The sun is out, the sky is blue and up and down the country managers are plotting transfer coups. Managers live and die by the decisions that they make in the summer and when it comes to buying the player who will transform their club’s fortunes they have to tread carefully. That East European forward that they have seen only on video could turn out to be as good as Dimitar Berbatov, or as bad as Florin Raducioiu. That skilful defender that an agent is talking up could be the next Alan Hansen, or the new Titus Bramble. If you are a manager with money to spend, put your feet up and seek inspiration in our list of the Top 50 Best Transfers – it could save your job.
50 MICHAEL CHOPRA (Newcastle United to Cardiff City, £500,000, 2006)
Did not make the grade at St JamesÂ’ Park but made up for lost time by scoring 22 times in his first season at Ninian Park, more than David Nugent managed for Preston. It is thought that David Jones could now get 12 times the fee that he paid Newcastle.
49 ZAT KNIGHT (Rushall Olympic to Fulham, 30 tracksuits, 1999)
Knight has played for England twice but seven years ago he was worth 30 tracksuits. Strictly speaking, Fulham were under no obligation to hand over the kit – there was no fee due for the central defender – but Mohamed Al Fayed was feeling generous.
48 BRAD FRIEDEL (Liverpool to Blackburn Rovers, free, 2000)
Graeme Souness has had his fingers burnt in the transfer market more often than most managers, but when it came to Friedel his judgment was spot on. The United States goalkeeper did not convince at Anfield but at Blackburn he has become one of the best No 1s in the top flight.
47 CHRIS COLEMAN (Blackburn Rovers to Fulham, £2 million, 1997)
Eyebrows were raised when Coleman dropped two divisions to the third tier to play under Kevin Keegan at Fulham but the Wales defender can have few regrets about taking the plunge. As well as captaining the side up to the Premier League, Coleman replaced Jean Tigana as manager in 2003 and kept the club in the top flight on a tight budget for three seasons.
46 BILLY SHARP (Sheffield United to Scunthorpe United, £100,000, 2005)
Failed to impress Neil Warnock at Bramall Lane and was sold to Scunthorpe for only £100,000 in 2005. Scored 53 times in 82 league appearances at Glanford Park before United, now under Bryan Robson, realised the error of their ways and bought him back for £2 million this summer.
45 FRANNY LEE (Bolton Wanderers to Manchester City, £60,000, 1967)
Anyone who can inspire Manchester City to win the title has to be on this list. In 1971-72, “Lee One Pen” scored 35 times, including 15 penalties, most of which he “won”. Set up a successful toilet roll manufacturing business after he retired in 1976.
44 KERRY DIXON (Reading to Chelsea, £150,000, 1983)
Terrible hairstyle, brilliant striker. Dixon was the heart and soul of Chelsea when Stamford Bridge was a dump and Roman Abramovich was selling toys on a market stall. Andriy Shevchenko needs to score another 180 times to overtake DixonÂ’s total of 193 Chelsea goals.
43 PHIL NEAL (Northampton Town to Liverpool, £66,000, 1974)
Before Gary Neville, there was Phil Neal. The dependable right back, who was Bob PaisleyÂ’s first signing as Liverpool manager, won seven league medals, as well as four European Cups at Anfield, where he made more than 600 league appearances and won 50 England caps.
42 ROWAN VINE (Portsmouth to Luton Town, £250,000, 2005)
£2 million may be loose change to most Premier League clubs but for the likes of Luton it can be the difference between survival and extinction. Vine moved to Kenilworth Road for £250,000 and was sold 18 months later for £2.5 million to Birmingham City. Kerching!
41 DAVID JAMES (Manchester City to Portsmouth, £1.2 million, 2006)
Harry Redknapp has landed some notable gems in the transfer market and, according to the Portsmouth manager, James has been one of his best ever buys. Old Calamity may drop a few clangers but who can argue with his Premier League record of 142 clean sheets.
40 CHRIS WADDLE (Newcastle United to Tottenham Hotspur, £590,000, 1985)
Forget “Diamond Lights” and the missed penalty in the 1990 World Cup semi-final, in his pomp at White Hart Lane Waddle was arguably the best winger in the world. Not bad for someone who used to work in a sausage factory. He was sold to Marseille for £4.5 million in 1989.
39 DAVE MACKAY (Heart of Midlothian to Tottenham Hotspur, £32,000, 1959)
Scottish left-half and sweeper whose determination and skill inspired Spurs to the Double in 1961 and the FA Cup again in 1962 and 1967, although he missed the Cup WinnersÂ’ Cup triumph in 1963 through injury.
38 RUUD VAN NISTELROOY (PSV Eindhoven to Manchester United, £19 million, 2001)
Arsenal had Henry, United had Van Nistelrooy. Selfish and single-minded, the predatory Dutchman was only interested in scoring goals. Luckily for him, he rarely missed and his record of 150 goals in 219 appearances is awe-inspiring.
37 DENIS LAW (Torino to Manchester United, £115,000, 1962)
After failing to settle in Italy, Law moved back to England and set about becoming the King of Old Trafford. Scored 237 times in 409 appearances alongside George Best and Bobby Charlton.
36 PETER SHILTON (Stoke City to Nottingham Forest, £250,000, 1977)
Shilton was playing away at Mansfield Town when Brian Clough decided to snap him up. Forest had just been promoted to the top flight, but with Shilton in imperious form, CloughÂ’s side won the title in 1978 and the European Cup the following two seasons.
35 JIMMY GREAVES (AC Milan to Tottenham Hotspur, £99,999, 1961)
ItÂ’s a funny old game. Greaves scored a club record of 266 goals in 380 matches for Spurs to become arguably the most lethal striker in English football history. His record of being the top-flightÂ’s leading goalscorer for a total of six seasons has never been matched.
34 ALAN SHEARER (Southampton to Blackburn Rovers, £3.6 million, 1992)
Read it and weep: Shearer scored 112 Premiership goals for Blackburn in just 138 appearances and the Ewood Park coffers swelled by £15 million – a profit of more than £11 million – when he was sold to Newcastle United in 1996. Oh, and he helped to win Rovers the title.
33 BRYAN ROBSON (West Bromwich Albion to Manchester United, £1.5 million, 1981)
Ron Atkinson never won the title as United manager but he did sign Captain Marvel for a record fee. During the dark days of the 80s Robson was Mr United. Made more than 460 appearances and scored 98 goals – from midfield. Determined, skilful, uncompromising and arguably one of the best midfield players in United’s history.
32 ALAN HANSEN (Partick Thistle to Liverpool, £100,000, 1977)
Never ask this man to show you his medals. Arrived at Anfield as a raw Scottish defender and left in 1990 after winning the league eight times and the European Cup three times.
31 DAVID PLATT (Crewe Alexandra to Aston Villa, £200,000, 1988 )
Rejected by Manchester United as a schoolboy, Platt took it on the chin and set about making himself one of the best midfield players in the world. Hit the headlines by scoring a last-gasp goal for England against Belgium in the 1990 World Cup finals and was sold to Bari for £5.5 million a year later.