How Liverpool can afford £265m spending spree - and why they could still sign Alexander Isak and more before the end of the transfer window



The Reds have already made a string of expensive signings, but they still have the cash to realise their dream deal

Liverpool fans have always enjoyed singing "The Reds have got no money but we'll still win the league", and last season's Premier League title triumph was certainly notable for the fact that it was achieved with just one summer signing in Federico Chiesa - who cost just £10 million ($13.5m) and barely played.

However, the idea that the club is strapped for cash has always been grossly misleading. Liverpool's owners, Fenway Sports Group (FSG), aren't poor; they're prudent. When there has been a need - or indeed an opportunity - to spend big on a potential game-changer, the Americans have been very willing to stump up the cash.

Remember, record-breaking fees were paid for Virgil van Dijk and Alisson Becker in 2018 and laid the foundation upon which Jurgen Klopp's era of sustained success was constructed, while the midfield overhaul in the summer of 2023 undeniably played a pivotal role in Liverpool running away with the league last season.

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However, no previous splurge even comes close to the spending spree FSG have sanctioned during the current summer transfer - which isn't even over yet. Indeed, with more than five weeks to go until deadline day, Liverpool have already spent a staggering £265m ($359m) - and that's without getting into add-ons and bonuses.

So, how are the Reds paying for all of these new players? Will they now need to sell to balance the books? And could there actually be even more new arrivals before the close of the window on September 1?

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    'Rowing in the same direction'

    Liverpool's club-record outlay for a single window has astounded a lot of Reds - particularly those that previously criticised FSG for their perceived parsimony. Within certain sections of the fanbase, there was a belief that former boss Klopp could have won even more trophies had he been backed to the same extent in the transfer market as Pep Guardiola, the manager of Liverpool's great rivals Manchester City. However, Kieran Maguire, author of 'The Price of Football' and co-host of the podcast of the same name, says that the majority of Reds have always understood and appreciated how well their club is run.

    "Whenever I go to Anfield and meet Liverpool fans, they always strike me as one of the most knowledgeable sets of supporters out there," he tells GOAL. "But that's the people going to the ground every week. The eejits on social media are the problem. They think that the solution to everything is spending £200m on as many players as possible in each and every window. As a result, these fans make an awful lot of noise on social media - without having any knowledge of how to run a football club.

    "I mean, if I go and watch a re-run of ER, it doesn't make me a medical expert! But you've got this situation where a person that has won five league titles in a row with Liverpool on FIFA thinks he knows as much as the professionals calling the shots at Anfield. It's lunacy.

    2I would urge anyone who has criticised Liverpool to read Ian Graham's book 'How to win the Premier League' - because the club's approach is brilliant. It's basically, 'We will only bring players in if they're of net benefit to the club.' And that's it, it's that simple. Crucially, though, the coach agrees with that approach, the directors agree with it, and the money men agree with that. Basically, at Liverpool, everyone is rowing in the same direction."

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    Problem-solving skills

    Maguire's insight helps explain why there was no sense of panic at Anfield last summer while those on the outside were once again lamenting Liverpool's failure to sign a defensive midfielder.

    Sporting director Richard Hughes, who had only just arrived from Bournemouth, thought he had wrapped up a deal for Martin Zubimendi - only for the Spain international to perform a dramatic, eleventh-hour U-turn and decide to stay at Real Sociedad. Liverpool had no Plan B either. There was no Zubimendi alternative, which seemed strange. But Hughes and the rest of the Reds' recruitment team clearly didn't feel that there was another No.6 on the market capable of improving Slot's squad - and they were right.

    As it transpired, Liverpool were already in possession of a solution to their defensive midfield problem - and Slot found it. The Dutchman's decision to deploy his compatriot Ryan Gravenberch in front of the back four proved an absolute masterstroke - as underlined by the Bayern Munich flop being crowned the Premier League's Young Player of the Season for the pivotal part he played in Liverpool's championship success.

    A lot of other coaches would have reacted very negatively to being given just one signing to work with at a new club (Antonio Conte immediately comes to mind!), but Slot simply got on with the task at hand - just as he had always done at Feyenoord, where he had overachieved with fewer resources than traditional rivals Ajax and PSV. In fact, Slot's resourcefulness was one of the key reasons why Liverpool hired him, so his problem-solving skills came as no surprise to Michael Edwards & Co.

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    Why now?

    Of course, it also helped that Klopp had left Liverpool in rude health - something that Slot acknowledged in several press conferences. As he repeatedly pointed out, it isn't easy to improve an already-strong squad. However, the plan was always to bring in new players at the end of the 2024-25 campaign - no matter how well the season had gone.

    As transfer market reporter Ben Jacobs tells GOAL, "FSG are always willing to back Liverpool managers when there is a need to do so - and this is a time when Liverpool feel they need a revamp. There are several reasons for that, but I think the main thing is that Richard Hughes is settled into his role now and we're also a year into Slot's reign, so he's had time to assess his squad and see what else he needs.

    "The first priority was obviously keeping Mo Salah and Virgil van Dijk. The second was adding to the squad - and Liverpool wanted to do that now so that there was effectively an overlap, meaning the players that have come in will be effectively competing for a starting spot with those that they'll end up replacing. For example, they've brought in Giorgio Mamardashvili while Alisson is still there, and they've brought in Milos Kerkez while Andy Robertson is still there - and this is the Liverpool way.

    "They're going big now in order to overhaul the squad before there's a drastic need to overhaul the squad. And that takes the pressure off the players coming in, because they won't be thrown straight in at the deep end. I think that Liverpool also realise that if they don't make these signings now, during a summer when other Premier League teams are spending big, there is a risk of losing your status as the best team in England.

    "So, there's an element of urgency - but Liverpool's particularly brand of urgency has always been very calm and considered. They move quietly in the market and ignore a lot of the noise."

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