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Manic Monday

MANCHESTER United swooped from nowhere yesterday to make striker Radamel Falcao the surprise big signing on the last day of Europe’s record-breaking summer transfer window.

British media said the Colombian would move from Monaco in a one year loan that pushes United’s spending since the opening of the transfer market on June 9 above £150 million (RM825 million).

Teams from the top leagues in England, Spain, Germany, Italy and France have laid out more than US$2.1 billion (RM6.72 billion) during the transfer window and the frenzied last day, with the window shutting at 6am (Malaysian time) today, was likely to see the figure rise substantially.

Manchester United have been the single biggest spenders, ahead of Spain’s Real Madrid.

Manchester United signed Daley Blind from Ajax Amsterdam and also brought in Argentine international Angel di Maria from Real Madrid for £59 million, Spanish international Ander Herrera, England defender Luke Shaw and another Argentine Marcos Rojo.

The arrival of 28-year-old Falcao sparked new moves around United, who have failed to win any of their first three games in the Premier League.

The club’s Mexican striker Javier Hernandez went to Real Madrid on a season-long loan.

“Real Madrid and Manchester United have reached an agreement for the loan of Javier Hernandez, who will be tied to the club for this season” the Spanish club said in a statement yesterday. “Real Madrid reserves the option to buy the player.”

United’s England striker Danny Welbeck was also tipped to move during the day. Their Japanese striker Shinji Kagawa returned to former club Borussia Dortmund on Sunday.

Manchester City’s England defender Micah Richards was in Italy for a medical with Fiorentina, the Italian side said. Chelsea’s Dutch midfielder Marco van Ginkel has gone to AC Milan.

Italy’s World Cup striker Alessio Cerci moved from Torino to Atletico Madrid, who have signed 10 players for their campaign to defend the Spanish title.

According to Fifa Transfer Matching System, which monitors the global market, the big five leagues had already smashed the US$2.02 billion spent on last year’s transfer market.

Spending is dramatically higher in England, Spain and to a lesser degree Germany.

According to Deloitte’s sports business group, more than US$1.2 billion had been spent by England’s 20 Premier League clubs up to Friday.

That was already more than US$165 million above last year’s transfer window and British media said the total figure would pass US$1.33 billion by the end of late yesterday.

On top of United’s big buys, Liverpool also spent more than US$190 million (mainly to buy Mario Balotelli, Adam Lallana and Dejan Lovren). Chelsea laid out more than US$125 (including for Cesc Fabregas and Diego Costa) and Arsenal more than US$103 million.

English clubs spent about US$300 million on Spanish players. But, according to Fifa, Spain’s current spending is closing on US$600 million and already three times higher than last year’s pre-season transfer window.

A spending splurge by Real Madrid and Barcelona has accounted for the buying.

Barcelona paid Liverpool more than US$125 million for Luis Suarez, while Real Madrid spent a reported US$108 million on Monaco’s James Rodriguez and more than US$35 million on German World Cup midfielder Toni Kroos.

The market has fallen just as dramatically in Italy and France, where the poor economy and UEFA’s financial fair play regulations have hit the football business.

Top French sides Paris St Germain and Monaco spent 75 per cent less this year on new players than in the 2013 transfer window.

Spending by Italian clubs approaching US$200 million was 45 per cent down on last year. AC Milan took Chelsea’s Fernando Torres in a loan deal on Saturday. AFP

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