Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy has reclaimed the title of highest-paid director among the Premier League’s current 20 clubs.
The most recent confirmed figures are from 2021-22 club accounts and Levy was paid £3,265,000, or £400,000 a year more than second-placed Paul Barber, the CEO at Brighton.
Levy’s substantial pay will do little to improve the mood of Spurs fans, who booed the team off last week after losing their final home match to Brentford, in what has been a dismal season.
Long-serving Levy reclaimed the highest pay title after former Manchester United chief executive Ed Woodward left Old Trafford following the January transfer window last season.
Woodward was previously the Premier League’s best-paid director, he earned £1.941m in the months before departing Old Trafford, the equivalent of £3,327,000 a year.
Champions Manchester City are the only club in the Premier League not to publish the remuneration of its highest paid director.
Unconfirmed reports suggest City CEO Ferran Soriano earns £3.4m a year.
Former Chelsea director Marina Granovskaia was the third highest paid director last season, commanding a package worth £2,244,000.
However, her pay was boosted considerably after she banked a £35million bonus for ‘services related to the club’s sale’ to Todd Boehly’s consortium.
Former Newcastle United managing director Lee Charnley was the lowest paid director in the Premier League on a salary worth £260,000, albeit topped up with a £900,000 one-off pay-off for losing his job.
However well remunerated the best-paid directors are, there are only two top-earning directors who earn more than the basic average first-team pay of their clubs’ players.
One is at Bournemouth and the other is Brighton’s Barber. Given the season they’ve had, everyone at the club deserves every penny.
Honbdnopz
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But he Co owns Spurs for your info.
Neomyug
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he is stingy n selfish[Crylaugh]
LeoM17
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Instead of paying him that much, Spurs should invest on players.
Desioprs
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.Fool!