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Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

author:The world is north and south

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >10. Mario Balotelli (Liverpool, striker</h2>).

Nationality: Italian

Source: AC Milan (Italy)

Year: 2014

Transfer fee: £18 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

Speaking of this benevolent brother, the most famous is of course this picture. The brother is also a personal winner, the youngest debut record holder in Serie A, the 2010 FIFA Golden Boy Award, 3 Serie A titles, 1 UEFA title, and 1 Premier League title, and has been on the cover of Time magazine. But this benevolent brother should be the typical representative of all the top below the head, and he did all kinds of things when he was at Manchester City, that is, the then manager Mancini tolerated him. Mancini was sold to AC Milan immediately after class.

Liverpool manager Rodgers' transfer was also a rush to the doctor, a gamble made after Suarez moved to Barca as he wished, but he lost the bet himself. Balotelli has scored just four goals in 28 games of the season, including just one goal in 18 Premier League games.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >9. Winston Bogard (Chelsea, defender</h2>).

Nationality: Dutch

Source: Barcelona (Spain)

Year: 2000

Transfer Fee: Free transfer

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

Then-manager Vialli gave him a four-year contract with a weekly salary of £40,000 (not a lot in the year), but Vialli was fired 13 days later... The government can't be blamed for his fate, with Bogard making 9 appearances in his first year and all of them on the bench for the next three years.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >8. Thomas Brolin (Leeds United, midfielder).</h2>

Nationality: Swedish

Source: Parma (Italy)

Year: 1995

Transfer fee: £4.5 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

Speaking of Leeds United may be quite unfamiliar to fans today, but it was a famous youth army back then. In 1995, Leeds United signed Brolin for the highest transfer fee ever made by the team at the time of £4.5 million.

Brolin suffered a serious foot injury while playing for the Swedish national team in 1994. After signing leeds United, Brolin scored four goals in 18 Premier League games and wasn't that bad. The follow-up story was to hurt each other, when then-manager Howard Wilkinson let Brolin play in a position he was not good at, and Brolin deliberately performed badly, losing 0-5 to Liverpool. In the end, Brolin retired early at the age of 28.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >7</h2>

Nationality: Ukrainian

Source: AC Milan (Italy)

Year: 2006

Transfer fee: £39.5 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

After joining Chelsea, Abramovich brandished a cheque book to make a big purchase to satisfy his philatelic desires. The 29-year-old Ukrainian nuclear warhead was in the downhill phase of his career when he landed at Stamford Bridge, and it was really difficult for him to adapt to the long-pass rush of the "British" era at that time. Injuries, contradictions and Drogba's comeback have left Shevchenko scoring just nine Premier League goals in 48 games. Shevchenko was loaned to Milan after his second season and then moved back to Dynamo Kiev on a permanent basis.

The best career of a Ukrainian nuclear warhead, of course, was the red and black years.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >6</h2>

Nationality: Argentine

Source: Roma (Italy)

Year: 2013

Transfer fee: £13.6 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

The benevolent brother looked like he was either fighting or on his way to fight. Prior to joining Southampton in 2013, Osvaldo had already been penalized for fighting with Roma Eric La Mella. After scoring three goals in the 855th Premier League, Osvaldo ended his Saints career due to head-on strike with defender Jose Fonte in training.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >5</h2>

Nationality: Romanian

Year: 2003

Transfer fee: £17.1 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

Another philatelic card of Abramovich, but the benevolent brother died by himself. Mutu had a good debut season at Chelsea, contributing six goals and eight assists in 2003-04. Subsequently, Mutu was tested positive on a cocaine drug test and banned for seven months. Then, there is no then.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > 4. Bursk Baraban (Aston Villa, forward).</h2>

Nationality: Croatian

Source: Dinamo Zagreb (Croatia)

Year: 2001

Transfer fee: £7 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

It would take eight months for Balaban to play a 90-minute game, even in the reserves. The Croatian never started, playing just 138 minutes in eight games with zero goals. After a disastrous first season, he was loaned back to Dynamo.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > 3. Ricardo Alvarez (Sunderland, midfielder</h2>).

Source: Inter Milan (Italy)

Year: 2015

Transfer fee: £9.5 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

The Black Cats loaned Alvarez for £900,000 in 2014 with a post-relegation buyout clause in the contract. Alvarez played just 13 games after injuring his right ankle, leaving him with a left knee injury that left him missing the experience. The black cat does not want to bear the obligation to buy out, and the follow-up is a series of rip-off lawsuits, and the black cat did not win...

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" >2</h2>

Nationality: England

Source: Leicester City (England)

Year: 2017

Transfer fee: £34.1 million

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

That's right, it's Chelsea again. Drinking water brother can come to Chelsea with the aura of the main midfielder of the Premier League champions, but who can he compete for? The Chelsea midfielder at the time was star-studded. The bench is the regular companion of the championship midfielder.

<h2 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > 1. Ali Dia (Southampton, striker).</h2>

Nationality: Senegalese

Source: Free Transfers

Year: 1996

Ranking of the worst 10 players in Premier League history

The Senegalese striker, who is probably the biggest parallel player and con artist in Premier League history, is said to have joined Southampton on the recommendation of the great Giorgio Weah. There is also a theory that he lied that he was Weah's younger brother, and that Southampton manager Souness believed it and signed him, which was a Premier League version of the "Tanuki for the Prince". In southampton's match against Leeds United in November 1996, AliDia was substituted after playing just 20 minutes. Because during these 20 minutes, Soness discovered that Ali Dia couldn't play football at all, and he and his team were cheated. After joining the club for only 2 weeks, Soness dismissed him.

Conclusion: In the current era of transfer fee explosions, there is no most water, only more water. Let's wait and see the next more watery transfers.

This year, the work of the football manager is really not done by people.