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Wenger expresses transfer fears; expects £200m deal ‘soon’

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Arsene Wenger fears football transfers will never have a limit and believes the days of £200million transfers are not far away.

Arsene Wenger

Arsene Wenger

Arsenal’s Premier League rivals Manchester United broke the world transfer record earlier in the week when they paid £89million to Juventus to take Paul Pogba back to Old Trafford.

That deal continues a trend which has seen the record extended by nearly £75million in 20 years, with the likes of

Alan Shearer , Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale previously holding the tag of the world’s most expensive player.

Wenger’s own record signing came when Arsenal paid in excess of £40million to sign Mesut Ozil from Real Madrid and he has previously criticised the amount of money that has been spent recently.

And the Frenchman, whose side welcome Liverpool to the Emirates Stadium for their Premier League opener on Sunday, believes the figures will continue to grow.

Asked how long it would be until a club pays up to £200m for a player, Wenger replied: “Not long.

“I have said that since I have been in the game that at some point it has to stop, but as long as football continues to develop and becomes more popular, more money will come in.

“What is interesting to see is that today, you have a local business and you just want to survive or you have a world business and the money comes in, whether it is Google, Facebook, football or any other sport, they are worldwide so you can’t set any limitations on the income.

“If football continues to be popular it may become much higher in the future.”

Wenger recruited Granit Xhaka from Borussia Monchengladbach in May for around £30m but has failed to add any other big name signings since then.

A defender is currently his highest priority given injuries to centre-back pairing Per Mertesacker and Gabriel, and with

Laurent Koscielny not ready after his run to the final of Euro 2016 with France.

Valencia’s Shkodran Mustafi has been heavily linked but Wenger insists success is not always down to how much is spent.

“It is not always about spending money or sacking the manager – football has to be a bit bigger than that,” he said.

“I believe the big clubs are also about values and identity and we have to be conscious – that is important as well.

“I’m 20 years here in England and it is the first time a team like Leicester wins the championship.

“You can still make fantastic buys at a normal, reasonable price, we saw that with N’Golo Kante last season.

“He was certainly a vital aspect of their chances in the Premier League but they did not keep him so in the longer distance of course it makes a difference.”

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