SportsView
·21 de marzo de 2025
How much Liverpool will spend this summer as club heads for ‘record’ revenue

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Yahoo sportsSportsView
·21 de marzo de 2025
Liverpool have made giant strides both on and off the pitch.
Despite losing the Carabao Cup final against Newcastle United, and bowing out of the Champions League in the round of 16 stage against Paris Saint-Germain, Liverpool can still end the season on a high by winning the Premier League.
With nine games left to play, winning the league is a must. Liverpool would have increased their revenue more had they still remained in the Champions League, but they are still on course for a massive income in 2024-25.
If they win the league, they will do so with much lower squad cost than any of Manchester City’s recent winning teams, and while Liverpool’s wage cost is very high, they can still expect to make some profit.
The club’s commercial growth has overtaken Manchester United’s for the first time in the Premier League era, and with matchday income rising thanks to the stadium expansion, Liverpool are on their way for a record revenue this campaign.
According to a report from The Athletic, Liverpool will break another club record for revenue this season. The Reds should top £700m in income in 2024-25, a barrier only previously broken by Manchester City on the domestic front.
It is predicted that Liverpool’s pre-tax profit this season could hit the £40m-50m mark. And even if the wage bill reaches £400m, Liverpool could still clear £30m profit.
The club’s new kit-manufacturer deal with Adidas, which will begin in August 2025, is expected to generate even more revenue than its arrangement with Nike.
The report claims that it is really hard to predict at the moment, but the Reds have money to spend, and they are likely to spend in the summer.
The Fenway Sports Group works on the philosophy of “sustainability,” and Michael Edwards and Richard Hughes subscribe to that mantra.
The transfer window is going to be tricky. Will Liverpool be able to keep hold of Trent Alexander-Arnold, Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk?
Even if one of them departs (or three in the worst-case scenario), it will see a massive drop in the wage bill.
In addition, will Liverpool be able to offload players like Darwin Nunez, Luis Diaz, or Diogo Jota at a high price? Will Liverpool try to sign players like Alexander Isak by paying a record-breaking £150m transfer fee?
It is a matter of conjecture, but what should excite the Liverpool fan base is that the club is financially in a great position and heading in the right direction.
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