The Spoiler

Are Villa still the Premier League penny-pinchers?


Bigmouth defender shows some things don’t change at the Villa

Mustapha Hadji in happier times

Curtis Davies may be spending the next couple of days practising the ps and qs ahead of attending the England wrap party tomorrow evening, but his agents have had no such qualms about speaking out of turn recently. Castigating Martin O’Neill for refusing to open negotiations on a new contract (due when Davies has played 60 matches for Villa,) Davies’ people hinted that dark forces were at work when their client, who has featured in 58 Villa games thus far, was left out of the side earlier this season.

Nonsense and piffle of course, but it did remind thespoiler of a story from the Doug Ellis reign at Villa Park, involving Mustapha Hadji. Having spent months negotiating a fee with Coventry chairman (and fierce rival) Bryan Richardson, Ellis was still smarting from what he saw as an excessive final fee of £2.5million between the clubs. Richardson on the other hand, felt £2.5million in a summer which saw Blackburn Rovers pay £6.5m for Corrado Grabbi, and Villa themselves lose £6m in a Bosko Balaban shaped hole, was a little on the cheap side. The Coventry chairman thus engineered a £500,00 payment due when Hadji started 25 matches for Villa.

John Gregory failed to last the season at Villa, and his replacement Graham Taylor preferred more workmanlike performers. By the end of the 02-03 season, Hadji was marooned on 24 matches, a bit-part player at the Villa. Enter Mr Ellis and his opportunity for revenge on Richardson. New manager David O’Leary was warned not to start Hadji by any means, and O’Leary was forced to select such Villa luminaries as Mark Kinsella, Peter Whittingham and Ulises de la Cruz in place of the experienced Moroccan playmaker. Hadji was soon shipped off to Espanyol, leaving Coventry, by now in deep financial trouble, half a million quid light.

1 CommentTags: , , ,

Posted: October 13th, 2009 by Eliot Pollak

The top ten over-priced English players in the Premier League


Proof that clubs are willing to pay much more for domestic goods

Darren Bent and Marlon Harewood

The national team couldn’t muster the will to qualify for Euro 2008, but somehow clubs continue to demand mega money for home grown talent. With David Bentley costing a princely sum, Gareth Barry’s non-negotiable fee and Andy Johnson’s imminent trade, it’s clear that players are far too expensive if they were born on this tiny island.

Hence, we think the time is right to consider ten of the most overpriced Englishman currently plying their trade in the Premier League, comparing their lofty prices with some better value foreign equivalents…

Shaun Wright-Phillips
Manchester City were heartbroken to lose their star player to Chelsea, but in hindsight getting £21 million was fantastic business. Four league goals in three seasons compared to ten in his last year at Citeh highlights his failure to step up.
Foreign equivalent: Amantino Mancini to Inter - £10 million

Owen Hargreaves
£17 million might not have been too steep for a 26-year-old midfielder, but his failure to dislodge Michael Carrick, his predecessor in the overpriced stakes, shows he has yet to live up to his price-tag.
Foreign equivalent: Yaya Toure to Barcelona - just over £7 million

Scott Parker
The midfielder moved from Charlton to Chelsea to Newcastle and then to West Ham for a combined fee of £23.5 million, but has still managed just three England caps. Injury limited Parker to 17 league starts last season, meaning West Ham are yet to receive value for their £7 million investment.
Foreign equivalent: Tim Cahill to Everton - £1.5 million

Dave Kitson
The ginger striker’s invaluable contribution to Reading’s relegation battle was

Read more

29 CommentsTags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Posted: August 4th, 2008 by Ryan Bailey