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    Man City struck gold selling Pep’s “incredible” star for 1782% profit

    Pep Guardiola has enjoyed an incredible reign as Manchester City manager despite the club’s recent downturn in form.

    Having arrived at the club in 2016, Guardiola has managed 495 games for City averaging an incredible 2.31 points per match.

    His trophy cabinet is not bad either. Guardiola has won six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, four EFL Cups and ended Man City’s long wait for a Champions League back in 2023.

    Guardiola has overseen many squad overhauls during his time at the Etihad and seems to have a knack for moving players on at the right time.

    Manchester City’s biggest sales

    A major part of Manchester City’s recent success on the pitch has been their ability to be proactive and decision-making off the pitch. None more so than recruitment in the transfer market, selling their assets at the right time and most importantly for the right price.

    Manchester City’s all-time top 10 player sales

    Player

    Joined

    Fee

    Julian Alvarez

    Atletico Madrid

    €75m

    Raheem Sterling

    Chelsea

    €56.2m

    Ferran Torres

    Barcelona

    €55m

    Gabriel Jesus

    Arsenal

    €52.2m

    Leroy Sane

    Bayern Munich

    €49m

    Cole Palmer

    Chelsea

    €47m

    Danilo

    Juventus

    €37m

    Oleksandr Zinchenko

    Arsenal

    €35m

    Riyad Mahrez

    Al-Ahli

    €35m

    Shaun Wright-Phillips

    Chelsea

    €31.5m

    Statistics and fees via Transfermarkt

    Arguably, barring Cole Palmer who left very early on in his City career, none of the players on that list ever reached the heights they achieved whilst playing at the Etihad Stadium.

    It shows that Manchester City not only recruit well but know when to cash in on a player and make a tidy profit. This summer for example, City were around £96m in profit after their expenditure and sales.

    One of their best pieces of business throughout the last few years happened to be Ukrainian defender Oleksandr Zinchenko, who despite once being labelled by Guardiola as ‘incredible’, earned Man City an eye-watering profit after joining the club for just £1.7m back in 2016.

    Market Movers


    Market Movers

    Football FanCast’s Market Movers series explores the changing landscape of the modern transfer market. How much is your club’s star player or biggest flop worth today?

    Oleksandr Zinchenko sale makes 1782% profit increase

    Mikel Arteta lauded Oleksandr Zinchenko as an ‘exceptional footballer’ upon signing the defender in the summer of 2022. Zinchenko made an exceptional start to his Arsenal career and was seen as a ‘level raiser’ that propelled Arsenal to finishing second in the league during his first season (22/23).

    The Citizens sold Zinchenko for £32m, making an incredible £30.3m profit on the Ukrainian. It could be argued that City enjoyed Zinchenko’s best years too.

    oleksandr-zinchenko-arsenal-manchester-city

    The defender made 128 appearances for the Citizens, scoring twice and creating twelve more. He also won four Premier League titles, four EFL Cups and an FA Cup in his time there.

    Since joining the Gunners, Zinchenko is yet to win a trophy and is now struggling to make it into Arteta’s first XI. His performance metrics are down too from when he played under Guardiola at Man City.

    Zinchenko in 24/25 (Arsenal) vs 21/22 (Man City)

    Metric

    24/25

    21/22

    Assists

    0

    4

    Progressive carries *

    1.92

    2.76

    Progressive passes *

    7.31

    9.74

    Progressive passes received *

    2.31

    7.59

    Pass completion

    81.8%

    88.8%

    Tackle completion

    25%

    55%

    Ball recoveries

    13

    65

    Statistics via FBref (* = per 90 mins)

    From the table, it is clear that Zinchenko peaked in form during his last season at Manchester City. He produced more assists than his current season, more progressive carries and passes and kept the ball better with a higher pass completion.

    A carry is considered progressive if the ball is moved towards the opponent’s goal at least 10 yards from its starting point or is carried into the penalty area.

    Defensively, Zinchenko was also more sound at City, with a higher tackle completion and over five times more ball recoveries.

    lino-sousa-oleksandr-zinchenko-arsenal-opinion

    It seems that Manchester City have a knack of knowing when to sell an asset on, in the Ukranian’s case, it was on to a league rival that made the club a huge amount of profit to improve other areas of their side.

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