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Kaka is MLS’s top earner on $135,000 per week.
Kaka is MLS’s top earner on $135,000 per week. Photograph: John Raoux/AP
Kaka is MLS’s top earner on $135,000 per week. Photograph: John Raoux/AP

MLS has more high-earning players than Italy's Serie A, report finds

This article is more than 7 years old
  • Kaká and Sebastian Giovinco are the top earners in Major League Soccer
  • Premier League has most big contract in world football

MLS had more players in 2016 earning a six-figure weekly salary than Italy’s Serie A, according to research released this week.

The study, conducted by Verve Search, a marketing agency in London, and Axo Finans, a Norwegian financial consultant, found that 5% of players who earn a gross salary of €100,000 ($107,000) or more per week ply their trade in North America, as opposed to 3% in Italy.

Kaká ($135,000 per week) and Sebastian Giovinco ($134,000 per week) led the way in MLS, just behind Serie A’s top earner, Juventus striker Gonzalo Higuaín ($159,000 per week). The other two players earning over €100,000 a week in Serie A were Higuaín’s Juve team-mate Miralem Pjanic and Roma’s Daniele De Rossi.

MLS’s other players earning over €100,000 a week were Toronto FC’s Michael Bradley, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard – who recently left LA Galaxy and NYC FC respectively – and Andrea Pirlo. The Premier League amassed the majority of high earners over the €100,000 a week threshold (49%), with La Liga and the Chinese Super League both at 15%.

Despite the fact that MLS mainly attracts aging stars, the study perhaps says more about Serie A and its decline in popularity. Once a dominant power in European soccer in the 1990s, the Italian league has faced challenges of economical instability, corruption and violence. In addition, the league has also suffered from a lack of competition: Juventus have won the scudetto for the previous five seasons, while Internazionale did the same between 2005-06 and 2009-2010. According to the study, the lack of competition has negatively affected TV viewing figures, with a knock-on effect on clubs’ earning power.

  • This article was amended on 8 December 2016 to reflect the fact that the figures for the salaries above are gross rather than net.

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