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Friday, June 12, 2009

Cristiano Ronaldo Transfer: Manchester United's Most Expensive Sales

If Cristiano Ronaldo completes his £80 million move to Real Madrid, the fee will treble the amount Manchester United received for England midfield David Beckham.

Beckham joined Real for £25m six years ago, a small figure in comparison to the fee Real are preparing to pay for Ronaldo.

Most expensive players out of Manchester United:

July 2003: David Beckham to Real Madrid for £25m
The fact that he is still playing for England six years on suggests the fee, by comparison, was modest.

Aug 2001: Jaap Stam to Lazio for £16.5m
The big Dutchman fell out with Sir Alex Ferguson and so the parting was not unexpected.

Aug 2003: Juan Sebastien Veron to Chelsea for £15m
United took a £13m loss on Veron in just two years, but his time at Chelsea was even more unimpressive.

July 2006: Ruud van Nistelrooy to Real Madrid for £11m
Like Ronaldo, Van Nistelrooy did not hide his desire to join Real, and made a good impact before age caught up with him.

Dec 2001: Andy Cole to Blackburn for £8m
One of the most prolific scorers in Premier League history, Ferguson sold him at probably the right time.

June 2005: Paul Ince to Inter Milan for £7m
England midfielder was reluctant to leave Old Trafford, but his experience in Serie A helped him on his path to management.

Aug 2007: Alan Smith to Newcastle for £6m
Smith wanted first-team football after struggling with injuries, but his career has stuttered ever since.

July 2007: Kieran Richardson to Sunderland for £5.5m
Initially regarded as one of the next generation of bright young things but an inability to hold a first team place saw him move on.

May 2008: Gerard Pique to Barcelona for £5m
Came of age following his move to Barcelona. He made just 14 appearances for United, having signed as a kid.

Aug 1995: Andrei Kanchelskis to Everton for £5m
Another player to have fallen out with Ferguson, he arrived amid fanfares but despite some famous performances, overall his contribution was minimal.

source : telegraph.co.uk

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