LEICESTER'S bank balance will profit from the benefits
that champions enjoy in the months to come.
For simply competing in the Champions League group stage,
Leicester will receive £9.3million while each win will further line their
pockets to the tune of £1.2m. Even a draw at Europe's top table generates
£390,000.
Added to that is a slice of the TV revenue drawn from BT
Sport's massive £897m three-year investment in European football. The pot for
2016-17 stands at around £75m and the champions will receive the lion's share —
about 40 per cent.
All this means that if Leicester go out at the first
stage without picking up a point, they will still earn close to £40m. That is
before revenue from three guaranteed home games and additional sponsorship are
factored in.
Winning the Premier League title has also handed them
around £90m in prize money.
This is £10m short of what Chelsea earned last season and
but likely to be less than Tottenham, Arsenal, and the two Manchester clubs
would have got this term because Leicester have not been on TV as frequently.
Each time a club is shown live by Sky or BT Sport they
receive a set fee (nearly £800,000 per match last season). But it is only recently that the two
broadcasters have started to regularly select Leicester games. In the first
half of the season, just four of their games were shown live.
Next season that will change, however. Leicester will
benefit from being a side everyone wants to watch. Match-day and retail income
will also go up from the £30m banked in the 2014-15.
Conservatively, they can expect to bring in an estimated
£170m from their title victory, representing a staggering growth from the
£31.2m generated in their Championship-winning season of 2013-14. In 2012-13
that figure was just £19.6m.
Costs will inevitably rise too, with players' salaries
increasing. Last season, staff costs across the club amounted to £57m — up from
£36.3m in 2013-14 — and new contracts for Mahrez and Kante, each on around
£40,000 per week, are essential.
Wes Morgan and Danny Simpson will have one year left on
their contracts in the summer, while Kasper Schmeichel, Marc Albrighton, and
Danny Drinkwater have two years remaining.
Manager Claudio Ranieri, meanwhile, is set to seal a £5m
bonus by virtue of his clause to receive £100,000 for every place he finishes
above the relegation zone.
Jamie Vardy signed a new deal in February, initially
worth around £80,000 per week and his earning potential, like others, will be
enhanced.
A bidding war took place for the rights to Vardy's
autobiography, with advance offers from publishers in excess of £500,000.
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