So far, a club has had the highlights in the 2020 summer move-in window: Chelsea.
With five deals shown and a sixth successful agreement in sight, Kai Havertz, which B/R’s Dean Jones has shown is still carried out, are the envy of almost every fan.
The Blues secured the signings of Hakim Ziyech, Timo Werner, Malang Sarr, Ben Chilwell and Thiago Silva for a combined spend of around 140 million pounds, and Havertz’s signing would take that total to the mark of two hundred million pounds.
By contrast, Liverpool and Manchester United have signed a one-player overall combo, a left-back, and it looks like the Blues are at the end of the hole with him (and distanding from the rest) this summer thanks to a competitive search for more sensible talent.
It’s dream matter; this is the caliber of the signed players, it has the prospect of being one of the movement windows of all time.
This perspective has made us think: if the collection of Ziyech, Werner, Sarr, Chilwell, Silva and Havertz turns out to be a wonderful price of all time, what other window of movement do we compare it to?
If Chelsea 2020 recruits live up to their billing, they’ll battle the five indexed groups under the name of the all-time club window.
5. Real Madrid, 2010
Angel Di Maria (33 million euros), Sami Khedira (14 million euros), Mesut Ozil (18 million euros), Ricardo Carvalho (8 million euros), Pedro León (10 million euros), Sergio Canales (6 million euros)
While the World Cup watched admiringly as a young and German team made waves at the 2010 World Cup, reaching the semi-finals, Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez picked up the phone.
He obtained the signatures of Ozil and Khedira, who played in South Africa, for a total of 32 million euros, then added Carvalho, Di María, León and Canales to that end to make it one of all time.
Khedira, Carvalho and Di Maria and helped win the 2014 UEFA Champions League final, the latter being named the best player of the match. Ozil left in the summer of 2013 but made his mark on the Bernabeu, superbly joining Cristiano Ronaldo.
Canales and Leon did not have much impact, however, the first was sold for a small profit.
4. Barcelona, 2004
Samuel Eto’o (27 million euros), Deco (21 million euros), Ludovic Giuly (8.5 million euros), Edmilson (8 million euros), Belletti (6 million euros), Sylvinho (1.5 million euros), Henrik Larsson (free)
In the summer of 2004 Barcelona laid the foundation for their 2006 Champions League triumph and pulled them out of a very different nadir than they are facing lately.
The last two years had been desperate; in 2003, he finished sixth in La Liga, while in 2004 he recovered to the moment position and left the UEFA Cup in the quarter-finals.
A wonderful summer followed, in which Barca reshaped his fortune with a multitude of new superstars.
Six of the seven players bought were in the 2006 final, with Eto’o and Belletti scoring goals to defeat Arsenal, and Larsson creating both. The one who did not appear, Sylvinho, an unused spare, so the seven were part of the team.
Giovanni van Bronckhorst kept Sylvinho out of the XI and can also be classified as an addition in 2004, as his Loan from Arsenal had become permanent that summer.
Barca won the league in 2004/05 and 2005/06, with Ronaldinho pulling the strings in the middle of the field and Lionel Messi for the first time among the Camp Nou audience.
Days of joy for the blaugrana faithful, and a representation of how it only takes a 10/10 merchant to turn the course of a superclub.
3. Inter Milan, 2009
Diego Milito (28 million euros), Samuel Eto’o (20 million euros), Wesley Sneijder (15 million euros), Thiago Motta (10 million euros), Lucius (7 million euros), Goran Pandev (free)
It was the matter of a summer that led directly to a European treble. In the short term, there’s nothing more than that.
Five of the six primary purchases kicked off the final Champions League win against Bayern Munich, the strangest being Thiago Motta, who had started any of the semi-final matches against Barcelona and sent off at the Camp Nou; he also played a leading role in the team’s historical campaign.
They were players made for Jose Mourinho, Lucio a warrior central defender, Motta a thorny central midfielder, Milito a bullish goal that can bring the rhythm through himself and Pandev a broad artistic type but, above all, a willing runner.
If there’s one thing that prevents the paintings in this window from being the most productive, it was a little shortsighted. The six were over 25 years of age or older, Milito and Lucius were over 30 years old, and one of the pieces the club sacrificed to bring Milito and Motta was a fresh-faced Leonardo Bonucci, who would be one of the most productive in Italy. central defenders.
But ask an Inter fan if he regrets something and will tell you he won the hat-trick, so he’s a no.
2. Chelsea, 2004
Dider Drogba (38.5 million euros), Ricardo Carvalho (30 million euros), Paulo Ferreira (20 million euros), Arjen Robben (18 million euros), Tiago (15 million euros), Petr Cech (14 million euros), Mateja Kezman (7.5 million euros)
Fresh from a Champions League win with FC Porto, Jose Mourinho arrived at Stamford Bridge and received a team of new players to paint with.
Some were attracted, Carvalho and Ferreira were plucked from this aspect of Porto, while others, such as Drogba and Cech, were acquired for him, to his delight.
Of the seven names brought in, only Kezman and Tiago couldn’t stand. Kezman spent only one year at the club, unable to reflect his goals in the Eredivisie, and continued to play for seven other groups in search of the lethal form that earned him a move to London in the first place. Tiago has been forged for a while.
The other five ranged from the most impressive of all time.
Robben shone for moments but also struggled with injuries, leading the Blues to make big profits, while Cech, Carvalho, Ferreira and Drogba are mythical figures of the club.
The three most sensitive shaped important parts of one of the most productive defenders the Premier League has ever seen, while Drogba led the line for 8 years and scored the final tie in the 2012 Champions League final, paving the way for a penalty win.
1. Real Madrid, 2009
Cristiano Ronaldo (94 million euros), Kaká (67 million euros), Karim Benzema (35 million euros), Xabi Alonso (34.5 million euros), Raúl Albiol (15 million euros), Alvaro Arbeloa (4 million euros), Esteban Granero (4 million euros)
The money spent through Real Madrid in the summer of 2009 surprised everyone, but time showed that it was well spent (for the most part).
Ronaldo has been transferred for a world record of 94 million euros, but after averaging more than a purpose consistent with the game for nine consecutive years, helping the club win 4 Champions League titles, those near-cheap fares.
Alonso anchored the midfield for five years, while Karim Benzema led the line of attack for more than 10 years. The first helped Madrid to “La Décima”, his remarkable tenth victory in the Champions League, the moment stayed and orchestrated another 3.
Albiol, a valuable player in defence, Arbeloa made more than two hundred appearances with the club in the direction of various trophies, and Barn played his component before moving on to profit.
The negative is Kaká: the winner of the Ballon d’Or has never risen to his own turnover due to a succession of injuries. There were brilliant moments and impressive projections, but the evils and tension of the tax swallowed it up a little bit.
However, what Madrid has received from Ronaldo, Benzema and Alonso during a long period makes them worthy of the first place. Albiol’s service and Kaká’s occasional brilliance are bonuses.
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All statistics WhoScored.com
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