Football365
·24 Juni 2026
Where would Sandro Tonali fit in the 20 most expensive midfielders ever? He’s already in…

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·24 Juni 2026

Sandro Tonali already appears once in a list of the most expensive midfielders in transfer history, with a place in the top three imminent.
First things first: by ‘midfielder’ we very much mean your 6s and 8s rather than the 10s of this world – those are for another list.
These are the box-to-box men, the pivots, the connectors between defence and attack. And they cost a small fortune, with summer 2026 promising to take that theme to absurd levels.
A €10m Benfica signing and Argentina youth international in June 2022; a €121m Chelsea signing and Argentina World Cup winner six months later. It was a lot of money to finish in the bottom half but then they sorted themselves out…before becoming awful again amid constant reports that Fernandez wants out.
Rice was a game-changer for Arsenal – as £100m and another £5m in add-ons suggested he ought to be. The West Ham curse was broken in his third season.
There is every chance Caicedo could jump to the top of this list soon, with around half of the £15m in add-ons a grovelling Chelsea had to offer described as easily achievable in some quarters. Liverpool had put together a £111m package but, much to some hilarious and entirely grown-up Proper Red fury, the Ecuadorean wasn’t interested.
Man Utd never did figure out how to unlock Pogba, with the weary efforts of three different managers ultimately ending in frustration, viruses, haircuts and a second Old Trafford exit to join Juventus as a free agent.
The idea of a £100m bargain sounds particularly weird but Bellingham is as close as is possible. Real Madrid would be thrilled if add-ons taking the deal to £115m/€133.9m were activated over the course of a six-year contract for a 22-year-old with well over 300 senior career appearances who will probably break soon.
Given a choice also involving Paris Saint-Germain and both Manchester clubs, De Jong cashed in on his rising Ajax stock at the absolute peak to join Barcelona just as they started financially collapsing in on themselves. The Dutchman has been central to their revival.
Similar to Bellingham, Real Madrid would not mind paying an extra £17m/€20m if Tchouameni holds up his end of a quite stunningly executed midfield renovation. Probably needs to stop fighting team-mates first.
Liverpool did indeed borrow the world’s fourth most expensive midfielder ever at the time to solve problems which Arthur’s injuries only exacerbated.
It was not the most seamless transition to Pepball – it never is – but Rodri went from ropey to learning the ropes and then master of the tactical fouling rest defence rope-a-dope, all the way to Champions League final goalscorer.
In a mild panic induced by consecutive defeats to Brighton and Brentford, Man Utd chucked up to £70m on a 30-year-old and gave him a four-year contract. It worked equal parts well and disastrously.
Liverpool could not persuade Zubimendi to abandon the food or mountains of San Sebastian but Arsenal made the right pitch a year later, reuniting Mikel Merino with his former La Real teammate.
Manchester City could not force a deal over the line but the pull of London and Maurizio Sarri delivered Jorginho to a productive if never unanimously popular half-decade at Chelsea.
A club-record signing made so long ago that Mauricio Pochettino welcomed him to north London when Ange Postecoglou was busy winning titles with Yokohama F Marinos, Ndombele left for nothing nine games short of a century of Spurs appearances.
“I thought it was lira,” said Paul Merson of the fee an English club had agreed to pay a German side for a Belgian player. “The world is going mad,” added Phil Thompson. That fee does look crazy for what Manchester City received in return over a decade, to be fair.
Remember the Arthur entry? Well as part of a fudged pandemic transfer which seemed to point towards a future of big clubs swapping their wage-drainers because no-one had any money, Barcelona were able to press the Pjanic button for a couple of years.
Thirty-six senior career appearances was enough for a Chelsea side gripped by their insatiable obsession with signing young midfielders. And indeed anyone. Manchester City even received £8m or so after sticking a sell-on clause into the deal which saw Lavia join Saints a year earlier.
The Portugal international went on strike to force through a move to work with Pep Guardiola at City after Wolves refused the Treble winners’ first offer. The fee includes a 10 per cent sell-on clause when City are done with the 27-year-old reappropriated right-back, who might now belong on a different list.
That rare example of an expensive Liverpool transfer committee misstep. Keita seemed absolutely perfect for Klopp but 75 starts in five seasons tells a particular story which revolves around hamstrings.
Helping knock new teammate Bruno Guimaraes (£40m/€50.1m) off this list, Tonali followed a similar path into the collective hearts of the Geordie nation. He might eschew that status soon for the lure of Spurs.
Manchester City tried to get a deal done for a little less the winter before but their exit from the race left the path clear for Man Utd to polarise their fanbase for years to come by signing a diligent, determined but ultimately limited midfielder.







































