Interesting what do they do with all their money:D
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Interesting what do they do with all their money:D
wow, cristiano ronaldo is also sponsored by KFC. this is interesting
thiery henry, samuel eto o, neymar, lionel messi, ronaldinho have their highest level in barcelona haha
This is so sad. They should be earning so much less.
@rama- They trained hard since they were kids. They were the best of the best all through academies to 1st team. They are global football superstars. Why should they earn less? You complain too when superstar movie actors get 30 mil a film or boxers 20 mil a fight? Football is a sport but and in the end it's entertainment. So as long as people pay to watch they will continue to get this amount of money. Supply and demand... If you are the best in what you do in any profession who will earn a generous pile of money.
Meanwhile... Kids are dying and starving in Africa
While these amounts of money are totally obscene, what I think is sad is that people are interested in that kind of list. You'd have to be a really material person.
While these amounts of money are totally obscene, what I think is sad is that people are interested in that kind of list. You'd have to be a really material person to be interested in that kind of list.
"Football is a sport but and in the end it's entertainment"
I'm telling you football became much more than this. For someone it's just investment to make more money.
@fabryi all forms of entertainment people invest in them. Everything that people want you can invest in, from water to football. That's how it works. So let's stop thinking money and investment is evil because this is a very naive way of thinking.
too much money ....
Too much money and kids starving in Africa? I guess none of you have a clue about the big billionaire corporations that make a living off other people being poor.
These guys make this much money off doing what they love, their conglomerate deserves some respect in my opinion.
Why would you suddenly bring up "starving kids in Africa"....
The logic in this forum is ridiculous...
Neymar 6th? Seriously?!
He's a great example of how money destroyed the football that I miss in the old days.
Neymar 6th? Seriously?!
Since we are talking about money. I am just going to copy and paste my old comment from another discussion.
Those people that are making 500 pounds a week choose to, and don't tell me **** otherwise. They choose to no go to college, the choose to not go to school, they choose not to wake up daily at 4 am, 5 am, and go play soccer. They choose to work at McDonalds, or be a Doctor, or whatever the fuck they want. Theese people, listed above chooses to play football. They choose to work hard as a kid, and get rewarded as an adult. Listen, the door is open. Everyone has a chance to pursue their dreams. You say their wages are ridiculous wage is ridiculous? How about the boxing champion Floyd Mayweather? He is 36 years old and 45-0 in his fight record . Last match alone he made 40 million. He buys the best cars, has the biggest houses, and has the hottest girls, but he went out there like any citizen of America, and made his money the hard way. Rio Ferdinand is a great example. Understand something life doesn't give you chances, you have to make them.
@wolfie
'@rama- They trained hard since they were kids.
They were the best of the best all through academies to 1st team. They
are global football superstars. Why should they earn less? You complain
too when superstar movie actors get 30 mil a film or boxers 20 mil a
fight? Football is a sport but and in the end it's entertainment. So as
long as people pay to watch they will continue to get this amount of
money. Supply and demand... If you are the best in what you do in any
profession who will earn a generous pile of money.'
Seriously? Do you see the best of bin cleaners earning loads? No. They earn £5 an hour and work from 5am in the morning till 5pm. And yes, it is JUST ENTERTAINMENT. EXACTLY. They shouldn't be earning bloody £300,000 a week for it. Anyone can kick a ball and keep themselves fit.
Barrack Obama- Makes world changing decisions- £150,000 PER YEAR
Wayne Rooney- Kicks balls into nets- £300,000 PER WEEK
Think its fair?
Thierry Henry's glittering career has seen him collect winner's medals for the World Cup, the Champions League, the Premier League and La Liga.
But the French forward, 36, has not only been successful on the pitch, cashing in at the height of his fame with lucrative endorsements for global brands such as Nike, Renault and Gillette.
Henry moved from Arsenal to Barcelona in 2007 for €20 million (£16m), signing a four-year deal with the Catalan club worth €5.6m (£4.6m) a season.
France's all-time leading scorer then eclipsed David Beckham as the highest paid player in the MLS when he joined New York Red Bulls in 2010.
Although his base salary in 2013 dropped to €2.7m (£2.2m), with bonuses Henry is still estimated to earn €3.2m (£2.6m) per year playing for New York.
Off the field, his wealth continues to grow as the public face of PUMA and he was central to the launch of the sportswear company's new evoPOWER boot in 2014.
Henry also promotes Red Bull and has a string of business and stock market investments. His properties include a €6.8m (£5.6m) home in Hampstead, London, and a luxury apartment in New York that cost €11.1m (£9.2m) in 2010.
Italy captain Gianluigi Buffon may not have experienced a particularly notable upturn in his sporting performances in 2013, but the same cannot be said of his bank balance.
While he continued to turn in the kind of performances for Juventus that have become his trademark since the Bianconeri paid Parma over €50 million (£35m) for his services in 2001, last year was a remarkable year for him in an economic sense.
Buffon, who already had some business interests off the pitch, added a key investment to his portfolio in purchasing 54% of manufacturing company Zucchi, increasing his previous 2% share. The Juve keeper reaped immediate dividends, with the company's capital increase in December seeing share prices rise by 107%.
There was heightened publicity for Zucchi off the back of the 36-year-old's cash injection and, on paper, the 139-cap shot-stopper became €19.5m (£16m) richer in the space of just two months.
Buffon continues to earn €4.5m (£3.7m) a year as skipper of the Turin club and will be looking to add further weight to his stock - both on and off the field - by leading Italy to glory at the World Cup in Brazil this summer.
His Juventus contract runs out in 2015, at which point the club are expected to offer him a decreased wage, but his business acumen and ongoing sponsorship deals – notably with PUMA – mean he is likely to remain among football's wealthiest players for some time to come.
He has trademarked his forename, purchased an island boasting 500 hectares of hunting ground and become the first footballer to release his autobiography through a state-of-the-art app. Even away from the football field, Zlatan Ibrahimovic walks his own kind of walk.
While the sport saw many of its previous transfer records broken in 2013, the Swede remains the most expensive footballer in history thanks to a series of big-money transfer deals totalling over €169 million (£139m). And with signing-on fees flying in, Ibrahimovic has done as well financially out of those moves as he has in a sporting sense.
Although he will miss out on this summer's World Cup after Sweden's play-off defeat to Portugal, he remains one of football's most marketable commodities thanks to his continued goalscoring exploits. Add in his €15m (£12.4m) annual salary at Paris Saint-Germain and there are plenty of money-making avenues still open to the 32-year-old.
As well as his home in the French capital, he also owns properties in Milan, New York, Stockholm, Malmo and the Swedish ski resort of Are, and his sponsorship deal with Nike earns him a seven-figure yearly sum. Meanwhile, he has recently been unveiled as the face of Xbox One in France and the Swedish Postal Service has initiated the release of a series of stamps bearing Ibrahimovic's image.
Intent on putting something back into his local community, Ibrahimovic funded a football complex in the area of Malmo in which he grew up, Rosengard. He has also donated Nike kits to the youth club he played with before becoming a professional, FBK Balkan.
Ronaldinho has been earning major money on and off the pitch since winning the 2002 World Cup.
His life was transformed the following year when he moved for €30m (£25m) from Paris St-Germain to Barcelona, and he soon developed into the best player on the planet - winning the 2005 Ballon d'Or.
After being generously rewarded by the Catalan club and key sponsor Nike, he joined AC Milan in 2008 for €22m (£18m) on a three-year contract worth €6.2m (£5.1m) a year, plus around €1.1m (£875,000) a season in bonuses.
It meant that by the time he returned to Brazil in 2011, initially to Flamengo, Ronaldinho had spent eight years as one of world football's biggest earners.
But the 33-year-old is hardly winding down his career. After a contract dispute with Flamengo, he switched to Atletico Mineiro and led the club to a first-ever Copa Libertadores title. He was named 2013 South American Footballer of the Year before renewing his contract for an estimated €2.7m (£2.2m) per year.
He still endorses Nike and owns property in Brazil, Greece, Barcelona, Lake Como and Florida.
It is a myth to suggest that just because Neymar was playing his club football in Brazil before last summer he was not already one of the game’s highest earners.
A string of sponsorships including Nike, Panasonic, Heliar, VW, Claro, Santander, Guarana Antarctica, Ambev, Red Bull and Unilever lifted his income as a Santos player to €20m (£16.4m) a year.
Then came that Barcelona move for €86.2m (£71m) in June 2013. One of the most controversial transfers in history ensured Neymar became one of the world's wealthiest players.
The precise details were announced on Barcelona’s website after the club was subjected to a tax fraud investigation. Neymar, 22, was paid a €10m (£8.2m) signing-on fee and also handed a five-year contract for an annual salary of €8.8m (£7.2m).
On top of that, the club revealed that Neymar’s mother and father, Neymar Snr and Nadine, were paid €40m as “compensation” related to a previous agreement with their company, N&N.
No other parents’ earnings are factored into the Rich List simply because they are not significant enough. Neymar is close to his parents and, given that this extraordinary sum of family income is derived directly from his football career, this figure has been included.
Neymar’s global image rights are hugely valuable and were excluded from the Barcelona agreement. In May 2013, he announced a deal with the investment fund, Doyen Global, run by David Beckham’s advisor Simon Oliveira, to exploit these rights outside Brazil.
Neymar owns a string of properties in Sao Paulo and a yacht worth €5m (£4.1m).
It was something of a topsy-turvy 2013 for Brazilian star Kaka. The end of his four-year stint with Real Madrid amidst a string of injuries and loss of form was offset by a mini-rebirth at AC Milan, the club he had left for Spain in 2009.
In departing the Santiago Bernabeu for a fresh start, Kaka sacrificed the final two years of his massive contract worth an annual €9 million (£7.4m) plus bonuses.
He exchanged that for a €4m (£3.3m) a year deal with the Rossoneri and even docked his own wages after picking up an injury in his return match at Torino, saying he did not wish to be paid again until he was fully fit.
Now back in action and with his form having improved despite Milan’s slump this term, the 31-year-old continues to court interest from sponsors the world over.
Through commercial deals with Adidas, EA Sports and Sony he remains a huge marketing force, while his seven-year modelling association with Armani reflects his clean-cut, boy-next-door image.
Owning several luxury apartments in Manhattan, New York and additional properties in Natal, Madrid and Milan, Kaka has joined a growing list of footballers who see the housing market as a wise investment base. And while he may have suffered a drop in wages thanks to his return to Italy, his profile and overall wealth continue to grow.
Wayne Rooney is catapulted up the Goal Rich List after signing the biggest contract deal in the history of British football, worth around €365,000 (£300,000) a week for the next five years at Manchester United.
It is set to net the England striker close to €95m (£78m) over the course of the contract until the age of 33.
That represents a significant improvement on his last deal, signed in 2010 and worth around €300,000 (£250,000) per week.
It signifies a huge turnaround in the relationship between United and Rooney, who looked destined to part ways last summer following the retirement of Sir Alex Ferguson.
Despite Rooney's lucrative on-field deals, he has been unable to cash to the extent of Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi with commercial interests. Coca-Cola dropped him after allegations about his private life surfaced, while he is no longer the cover star of EA Sports' Fifa range of video games.
He has this year fronted campaigns for Nike and Samsung, which bring in around €4m (£3.2m) annually.
The 28-year-old also signed a five-year book deal with Harper Collins in 2006 - estimated at the time to be worth €6m (£5m) in advances.
The great Anzhi Makhachkala dream may have died with the news in August that billionaire owner Suleyman Kerimov was to refocus the club’s efforts on a more reserved, locally-based project. But Samuel Eto’o’s two years with the Russian outfit were enough to make him one of the richest sportsmen outside of North America.
In 2011, the Cameroon striker was the marquee signing of the Kerimov era, collecting a world-record salary for a footballer of €20 million (£16.5m) a year, including bonuses, to add to what was already a healthy fortune thanks to spells with Barcelona and Inter.
Indeed, Eto’o had hit the headlines in 2009 when he bought each of his national team-mates a €33,000 (£29,000) watch with a personal inscription after they qualified for the World Cup.
The short but highly lucractive spell with Anzhi – which included the practice of flying to Russia from Paris for training and then on to Dagestan for home games – has firmly established him at the top end of the Goal Rich List.
After the Russian Premier League side said they would only offer wages of €7m a year beyond 2014, he was allowed to join Chelsea, agreeing a one-year contract worth around €5m (£4.1m). It has still been a stunning year, however, when earnings from the first six months of 2013 are taken into account.
Eto'o retains a €5m a year sponsorship package with PUMA, as well as deals with Ford and fashion label John Richmond.
Among his investments, the 32-year-old boasts a collection of stunning cars worth a total of around €5m, including a Bugatti Veyron, two Aston Martins and a Maybach Xenatec.
Lionel Messi has relinquished his Ballon d'Or crown to Cristiano Ronaldo and he has also slipped behind his great rival in the earning stakes.
Ronaldo's bumper new Real Madrid contract overshadowed Messi's deal with Barcelona, which was signed in December 2012 at a cost of around €15 million (£12.3m) per year until 2018.
The Argentine had been in talks over a new pay packet with Sandro Rosell before the president's resignation and a deal which will reportedly give Messi parity with Ronaldo is due to be signed this year.
Messi, 26, enjoys a long-standing commercial relationship with adidas, worth at least €2m (£1.6m) per year, for whom he became only the second athlete after David Beckham to be given his own signature range of sportswear and apparel.
Along with NBA superstar Kobe Bryant, Messi endorses Turkish Airlines while he also fronts the Fifa range of video games by EA Sports, Samsung's Galaxy 11 and a new campaign for Gatorade.
The demand for brand Messi is such that he recently signed up to be the face of Gillette's "Inner Steel" campaign, following in the footsteps of Tiger Woods, Thierry Henry and Roger Federer.
Among his string of properties are several in his native Rosario, Argentina, including a compound for his family, as well as a luxury mansion in Barcelona. He drives a Ferrari F430 Spider and also owns an Audi R8.
Cristiano Ronaldo is the Ballon d'Or holder and signed a new contract in September 2013, tying him to Real Madrid until 2018 at a dazzling cost of €105 million (£86.5m).
The Portuguese is being paid a salary of €17m (£14.3m) per year and also retains a large percentage of his lucrative image rights as part of the new agreement.
Ronaldo led Portugal to the World Cup finals with a stunning hat-trick in the playoffs against Sweden and Nike are in the process of negotiating an improved contract with him ahead of the tournament in Brazil. His €6m (£5m) per year deal, signed in 2010 with the American sportswear giant, is due to expire this year.
The 28-year-old also enjoys lucrative sponsorship arrangements with Armani, Castrol Edge, Jacob & Co, Herbalife, Banco Espirito Santo and KFC.
In 2013, Ronaldo launched his own CR7 underwear label while he still maintains a CR7 boutique on his home island of Madeira - where last year he also opened his own museum.
He owns properties in Madrid, Lisbon and Madeira, while he is a well-known aficionado of high-powered sports-cars. Among his collection are a Lamborghini Aventador and a Bugatti Veyron.