300,000 - Vegard Forren (2013)
£3,080,000 - Nigel Quashie (2005)
£2,770,000 - Grzegorz Rasiak (2006)
£2,640,000 - Danny Higginbotham (2003)
£1,980,000
The Saints’ biggest January outlay came in the first ever window in 2003, when £5.28m was forked out on Danny Higginbotham and David Prutton.
The club has not topped that since, but may be tempted into bringing extra bodies into a stretched squad that may find it hard to
maintain the form from the first half of the season in the new year.
- James Beattie (2009)
£3,520,000 - Jack Butland (2013)
£3,340,000 - Asmir Begovic (2010)
£3,300,000 - Brek Shea (2013)
£2,640,000 - Matthew Etherington (2009)
£2,640,000
Since the departure of Tony Pulis and the arrival of Mark Hughes in the summer of 2013, Stoke’s transfer spending has become
far more restrained than in their first few seasons in the Premier League.
Don’t expect that to change much this month. The Potters have spent just £8.84m since Hughes has been in the dugout and have
not traditionally been tempted into shopping sprees in January. Their biggest winter window signing came in their first season in
the Premier League when James Beattie was bought for £3.52m.
- Stéphane Sessègnon (2011)
£6,160,000 - Andy Reid (2008)
£5,280,000 - Danny Graham (2013)
£5,100,000 - Alfred N’Diaye (2013)
£4,140,000 - Mart Poom (2003)
£3,300,000
Manager Gus Poyet will surely want to improve the players at his disposal ahead of what looks to be another battle with relegation.
Yet the club has often struggled to find value in this window. Over £40m has been spent yet few players, with the exception of record
January signing Stephane Sessegnon, have made a prolonged impact.
- Luke Moore (2011)
£880,000 - David Cotterill (2010)
£594,000 - Ashley Williams (2008)
£528,000 - Nathan Dyer (2009)
£528,000 - Darryl Duffy (2007)
£264,000
Swansea are the only Premier League club to have never spent more than £1m in the January window.
Yet that hasn’t prevented them from finding exceptional value during the month. Ashley Williams and
Nathan Dyer, players who have made 265 and 200 appearances respectively were signed for £528,000 each.
- Robbie Keane (2009)
£14,700,000 - Jermain Defoe (2009)
£14,430,000 - Wilson Palacios (2009)
£13,200,000 - Alan Hutton (2008)
£11,440,000 - Jonathan Woodgate (2008)
£9,500,000
Tottenham have been the Premier League’s third-biggest spenders in January since the window first opened in 2003,
having splashed out £123.81m in that time (£52m more than North London rivals Arsenal).
Spurs’ most costly January came in 2009 – Harry Redknapp’s first season at the club – when £45m was spent on
Robbie Keane, Jermain Defoe, Wilson Palacios and Pascal Chimbonda.
- Luke Moore (2008)
£3,300,000 - Liam Ridgewell (2012)
£2,110,000 - Richard Chaplow (2005)
£1,980,000 - Nigel Quashie (2006)
£1,580,000 - Geoff Horsfield (2004)
£1,320,000
Not often tempted into a big January shop, the Baggies have spent just £12m in the window since it
opened – less than they spent this summer alone.
New boss Tony Pulis may want to change that as he looks to lift West Brom away from relegation trouble.
The former Stoke manager has spent over £27m in January windows at Stoke and Crystal Palace.
- Matthew Upson (2007)
£11,090,000 - Dean Ashton (2006)
£9,580,000 - Savio Nsereko (2009)
£7,480,000 - Luís Boa Morte (2007)
£5,980,000 - Calum Davenport (2007)
£3,700,000
West Ham have spent a chunky £53.6m in the 12 January windows so far, although a large portion of that came in
2007 when then-owner Eggert Magnusson released £24.7m for new recruits in an ultimately successful bid to stave off relegation.
Having already spent around £30m this summer, and with the team comfortably in the upper echelons of the table, a repeat of that is
unlikely this January.
All data courtesy of transfermarkt.co.uk
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