New Newcastle United managing director Lee Charnley has
pledged to continue the club's "financially responsible" approach to
transfers.
Newcastle announced Charnley's new role on Monday, after
he previously held the role of football secretary at St James' Park, as well as
being a director since 2008.
The role of managing director was previously held by
Derek Llambias, who resigned his position in June 2013, shortly after Joe
Kinnear had been appointed director of football, though he too has since
departed the club.
In a further reshuffle, owner Mike Ashley has been
officially appointed onto the club's board of directors, alongside Charnley and
finance director John Irving.
Charnley stated that transfer plans for the close-season
have already begun, with fans looking for reinvestment from the reported
£20million fee received for star midfielder Yohan Cabaye in his sale to Paris
Saint-Germain.
However, Charnley has stressed the importance of
financial prudence and said the club will continue to work hard to get the best
deal from every transfer.
"Our preparations for the summer transfer window
have already begun of course, and our challenge is to make sure we spend the
funds we have available in a careful and considered way in order to ensure that
we get the maximum benefit from every pound we invest in the squad,"
Charnley said.
"We will continue to operate in a financially
responsible manner and live within our means. This club is financially strong
and there is money to spend if the deal is right and we are confident a player
can add quality to the squad.
"That said, we will not pay over the odds or make
knee-jerk decisions. Every player we sign represents a major investment and
mistakes are costly which is why we will continue to be prudent in our transfer
dealings.
"This is the reality of a well-run football club
like ours.
"As a board we will continue to make the final
decisions on all player transfers. Clearly however the manager and his team
have a very significant involvement in such decisions and will be instrumental
in making recommendations in relation to the squad.
"Our transfer policy and strategy is very clear and
will remain unchanged. We will focus on identifying and recruiting young
players whose best years are ahead of them, which in nearly all cases means
players in their early to mid-20s and not beyond."
Culled from Soccerway
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