A smoother football transfer window for season 2014-15

By harrison Langsford / Roar Rookie

Painless, cheap and quick transfers in football are few and far between these days, particularly with big name players.

A prime example of the changing transfer market was Gareth Bale’s transfer to Real Madrid for a record €91 million fee, an ordeal which dragged on from the opening of the window to its closure.

English giants Manchester United under then manager David Moyes embarked on one of the most embarrassing transfer sagas in the club’s history, pursuing the likes of Thiago, Cesc Fabregas, Leighton Baines, Ander Herrera, with talks of a return of prodigal son Cristiano Ronaldo.

After all that, they had to settle for a humble Marouane Fellaini for an inflated fee of €32.8. His signature remains a great symbol of the demise of both United and Moyes last season.

So far this transfer window we have seen players arriving at new clubs, and big names too.

Chelsea have done good business, while Manchester United, in a bid to rid Old Trafford of the ghost of Moyes, have been busy as well, with plenty of the game’s stars jumping ship. Even the infamous Luis Suarez has sunk his teeth into a tasty new challenge at Barcelona.

So what’s changed from last year’s disaster to this year’s promising start?

Firstly, there’s the World Cup. While the world is engrossed in the greatest sporting event on the planet, managers and CEOs have to deal with the limited time created by the World Cup, and the holidays players demand following the tournament. With less time available to complete the necessary deals, clubs have less power to negotiate payments, debate administrative issues, or finically embark in search for ‘the right player’.

The World Cup is also a showcase for everything good and bad in the market. Teams have information that would otherwise be unavailable to them, and act fast to ensure they get the players they want before their market price rises dramatically. On the flip side, clubs who see their players underperform will try to offload them while they can. This was the case with Luis Suarez, with Liverpool moving him on after his biting antics proved a step too far.

Secondly, after the travesty of last year, there was a realisation that in order to get things done, you have to pay at market price, even if that market price is exorbitant.

Big teams need big players, and in a price inelastic market, you need to pay whatever suppliers are willing to supply at. This gradual realisation was typified by none Arsene Wenger of all people last year.

Wenger, usually a very prudent participant in the transfer market (and by that I mean he is reminiscient of George Costanza from Seinfeld), never seemed to want to splash the cash, much to the frustration of Arsenal fans. As a consequence, Arsenal haven’t been a challenger for the title in several seasons, with only one trophy in the last nine years.

Wenger’s approach to last year’s transfer window was no different. It wasn’t until Arsenal were thumped 3-1 by mid-table team Aston Villa that Wenger realised he had to change his ways.

So he purchased star midfielder Mesut Oezil for fifty million Euros. The result of this enormous signing was a revived Arsenal, who topped the league for the most games out of any club, and it wasn’t until Oezil got injured that Arsenal looked unlikely to win the Premier League.

He showed the rest of Europe that in order to compete for trophies, you need the best, and to get the best you need to spend.

With squads still depleted, you can be sure there are still plenty of transfers to come. The competition in Europe seems better than before, and who knows, maybe it’s a sign of better things to come.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2014-07-22T10:48:31+00:00

harrison Langsford

Roar Rookie


Thanks Newbie to the Game, really appreciate it

2014-07-22T03:19:18+00:00

nachos supreme

Guest


;)

AUTHOR

2014-07-21T09:07:46+00:00

harrison Langsford

Roar Rookie


haha good point Abramovich*

2014-07-21T03:42:39+00:00

nachos supreme

Guest


Last I checked, whilst Ibra is one crazy numpty I doubt he has any axe to swing at Stamford Bridge....

AUTHOR

2014-07-20T14:38:14+00:00

harrison Langsford

Roar Rookie


2014-07-20T14:35:04+00:00

Newbie to the game

Guest


Good article and insightful, thanks Harrison.

AUTHOR

2014-07-20T14:31:17+00:00

harrison Langsford

Roar Rookie


thank you Maquiquon i appreciate your feedback. Poley is the number one option and always will be.

AUTHOR

2014-07-20T14:30:24+00:00

harrison Langsford

Roar Rookie


Firstly Kcin, Do you really think that Liverpool felt compelled to trade their best player without a shadow of a doubt so quckly? Do you really think that the biting incident didn't play a part? Compare it to the Bale saga of yesteryear and how long that went on for, there really is no comparison even though they were both up there with the most sought after talents in the world. I didn't say :Liverpool 'moved him on', but when the money came in, his infamous record of biting and racism didn't help. Secondly, Ramsey was very good last year, but what i said was that the signing of a big name player like Ozil revived the gunners and their whole playing squad. Everyone in the squad lifted as a result of someone like Ozil joining the club. Of course coaches and staff play a part, but that is the same every year, no different to this year. As with Mourinho, the axe always looms over the Stanford bridge dugout because ibrahimovic is one crazy numpty. Im sorry that i cant write a ten page essay on all the reasons for a more lubricated transfer market, but seeing that a world cup is a unique event, it is important to write on its significance when it does come around.

AUTHOR

2014-07-20T07:39:53+00:00

harrison Langsford

Roar Rookie


Marko come on, some credit where credit's due, Villa escaped relegation with... 'conviction' last season. Lambert knows what he's doing. All jokes aside thanks for your comment, and yes while your most definitely right about the potential for transfer sagas, i like to remain optimistic that clubs will get deals done relatively quickly, or if the media is building up false hype for a player, clubs should be quick to reject. With a pretty good start to the transfer market i'm looking forward to what is to come. Langa

2014-07-20T07:16:53+00:00

EPLextra

Roar Rookie


In a World Cup year, the tournament always has a massive impact on transfers. For 5-6 weeks, the media’s attention is predominantly on what happens on the field and not what happens between agents and clubs. There is less of a vacuum for the papers to fill with actual football to write about in the ‘off-season’ for the major national leagues, but there will be plenty of time for the transfer sagas between now and the first round of matches. And thanks for the reference to Aston Villa as a mid-table team. As a Villa fan I would have added 'lower' in front of that reference. Marko

2014-07-20T05:32:49+00:00

kcin

Guest


This is terrible. Firstly Dracula was not moved on by Liverpool, Barcelona offered a lump sum to good to pass up on. Secondly Arsenal were top of the league thanks to ramsey et al, not Ozil. Ozil by his standards had a disappointing campaign with the exception of his very first game. Finally the reason why this transfer window is so smooth is mostly due to the current"big club; coaches and there respective positions. Mourinho has an almost complete squad and without success this year is in trouble. Liverpool have a truckload of cash. United have catching up to do to overhaul there mediocre squad (by there standards). Barca and Real are Barca and Real......so on. The world cup does play a factor but is not the sole overriding one

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