Chali 2na
The Tuna fish that descended from Lake Michigan
Much has been made about the apparent transfer fee of Martyn Waghorn, with some forum members claiming he's not worth it. I decided to do some digging:
The first thing I did was work out the going rate for an elite* championship striker. Over the past 3 seasons, on average, this has been £11.29m
The second thing I did, was compare that figure with the fee we used to secure our own 'elite championship striker' - £4m for James Beattie in 2007.
Finally, I used those figures to find the factor that football transfer inflation has risen by since 2008 for elite championship strikers. Applying this figure (2.82) to Martyn Waghorn, we can extrapolate that in 2007, he would have cost us £1.77m**
That figure of £1.77m may not mean much on it's own, but for comparison; it's less than the £2m Charlton paid to Sunderland to acquire Andy Gray that same year.
Interestingly, that season saw Freddy Eastwood (At the time, a prolific L1 striker, unproven in the Championship) move for £2m, using that fee as a barometer, and applying the rate of inflation (2.82) we could assume that in today's money, he'd be worth £4.5m - This would imply that any club purchasing Jack Marriot shouldn't spend too much beyond that.
In conclusion, when compared to transfer fees a decade ago, £5m for Waghorn seems like relatively good business IMO.
Note: this information should be taken with a pinch of salt: the figures I used were taken from transfermarkt and the method I used to determine the inflation figure was a little crude.
*I have defined this as a striker bought with the assumption of 'guaranteed' goals (Kodija, Afobe, McCormack, Rhodes
)
**Assuming that the fee we pay for Waghorn will be £5m.
The first thing I did was work out the going rate for an elite* championship striker. Over the past 3 seasons, on average, this has been £11.29m
The second thing I did, was compare that figure with the fee we used to secure our own 'elite championship striker' - £4m for James Beattie in 2007.
Finally, I used those figures to find the factor that football transfer inflation has risen by since 2008 for elite championship strikers. Applying this figure (2.82) to Martyn Waghorn, we can extrapolate that in 2007, he would have cost us £1.77m**
That figure of £1.77m may not mean much on it's own, but for comparison; it's less than the £2m Charlton paid to Sunderland to acquire Andy Gray that same year.
Interestingly, that season saw Freddy Eastwood (At the time, a prolific L1 striker, unproven in the Championship) move for £2m, using that fee as a barometer, and applying the rate of inflation (2.82) we could assume that in today's money, he'd be worth £4.5m - This would imply that any club purchasing Jack Marriot shouldn't spend too much beyond that.
In conclusion, when compared to transfer fees a decade ago, £5m for Waghorn seems like relatively good business IMO.
Note: this information should be taken with a pinch of salt: the figures I used were taken from transfermarkt and the method I used to determine the inflation figure was a little crude.
*I have defined this as a striker bought with the assumption of 'guaranteed' goals (Kodija, Afobe, McCormack, Rhodes
**Assuming that the fee we pay for Waghorn will be £5m.