The Spanish giants continue to be the benchmark in the Football Money League as they have expanded their lead over the top clubs from England, Germany and Italy
- Real Madrid crowned as world's richest club for eighth year in a row
- Top-six placings remain unchanged
- Clubs from five different countries in top 20
- Manchester City, Borussia Dortmund and Napoli climb most places (5)
- EPL has most representatives
- Italy continues to struggle
- Combined revenues grow 10 percent
Real Madrid and Barcelona
once more dominate football’s rich list as the Spanish duo are still
miles ahead of their rivals from England, Germany, Italy and France.
According to the 2012 Deloitte Football Money League, published on
Thursday, the Liga giants remain the only clubs with annual revenue over
450 million euros.
Real Madrid tops the Football Money League
for the eighth year in succession, thus equalling Manchester United’s
dominance in the top position during the first eight years of the Money
League, and became the first club in any sport to surpass the 500
millions euro revenue threshold in a single year.
"It is an
impressive achievement for Real Madrid to have surpassed 500 million
euros in revenue in a single year. Real have led the way in the
phenomenal rate of revenue growth achieved by the game’s top clubs," Dan
Jones, Partner in the Sports Business Group at Deloitte said.
However,
the reigning Spanish champions are being chased hard by archrival
Barcelona, whose growth in 2011-12 leaves the club only 17m euros short
of the 500m euro mark. Even though the Catalans couldn’t quite match
their on-pitch success from 2010-11, the club enjoyed 32.3m euro (seven
percent) revenue growth.
United’s failure to qualify for the
knockout stages of the Champions League in 2011-12 meant it was unable
to prevent a Spanish one-two for the fourth successive year, but Sir
Alex Ferguson's side remains the proud No. 3 in the rankings.
For the fifth successive year, the clubs comprising the top six places in the Money League remain the same.
"An
unchanged top six emphasises the fact that these clubs have some of the
largest fanbases and hence strongest revenues, in both domestic and
international markets," Jones commented.
The Money League top 20
again comprises clubs from the ‘big five’ European leagues, seven of
which come from the English Premier League, while Italy has five teams
in the top 20, and Germany four. Spain and France, meanwhile, has to
settle for two representatives each.
"It’s always interesting to
see the disparity between the top two in Spain and the rest of the
league. There are no other Spanish clubs in the top 20. A key change
that would improve the overall state of finances in Spanish football
would be a collective broadcast deal. It sounds like the Spanish
government have put collective payments on the agenda on that level
which, if it happens, can only help with the competitiveness of the
division," Mark Roberts, Senior Consultant within the Sports Business
Group at Deloitte, stated.
The top 10 consists of teams from only
four leagues, as Ligue 1 sides Olympique de Marseille and Olympique
Lyonnais sit only 16th and 17th respectively.
Manchester City
(seventh) is this year’s joint highest climbers, along with Borussia
Dortmund (11th) and Napoli (15th), moving up five places and claiming a
top 10 position for the first time.
DELOITTE MONEY LEAGUE -
THE TOP 10
CLUB
1. Real Madrid
2. Barcelona
3. Manchester Utd
4. Bayern Munich
5. Chelsea
6. Arsenal
7. Manchester City
8. AC Milan
9. Liverpool
10. Juventus
11-12 REVENUE
€512.6m
€483m
€395.9m
€368.4m
€322.6m
€290.3m
€285.6m
€256.9m
€233.2m
€195.4m
"City’s Premier League title-winning season combined with participation
in the Champions League, helped drive 51 percent revenue growth to
285.6m euros, the largest absolute and relative growth of any Money
League club," Austin Houlihan, Senior Manager in the Sports Business
Group at Deloitte, said.
As pointed out before, the English
Premier League has the most representatives, and this situation seems
unlikely to change any time soon.
"The Premier League still has
the most representatives in the top 20 of the list. Clubs will get
another 20-30m euros from the new broadcasting deal so in the future
there will be more English clubs challenging for those positions. The
most there has been in the list is eight but I think we could be seeing
as much of half of the list represented by the Premier League," Roberts
pointed out.
Italy's future on the other hand seems far less rosy as the nation's facilities generally don't match its reputation.
"The
poor financial performance of Italian clubs goes back to their matchday
revenues. Juventus have benefited from their new stadium, which
increased their matchday income by about 20m euros. For the Milan clubs
and the Rome clubs, the stadia is a limiting factor on their revenue
generation. They simply don’t have the facilities and don’t get the
gates to compete with matchday incomes in other countries. Italy has
gone to collective selling of broadcasting and that is a positive start
in improving that," said Roberts.
The combined revenues of the
world’s 20 highest earning football clubs have grown 10 percent on the
previous year to reach 4.8 billion euros in 2011-12.
"The combined revenues of the top 20 clubs have quadrupled since we began our analysis in 1996-97," Jones explained.
“Whilst
eight of the top 20 clubs experienced a drop in revenue in 2011-12, in
most cases this was due to less successful on-pitch performances in
European club competitions, rather than wider recessionary impacts.
"Combined,
the 20 Money League clubs contribute over one-quarter of the total
revenues of the European football market. The top 20 can be expected to
generate over 5bn euros between them in 2012-13."
Commenting
on the impact of UEFA’s financial fair play break-even requirement,
Paul Rawnsley, a Director in the Sports Business Group at Deloitte said:
"Whilst the Money League covers clubs’ revenue performance,
there is an increasing focus within European football on clubs achieving
more sustainable levels of expenditure relative to revenues,
particularly given UEFA's financial fair play break-even
requirement.
"Disciplined and responsible governance
structures and financial management within European football, whilst
providing the platform for investment in facilities and youth
development, should only be encouraged."
All revenue figures in the Money League report are based on the 2011-12 season or the most recent available calendar year.
It
focuses on each club's revenues from day to day football operations,
including matchday ticket and corporate hospitality sales, broadcast
rights revenues including distributions from participation in European
club competitions, sponsorship, merchandising, and other commercial
operations, but excluding transfer income.
THE TOP 10
1. Real Madrid
2. Barcelona
3. Manchester Utd
4. Bayern Munich
5. Chelsea
6. Arsenal
7. Manchester City
8. AC Milan
9. Liverpool
10. Juventus
€512.6m
€483m
€395.9m
€368.4m
€322.6m
€290.3m
€285.6m
€256.9m
€233.2m
€195.4m
Commenting
on the impact of UEFA’s financial fair play break-even requirement,
Paul Rawnsley, a Director in the Sports Business Group at Deloitte said:
"Whilst the Money League covers clubs’ revenue performance, there is an increasing focus within European football on clubs achieving more sustainable levels of expenditure relative to revenues, particularly given UEFA's financial fair play break-even requirement.
"Disciplined and responsible governance structures and financial management within European football, whilst providing the platform for investment in facilities and youth development, should only be encouraged."
All revenue figures in the Money League report are based on the 2011-12 season or the most recent available calendar year.
It focuses on each club's revenues from day to day football operations, including matchday ticket and corporate hospitality sales, broadcast rights revenues including distributions from participation in European club competitions, sponsorship, merchandising, and other commercial operations, but excluding transfer income.
"Whilst the Money League covers clubs’ revenue performance, there is an increasing focus within European football on clubs achieving more sustainable levels of expenditure relative to revenues, particularly given UEFA's financial fair play break-even requirement.
"Disciplined and responsible governance structures and financial management within European football, whilst providing the platform for investment in facilities and youth development, should only be encouraged."
All revenue figures in the Money League report are based on the 2011-12 season or the most recent available calendar year.
It focuses on each club's revenues from day to day football operations, including matchday ticket and corporate hospitality sales, broadcast rights revenues including distributions from participation in European club competitions, sponsorship, merchandising, and other commercial operations, but excluding transfer income.
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