‘Mitchell’ insists Newcastle won’t be pigs to be slaughtered

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Newcastle’s new sporting director Paul Mitchell has warned they will not be ripped off and spending too much after pulling out of a £70million deal to sign Marc Guehi. The club’s new sporting director has come under fire

for failing to sign big-name players in the summer transfer window, having been reluctant to risk the club’s future by overpaying. Newcastle’s

patience was put to the test when Crystal Palace co-owner Steve Parish raised the asking price for Guehi, leading Mitchell and head coach Eddie Howe to pull out of the deal. Guehi’s value is

likely to drop significantly with just two years left on his contract and he could cost as little as £35m-40m next summer.

Mitchell has laid out the Saudi-funded club’s spending strategy clearly, and will “improve” and increase the reach of the club’s global scouting team to new areas in order to compete with the best in the club’s search for new talent.

“There’s a saying that “Each player has a fair price and this football club has to draw the line. Are we not going to overpay? Maybe. “

The Newcastle tax is real. It’s about setting the standard in the market that we will pay a fair price for players with the right profile. There should be no misunderstanding that the club lacks ambition. I just think that’s the model you have to play in the modern football market at the moment. “

If we pay, pay, pay and pay again then we will be held accountable for that by penalising them, by fines and by points deductions. That is not good leadership, it is not good stewardship, it is not my responsibility. You are reckless, that’s the only thing. ยูฟ่าเบท http://ufabet999.appIt’s your ego and we will not do that.

“We have signed some really good players (investment of over £250m since PIF took over). Can we say some players are worth more than they should be in the market? You can talk about that.”

Mitchell said Newcastle could come out and say who they want to bring in, before adding:

“If we do that but at what cost? Is it a financial risk to the organisation and our growth plans? I don’t think we should do that. I am serious about that.

“Is it easier to keep an eye on the players we sign for a high price? Of course it would have been easier,” he said.

“But at the end of the day, for them to sacrifice Newcastle’s growth potential and ambitions to the credit of Paul Mitchell, that’s not what I’m here for. I’m here to do the short, medium and long term for the club.”