Also found this from the Mail back in June; makes a couple of interesting points (if they're true; you can never really trust the Mail):
Danny Ings' tribunal fee may not reach the heights Burnley hope for.
The Turf Moor club have rejected Liverpool's offer of £4million for the 22-year-old, who has already agreed on a move to Anfield, and expect the final price to be determined by a panel from the Professional Football Compensation Committee (PFCC) failing any last-minute agreement.
Burnley had accepted a £12million bid from Tottenham and offered a new contract, and hope those factors dictate a new record for a tribunal, surpassing the £6.5m agreed for Daniel Sturridge in 2010 when he moved from Manchester City to Chelsea.
Sturridge though was a player developed by City and when his fee was broken down it became £3.5m with add-ons based on appearances.
There was an extra £1m should he play for England, a further £500,000 due after 10, 20, 30 and 40 first team appearances and City were allocated a 15 per cent sell-on clause.
The transfer of Tom Ince was another case where Blackpool had received an £8m offer from Cardiff and that remained their valuation but the player ultimately chose Hull City and they agreed a £1.6m fee rising to £2.3m.
An added hindrance is that, like City, Burnley are unlikely to see any money from Liverpool for Ings until next January when the tribunal concludes.
Burnley believe £10m is more realistic for an England U21 international who scored 11 goals in the Premier League last season, though Liverpool expect the tribunal to put a ceiling at £6m.