Despite a serious economic crisis that has been in Turkey for years, local football teams continue to sign stars with international names. In Siktash, for example, a senior pioneer landing like Tammy Abraham, Glatsrai is close to the acquisition of Victor Osiman for € 75 million and has already attached Leroy Sana, who finished his contract from Bayern Munich for a huge wage. This trend is evident not only in the big four – Glatsrai, Fanbahcha, Shalkash and Terbzonfur – but also in smaller groups. And so the question arises, how do Turkish manage to do so? Behind these purchases is a complex political-economic system. The senior teams operate in a model of sports associationsMummy, like Real Madrid and Barcelona, with the presidents are selected in democratic elections and prevents the audience from impressing the audience. The management knows that fans vote in the legs and expect to see glittering names in the field. In the 2023/24 season, Glatsrai was ranked 16th in Europe with revenue of 59 million euros from ticket sales. The Turkish audience also leads the continent with the percentage of revenue from the sale of shirts and club products: in Panbahcha, for example, 39% of revenue comes from this field. Glatsrai alone receives € 20 million from sponsors, and at the same timeCrypto Sunflower: Equity for fans for $ 25 million and NFT in impressive amounts, but this model also relies on more problematic pages: widespread government support, political funding – and sometimes conflicts of interest. Groups like Bashair receive direct or indirect support from the government, among other things due to the Rajfa. He played himself in amateur leagues in his youth. The political impact on sports also does not miss out on other clubs, with at least 20 groups in the senior leagues enjoying a state capital. TV income has droppedDramatic: In 2015, the Qatar Bein Network paid half a billion $ 1 billion on the league’s broadcasting rights, but the amount has since dropped to only 370 million, partly due to pirate and increasingly uninstalled interest. The level of public discourse towards the broadcasts does not skyrocket: Panbahcha even blamed the broadcasting network with a deliberate bias against the club. Hence the debts of the Turkish teams also swell: as of February 2025, Glatsrai’s overall debt is € 293 million, Panbachcha, 255 million, and Territtur. The cumulative debt of all the country’s football clubs has already crossed the € 2 billion. The some of the debts covered the state herself, through a unionThe Turkish banks, who have approved more than a billion euros. The problems do not end here: due to rising inflation, clubs that put money in a Turkish capital are forced to pay contracts in Euro, which requires them to take new loans to return the recurrence. Despite the local authority attempts to apply Pierre Play rules, there is almost no real punishment, and the race for glittering names is drawn. In a country where 80% of fans support one of the big four, the collapse of one of them can lead to a social jolt. The clubs know this, and the politicians. Thus, even in the midst of an acute economic crisis, the Turkish football continues to shine in the transfer windows, even when behindThe scenes everything is burning. In Turkey, the fans say, “Champions are born at the airport.” Even if everything collapses in the background.