Angel Di Maria (right) joined Manchester United from Real Madrid last summer for a British record fee of £59.7 million.Angel Di Maria (right) joined Manchester United from Real Madrid last summer for a British record fee of £59.7 million.

In last year’s summer transfer window, almost every club in the English Premier League broke their transfer record boosted by cash from TV rights.

England left-back Luke Shaw became the most expensive teenage footballer in history after joining Manchester United from Southampton on a four-year deal worth £30 million.

This figure surpasses the £25.6m fee United paid Everton for Wayne Rooney in 2004.

Hull City paid a club record fee of £8m for defender Jake Livermore from Tottenham and Chile international Alexis Sanchez signed for Arsenal from Barcelona for a fee in the region of £35m.

Liverpool sold Luis Suarez to Barcelona on a five-year contract for a fee of about £75m, the Uruguayan becoming the third most expensive player in football history.

Leicester City signed Brighton striker Leonardo Ulloa, the 27-year-old Argentine, for £8m and West Brom landed Nigeria international Brown Ideye from Dynamo Kiev, also for a club record fee of £8m.

Romelu Lukaku secured a permanent move to Everton after a loan period. The Toffees shattered their club transfer record when they forked out £28 million to sign the Belgium striker from Chelsea.

Argentine winger Angel di Maria was confirmed as a Manchester United player for a £59.7m – a British record transfer move from Real Madrid.

Other stories of note from last season:

• Wales rise to their highest world ranking for 20 years after climbing 12 places to join Scotland in joint 29th position.

A 2-1 win in Andorra helped the Welsh, who were down at 116 less than four years ago, to their highest position since March 1994.

• After picking two points from their opening three Premier Lea-gue matches Man. United register their worst Premier League start since 1992.

• Liverpool win a record-equalling penalty shoot-out 14-13 to pro-gress to the fourth round of the League Cup at Middlesbrough.

• Welsh side Swansea chalk up nine points from three outings, their best start since 1923-24.

• In San Marino, Roy Hodgson’s England score a nap-hand victory in a European Championship qualification match, equalling the October 2012 win against the minnows away. England’s record over San Marino now reads 31 goals scored and only one conceded in five meetings.

• Hamilton celebrate a famous victory as Ali Crawford hands them their first win at Celtic Park since 1938 to move top of the Scottish Premiership. That season, the first division was composed of 20 clubs and Rangers won the championship 11 points ahead of Celtic.

Hamilton finished in seventh place on 41 points.

• At Queens Park Rangers, Liverpool win 3-2, leading through Richard Dunne’s record 10th Premier League own goal before a breathless finale.

Incredibly, it is just one short of regular league goals Dunne has scored in his 17-year professional career with Everton, Man. City, Aston Villa and QPR.

• Didier Drogba nets his first goal since rejoining Chelsea as the Blues record their biggest Champions League win with a dominant victory against Maribor at Stamford Bridge – 6-0.

• After 10 Premier League games Man. United gather 13 points, the worst start since 1986-87.

• The 1-2 loss for Man. City at home to CSKA in the group phase of the Champions League is the first win by a Russian side away to English opposition since Spartak Moscow’s success at Blackburn’s expense in September 1995.

Before Spartak’s win, Russian sides had lost six and drawn eight of their visits to England.

• Chelsea’s 2-0 win over West Brom lifts them seven points clear at the top of the table as Jose Mourinho’s team enjoy the best top-flight start in their history.

• After Arsenal’s 1-2 loss to Manchester United at the Emirates Stadium, supporters show their frustration as the Gunners make their worst start to a season in the entire Premier League era.

• At Stamford Bridge, Chelsea topple Tottenham 3-0 to extend their winning streak for 25 years against the Spurs.

• Liverpool leave manager Brendan Rodgers fuming after a 0-3 defeat at Manchester United, condemning them to their worst start to a season in 50 years.

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