Football
The highest paid coaches in the Premier League: Ten Hag in fifth place, coach of Soucek and Coufal rounds out the top ten
The Premier League is the most watched football league in the world. Thanks to this, clubs there can afford to buy and pay big money not only for players but also for coaches. Check out our ranking of the 10 highest paid coaches in England’s top competition.
The Premier League is the most watched football league in the world. Thanks to this, clubs there can afford to buy and pay big money not only for players but also for coaches. Check out our ranking of the 10 highest paid coaches in England’s top competition.
The Premier League is a money machine. Virtually even the weakest teams in the top English league manage to overpay the top teams in the rest of Europe’s top leagues. Therefore, it is not surprising that coaches, as well as players, earn interesting money.
The top ten highest earning coaches in the Premier League are rounded off by the bosses of Tomáš Souček, Vladimír Coufal and Alex Král. David Moyes, who now leads West Ham, earns £5 million a year, or just under 15 million Czech crowns.
One million pounds better off is the legendary Frank Lampard, once a star and coach of Chelsea, now leading Everton and hoping to successfully lead his new team to salvation. With seven million pounds, Southampton coach Ralph Hasenhüttl is again one million better off than Lampard.
Rather surprisingly, it is only at number seven on the list that we would look for Thomas Tuchel, the coach of Chelsea in London. He earns £8 million a year. Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta earns 8.3 million.
In the top five we have the new Manchester United coach Erik ten Hag, who will take the helm in the summer after joining from Ajax. With £9 million a year, he is just in fifth place. Brendan Rodgers, the strategist at Leicester, earns a million more.
The top three, then, is probably no longer surprising. The bronze position is held by Tottenham’s Antonio Conte (£15 million), silver would go to Liverpool’s Jürgen Klopp (£16 million) and gold to Manchester City’s Pep Guardiola with £19 million (over £556 million).
Source: The Sun
-
Motorsport5 days ago
Jorge Martín is rewriting history! the 26-year-old Spaniard became the new MotoGP World Champion, Bagnaia succumbed despite his best efforts
-
Motorsport6 days ago
Bagnaia keeps hopes of a miracle alive with MotoGP sprint win in Barcelona, third-placed Martín one step away from title