Football’s Biggest (Mis)spenders

Source: Statista

At the elite level, money rules football. But does spending the most money necessarily equate to a team ruling the sport? As this infographic shows, looking back over the last ten years, the clubs with the biggest net transfer spends have delivered very mixed levels of performance on the pitch. What might immediately stand out, aside from the chronic board-level mismanagement at Manchester United, are the clubs which have failed to win a single domestic league trophy in the analyzed time period.

Everton is surely the worst example on this list. Currently sitting in 10th place in the Premier League and having burned through eight managers in the last nine years, the club’s net spend of €429 million has really not paid off at all. This leaves new boss Frank Lampard with a difficult job: leading an ambitious club with high standards but no direction or recent pedigree.

Where it clearly has been effective (at least at maintaining high levels of success, if not buying new levels of achievement), is at Manchester City, PSG and Juventus. Barcelona, on the other hand, has been led similarly badly at board level to Manchester United. In the Catalan club’s case, spending wasn’t just not effective on the pitch, it led directly to the dire financial situation which caused its inability to keep hold of its greatest (ever?) player, Lionel Messi – now at the club third on this list, PSG.

The Most Successful Nations at the Olympic Winter Games

Source: Statista

Germany is associated mostly with its soccer prowess when it comes to sports, but the country is also a true winter sports nation. A look at the all-time medal table of the Olympic Winter Games shows that Germany has won more than 400 Olympic winter medals since 1924, ahead of Norway, Russia and the United States. Germany has also won the most Winter Olympics gold medals – 150. Canada, which comes sixth in the all-time medals table, has won a disproportionate number of golds, placing it fifth when only counting won competitions.

Whether Germany can further extend its lead at this year’s Olympic Winter Games in Beijing remains to be seen. At the most recent installment of the Games in South Korea’s Pyeongchang, German athletes won 31 medals in total – the most in 16 years. For U.S. athletes, the latest Games were a disappointment. 23 medals were the worst result in 20 years. The best year for U.S. winter Olympionites were the 2002 Games at home in Salt Lake City, when the U.S. snatched up 34 medals.

The following chart count all medals German teams have acquired, from Nazi Germany to Germany divided into East and West until after reunification. For Russia, Soviet Union medals are counted as well as those won by the ‘Olympic Athletes from Russia’ delegation which was created due to Russia’s doping scandal of 2015. Russian Athletes are still barred from taking part in the Olympics under the Russian flag.