Per chi ha la sub a pagamento a The Athletic, secondo me il miglior sito di informazione sportiva in circolazione, c'è questo articolo che parla degli stipendi della premier
https://theathletic.com/3476123/2022/08/10/premier-league-wages-growth-tax-top-earners/Posto un estratto
"Unless stated otherwise, players' wages are almost always detailed as gross figures as opposed to net.
So when you read that Mohamed Salah signed a £350,000 a week deal to extend his stay at Liverpool earlier this summer, that is the pre-tax amount.
In the 2022-23 tax year, which runs from April 6 to April 5, and ignoring pension contributions, Salah would take home just over £192,000 a week of that headline sum, with £142,000 going to Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs and another £15,000 taken out as a National Insurance contribution.
Footballers earning over £150,000 per annum in the UK will be paying the highest tax rate — 45 per cent.
Across Europe's other top domestic leagues, according to
totalsportal.com, the tax brackets are generally similar: France's top rate is 50 per cent, Italy's is 43 per cent, with Spain and Germany both at 47 per cent.
When negotiating with clubs, one agent said they always talk gross (pre-tax) figures with clubs in the UK and net (post-tax) when doing deals abroad.
The reason for this, they say, is because clubs in England prefer to protect themselves against any tax changes, while European sides want to stick to a net figure. They added that if a player was joining a Premier League side from one on the continent, he would say what he wants as a net salary, so it would be down to the intermediary to work this out as a gross figure before negotiations."
Mi pare chiaro che quando si parla di dati provenienti dalla Premier dobbiamo sempre considerare la cifra come lorda, non come netta.