Pep Guardiola’s spending closing in on £1billion mark as Manchester City boss
Jack Grealish arrived from Aston Villa as the Premier League’s first £100million player as Guardiola continues to spend since he joined City in 2016.
![Jack Grealish, left, is Pep Guardiola’s latest big-money signing (Mike Egerton/Adam Davy/PA)](https://static.independent.co.uk/2021/08/06/14/06132053-295743c7-b801-4267-897f-96d9f45c557e.jpg)
Thursday’s signing of Jack Grealish added to Pep Guardiola’s spending with Manchester City and the £1billion mark could be broken should they complete a move for Harry Kane this summer.
Grealish arrived from Aston Villa as the Premier League’s first £100million player while Kane, who would most likely cost even more, has yet to report back for pre-season training at Tottenham as he seeks to force through a move.
Here, the PA news agency takes a look at Guardiola’s spending since he joined City in 2016.
Season by season
![Aymeric Laporte, Ederson and Kyle Walker, second left to right, contributed to 2017-18’s spending spike (Shaun Botterill/PA)](https://static.independent.co.uk/2021/08/06/14/3cf4e06a2153747bb2e39e5c8c375767Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNjI4MzM3NTcx-2.54743974.jpg)
While many fees are undisclosed and feature add-ons over the course of the deal, leading to a reliance on reported or estimated figures, Guardiola’s gross spend is at least £880m after Grealish’s arrival.
His biggest outlay came in his second season in charge, 2017-18, when the club spent over £200m on defensive reinforcements alone and around £273m in total.
Goalkeeper Ederson arrived for £35m in the summer window alongside high-priced full-backs Kyle Walker Benjamin Mendy and Danilo, with centre-back Aymeric Laporte arriving for £57m in the January window. The £43m summer signing of Bernardo Silva added to the considerable outlay.
The following season was the only one with Guardiola spending less than £100m, with winger Riyad Mahrez arriving from Leicester for £60m but no other big-money signings of note.
John Stones, Leroy Sane, Gabriel Jesus and Ilkay Gundogan contributed to a near-£170m spend in Guardiola’s debut season in 2016-17, Rodri and Joao Cancelo were twin £60m-plus arrivals in 2019-20 and centre-backs Ruben Dias and Nathan Ake alone cost a combined £103m last summer.
Biggest deals
![Jack Grealish becomes Manchester City and the Premier League’s record signing (PA graphic)](https://static.independent.co.uk/2021/08/06/14/06130142-ee69193d-250d-402b-b4c3-fa3a51e48f57.jpg)
Grealish is comfortably the club’s record signing and the first Premier League fee in nine figures, providing a huge jolt to City’s spending even if his records may soon fall to Kane.
Rodri heads a clutch of deals at £60m or just over, along with Dias, Mahrez and Cancelo, while Laporte was not far behind.
Deals between £45m and £50m have also been commonplace, with Mendy, Stones and Walker in that bracket and add-ons taking the latter beyond £50m, while Bernardo and Ake also cost over £40m and Sane and Ederson £35m or more. Jesus, Danilo, Gundogan and Ferran Torres also broke the £20m barrier.
Manchester monopoly
![City and Manchester United have hoovered up England’s top talent (PA graphic)](https://static.independent.co.uk/2021/08/06/14/06131328-f965e3a1-f53a-487d-ad68-c830431d2984.jpg)
The most expensive English players in history have overwhelmingly moved to Manchester, with City and rivals United both heavily represented on that list.
Grealish follows England team-mate and City academy product Jadon Sancho, who joined United from Dortmund for £73m, as a big-money arrival this summer with United defender Harry Maguire’s £80m arrival from Leicester in 2019 splitting the pair at the top of the all-time list.
Walker, Raheem Sterling and United full-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka all cost around £50m, with only Chelsea full-back Ben Chilwell and Arsenal newcomer Ben White splitting up the one-city monopoly.
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