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I'm just curious to know how much does the winning team get in order to compare to the rest of the world and know what country's premiership is the most expensive.

2006-11-27 00:14:04 · 6 answers · asked by Narcanto D 1 in Sports Football English Football

6 answers

Hi Narcanto,

English Premier League Prize Money - 2005/06

Prize Money 2005/06

1
Chelsea
£9,669,220

2
Manchester United
£9,214,259

3
Liverpool
£8,729,298

4
Arsenal
£8,244,337

5
Tottenham Hotspur
£7,759,376

6
Blackburn Rovers
£7,274,415

7
Newcastle United
£6,789,454

8
Bolton Wanderers
£6,304,493

9
West Ham United
£5,819,532

10
Wigan Athletic
£5,334,571

11
Everton
£4,849,610

12
Fulham
£4,364,649

13
Charlton Athletic
£3,879,688

14
Middlesbrough
£3,394,727

15
Manchester City
£2,909,766

16
Aston Villa
£2,424,805

17
Portsmouth
£1,939,844

18
Birmingham City
£1,454,883

19
West Bromwich Albion
£969,922

20
Sunderland
£484,961



English Premier League Prize Money - 2004/05
Finishing Posn.
Club
Prize Money 2004/05

1
Chelsea
£9,669,220

2
Arsenal
£9,214,259

3
Manchester United
£8,729,220

4
Everton
£8,244,298

5
Liverpool
£7,759,376

6
Bolton Wanderers
£7,274,415

7
Middlesbrough
£6,789,454

8
Manchester City
£6,304,493

9
Tottenham Hotspur
£5,819,532

10
Aston Villa
£5,334,571

11
Charlton Athletic
£4,849,610

12
Birmingham City
£4,364,649

13
Newcastle United
£3,879,688

14
Fulham
£3,394,727

15
Blackburn Rovers
£2,909,766

16
Portsmouth
£2,424,805

17
West Bromwich Albion
£1,939,844

18
Crystal Palace
£1,454,883

19
Norwich City
£969,922

20
Southampton
£484,961



* Prize Money is the amount of dosh Premier League Clubs receive based on their final finishing position - it is more usually called the 'Merit Award' and comes from a pool of money derived from the broadcasting income the EPL receives.

From source below:

2006-11-28 20:08:03 · answer #1 · answered by skay_16 3 · 0 0

Aston Villa 0-2 Liverpool Bolton Wanderers 2-2 Newcastle United Derby County a million-0 Portsmouth Everton 2-a million Wigan Athletic Middlesbrough 0-a million Blackburn Rovers Sunderland a million-a million Tottenham Hotspur West Ham United 2-0 Manchester city Arsenal 3-a million Fulham Chelsea 2-0 Birmingham city Manchester United a million-a million examining

2016-12-13 15:01:02 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

So..
I've been using this sport betting software with great success http://www.goobypls.com/r/rd.asp?gid=570

The system tells you easy to use predictions that makes you win with a high degree of probability (86.5%)
Hope it helps.

2014-09-14 09:03:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The FA Premier League (often referred to as the Barclays Premiership in the UK and the Barclays English Premier League internationally) is a league competition for football clubs located at the top of the English football league system (above The Football League), making it England's primary football competition. It is the world's most watched sporting league and most lucrative football league, followed by over a billion people
The Premiership boasts some of the best players in the world, including many from outside England. The Premier League is the most lucrative football league in the world, with total club revenues of over £1.3 billion in 2004–05 according to Deloitte, more than 40% above its nearest competitor, Italy's Serie A.[13] Revenues will increase substantially by the 2007–08 season, when new media rights deals start (see below). Based on May 2006 exchange rates, £1.3 billion converts to annual league revenue of about US$2.44 billion. This figure is the fourth highest for any sports league worldwide, behind the annual revenues of the three most popular North American major sports leagues (the National Football League, Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association), but ahead of the National Hockey League.

The 2005–06 average attendance of 33,875 for league matches is the fourth highest of any domestic professional sports league in the world. This represents an increase of over 60% from the average attendance of 21,126 recorded in the league's first season (1992-93).[14] However, during the 1992-93 season the capacities of most stadiums were reduced as clubs replaced terraces with seats in order to meet the Taylor Report's 1994-95 deadline for all-seater stadiums.[15][16] The 2005-06 figure is lower than the Premier League's record average attendance of 35,464, set during the 2002-03 season
At the inception of the Premier League in 1992-93, just eleven players named in the starting line-ups for the first round of matches were 'foreign' (players hailing from outside of the United Kingdom or Republic of Ireland).[31] By 2000-01, the number of foreign players participating in the Premiership was 36%. In the 2004-5 season the figure had increased to 45%. On 26 December 1999, Chelsea became the first Premier League side to field an entirely foreign starting line-up,[32] and on 14 February 2005 Arsenal were the first to name a completely foreign 16-man squad for a match.[33]

Despite being an English competition, no English manager has ever actually won the Premier League. Only four different managers have won the title as of 2006: two Scots (Sir Alex Ferguson, Manchester United and Kenny Dalglish, Blackburn Rovers), a Frenchman (Arsène Wenger, Arsenal) and a Portuguese (José Mourinho, Chelsea). Two English managers have achieved second place in the Premiership. They are Ron Atkinson (Aston Villa in 1993) and Kevin Keegan (Newcastle United in 1996).

Over 260 foreign players compete in the league, and 101 players from England's domestic leagues competed in the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea and Japan. At the 2006 World Cup, the Premier League was the most represented league with more than eighty players in the competition, including 21 of the 23 players in England's squad.

As a result of the increasingly lucrative television deals, player wages rose sharply following the formation of the Premier League. In the first Premier League season the average player wage was £75,000 per year,[34] but subsequently rose by an average 20% per year for a decade,[35] peaking in the 2003-04 season, when the annual salary of the average Premier League player was £900,000.[36]

The first few seasons of the Premier League saw the record transfer fee paid by English clubs broken almost every season, a practise that resumed in the first few years of the twenty-first century. The record rose to £3.75million in June 1993 (Roy Keane, Nottingham Forest to Manchester United), £5million in July 1994 (Chris Sutton, Norwich City to Blackburn Rovers), £7million in January 1995 (Andy Cole, Newcastle United to Manchester United), £7.5million in June 1995 (Dennis Bergkamp, Inter Milan to Arsenal), £8.5million in July 1995 (Stan Collymore, Nottingham Forest to Liverpool), £15million - world record - in July 1996 (Alan Shearer, Blackburn Rovers to Newcastle United), £19million in May 2001 (Ruud van Nistelrooy, PSV Eindhoven to Manchester United), and £28.1million in July 2001 (Juan Sebastián Verón, Lazio to Manchester United). The record since July 2002 was the £29million that Manchester United paid Leeds United for Rio Ferdinand. Alan Shearer's £15million record lasted nearly five years in England, although his worldwide record was broken within a year. Rio Ferdinand's record lasted nearly four years, before it was broken in 2006 by the summer transfer of Andriy Shevchenko from A.C. Milan to Chelsea for £30 million. The creation of the Premier League, therefore, has seen the record fee paid by English clubs broken 10 times in its first 10 seasons

2006-11-27 00:24:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The FA Premier League (often referred to as the Barclays Premiership in the UK and the Barclays English Premier League internationally) is a league competition for football clubs located at the top of the English football league system (above The Football League), making it England's primary football competition. It is the world's most watched sporting league and most lucrative football league, followed by over a billion people
The Premiership boasts some of the best players in the world, including many from outside England. The Premier League is the most lucrative football league in the world, with total club revenues of over £1.3 billion in 2004–05 according to Deloitte, more than 40% above its nearest competitor, Italy's Serie A.[13] Revenues will increase substantially by the 2007–08 season, when new media rights deals start (see below). Based on May 2006 exchange rates, £1.3 billion converts to annual league revenue of about US$2.44 billion. This figure is the fourth highest for any sports league worldwide, behind the annual revenues of the three most popular North American major sports leagues (the National Football League, Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association), but ahead of the National Hockey League.

The 2005–06 average attendance of 33,875 for league matches is the fourth highest of any domestic professional sports league in the world. This represents an increase of over 60% from the average attendance of 21,126 recorded in the league's first season (1992-93).[14] However, during the 1992-93 season the capacities of most stadiums were reduced as clubs replaced terraces with seats in order to meet the Taylor Report's 1994-95 deadline for all-seater stadiums.[15][16] The 2005-06 figure is lower than the Premier League's record average attendance of 35,464, set during the 2002-03 season
At the inception of the Premier League in 1992-93, just eleven players named in the starting line-ups for the first round of matches were 'foreign' (players hailing from outside of the United Kingdom or Republic of Ireland).[31] By 2000-01, the number of foreign players participating in the Premiership was 36%. In the 2004-5 season the figure had increased to 45%. On 26 December 1999, Chelsea became the first Premier League side to field an entirely foreign starting line-up,[32] and on 14 February 2005 Arsenal were the first to name a completely foreign 16-man squad for a match.[33]

Despite being an English competition, no English manager has ever actually won the Premier League. Only four different managers have won the title as of 2006: two Scots (Sir Alex Ferguson, Manchester United and Kenny Dalglish, Blackburn Rovers), a Frenchman (Arsène Wenger, Arsenal) and a Portuguese (José Mourinho, Chelsea). Two English managers have achieved second place in the Premiership. They are Ron Atkinson (Aston Villa in 1993) and Kevin Keegan (Newcastle United in 1996).

Over 260 foreign players compete in the league, and 101 players from England's domestic leagues competed in the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea and Japan. At the 2006 World Cup, the Premier League was the most represented league with more than eighty players in the competition, including 21 of the 23 players in England's squad.

As a result of the increasingly lucrative television deals, player wages rose sharply following the formation of the Premier League. In the first Premier League season the average player wage was £75,000 per year,[34] but subsequently rose by an average 20% per year for a decade,[35] peaking in the 2003-04 season, when the annual salary of the average Premier League player was £900,000.[36]

The first few seasons of the Premier League saw the record transfer fee paid by English clubs broken almost every season, a practise that resumed in the first few years of the twenty-first century. The record rose to £3.75million in June 1993 (Roy Keane, Nottingham Forest to Manchester United), £5million in July 1994 (Chris Sutton, Norwich City to Blackburn Rovers), £7million in January 1995 (Andy Cole, Newcastle United to Manchester United), £7.5million in June 1995 (Dennis Bergkamp, Inter Milan to Arsenal), £8.5million in July 1995 (Stan Collymore, Nottingham Forest to Liverpool), £15million - world record - in July 1996 (Alan Shearer, Blackburn Rovers to Newcastle United), £19million in May 2001 (Ruud van Nistelrooy, PSV Eindhoven to Manchester United), and £28.1million in July 2001 (Juan Sebastián Verón, Lazio to Manchester United). The record since July 2002 was the £29million that Manchester United paid Leeds United for Rio Ferdinand. Alan Shearer's £15million record lasted nearly five years in England, although his worldwide record was broken within a year. Rio Ferdinand's record lasted nearly four years, before it was broken in 2006 by the summer transfer of Andriy Shevchenko from A.C. Milan to Chelsea for £30 million. The creation of the Premier League, therefore, has seen the record fee paid by English clubs broken 10 times in its first 10 seasons

2006-11-27 03:48:07 · answer #5 · answered by irish dubliner 2 · 0 1

the team gets BILL GATES's lifes fortunes!!!!

2006-11-27 00:25:09 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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