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  2. Enzo Maresca working on transfer, pre-season plans ahead of Manchester City job https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7289785/2026/05/20/man-city-enzo-maresca-manager-plans/ Enzo Maresca has started working on summer transfer activity and pre-season planning before his impending appointment by Manchester City. The Italian is set to replace Pep Guardiola at the Etihad Stadium, with the Catalan bringing to an end his glittering 10-year tenure. Former Chelsea head coach Maresca left Stamford Bridge in January, a fortnight after The Athletic revealed he would be high among the candidates for the City job in the event Guardiola departed the club this summer, as he is now set to do. And sources briefed on the situation, not authorised to speak publicly, say he has already been collaborating closely with sporting director Hugo Viana for pre-season, the new campaign and beyond in preparation to take over. Maresca won the Conference League and the Club World Cup in his one full season in charge in west London and led the club to Champions League qualification. The 46-year-old, who won the Championship title with Leicester City, has worked at City previously, coaching the club’s Under-21 side for the 2020-21 season and returning as a first-team assistant to Guardiola in the summer of 2022. Guardiola has guided City to 20 trophies across a decade at the club, including the Carabao Cup and FA Cup this season. After winning four successive Premier League titles between 2021 and 2024, with the 2022-23 campaign bringing the treble including City’s first Champions League trophy, the club have now gone successive seasons without a league title. In 2024-25, City finished third and 13 points behind eventual champions Liverpool, before losing out to Arsenal this campaign. His final game will come against Aston Villa at the Etihad on Sunday, on the Premier League’s final weekend of the season. What You Should Read Next Is Enzo Maresca the right head coach for Manchester City? We asked seven Athletic writers Succeeding Pep Guardiola at Manchester City will be an onerous — perhaps impossible — task. But Maresca seems certain to accept it What kind of player suits Maresca’s preferred style? Analysis by Chelsea correspondent Liam Twomey Asked in a Chelsea press conference about Renato Veiga’s desire to play centre-back in January 2025, Maresca took the opportunity to set out his broader philosophy of the footballers he likes: “If there is a player that only wants to play one position, they have to adapt.” Maresca values versatility in players, a level of game intelligence and skill that can transcend specialised positions when the opponent or the circumstances of the game demand it. His goalkeeper must be prepared to play with the ball at his feet well outside his box. His full-backs must be ready to invert into defensive or even attacking midfield, as well as overlap or underlap in the final third. His centre-backs must be prepared to push deep into opposition territory to track their markers, as well as recover into the vast expanse of space behind them. His midfielders must always know where the space and the free men are. His wingers must pick the right times to move infield and stay wide. His striker must know when to drop deep to receive the ball and link play, and when to run in behind or connect with crosses into the box. Enzo Fernandez, Marc Cucurella and Pedro Neto in particular thrived. Levi Colwill and Moises Caicedo also excelled in a tighter structure, though Cole Palmer at times gave the impression of a player whose improvisational genius was being curbed. Maresca will find plenty of suitable players at City. The likes of Nico O’Reilly, Josko Gvardiol, Marc Guehi, Matheus Nunes, Rodri, Jeremy Doku and Antoine Semenyo should adapt easily. Others — perhaps even star names like Gianluigi Donnarumma and Erling Haaland — may find his football less than ideal for their skill sets. David Ornstein joined The Athletic in October 2019 after 12 years as a sports journalist and correspondent at the BBC. In the role of Football Correspondent, he is responsible for producing exclusive and original stories and interviews, offering unique insight and analysis. He works across
  3. What Chelsea’s Champions League absence means for their finances and UEFA agreement https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7291252/2026/05/20/Chelsea-champions-league-qualification-finances-uefa/ Despite Chelsea’s win over Tottenham Hotspur on Tuesday night, they can no longer qualify for next season’s Champions League. The club’s hopes of Champions League qualification have been hanging by a thread for some time, and were largely bolstered by the hope that Aston Villa winning the Europa League and finishing fifth in the Premier League would see the sixth-placed team in the league qualify. However, Tuesday’s results put that out of reach for Chelsea. Their highest possible finish is seventh, which would see them qualify for the Europa League, but that relies on at least a draw against Sunderland and Brighton & Hove Albion losing by a number of goals at home against Manchester United. A win for Chelsea and defeat for Brighton would also do it. Chelsea, as it stands, are eighth, which would mean a place in the Conference League. However, they still need to avoid defeat against Sunderland and rely on a beneficial result when Brentford travel to Liverpool to be guaranteed that spot. Here, The Athletic explains what missing out on Champions League football — and possibly European competition altogether — means financially in the context of Chelsea’s settlement agreement with UEFA. What impact does missing out on the Champions League have on Chelsea’s finances? Champions League football carries far more financial weight than UEFA’s second- and third-tier competitions. The Athletic estimates that Chelsea’s Champions League campaign this season, which ended in the round of 16 with defeat by Paris Saint-Germain, generated around £80million in UEFA distributions — plus income from the matches they hosted at Stamford Bridge. By comparison, winning the Europa League in 2018-19 earned £40.8m in prize money, and their Conference League triumph in 2024-25 earned £18.3m. Chelsea have a good chance of securing European football of some kind, but should they qualify for the Europa or Conference League, they carry nowhere near the same financial heft. Any shot at glory should be welcomed but, in cash terms, the benefits of UEFA’s junior competitions to a club carrying Chelsea’s operational costs are marginal; in the Conference League, which often involves substantial travel and where home games pale in significance to Champions League fixtures, it’s debatable whether the club even turns a profit from participation. Chelsea’s Champions League campaign generated significant revenueMike Hewitt/Getty Images What is the settlement agreement and what happens if Chelsea breach it? There is particular focus on Chelsea’s finances because of the extra conditions imposed on them by a settlement agreement with UEFA. In July 2025, the club were fined for breaching UEFA’s football earnings rules (€20m) and squad cost rule (€11m). The squad cost rule breach was punished by a one-off fine. It is the football earnings breach that is being managed under a four-year settlement agreement, and that is a cause for concern going forward. In simple terms, the football earnings rule is UEFA’s mechanism designed to limit club losses. Clubs are allowed €60m in ‘adjusted losses’ over a rolling three-year period. That limit can be increased by €10m per season, for a total of €30m in a three-year assessment period, as long as clubs comply with the financial conditions UEFA uses to assess whether or not they are in good health. In simple terms, the agreement sees Chelsea: Limited to a maximum €60million (£52m) Football Earnings deficit in the 2025-26 season; Limited to zero losses in 2026-27, which can be extended by any headroom the club has in its 2025-26 Football Earnings calculation, up to a maximum of €60m; and Limited to a maximum of €60m in Football Earnings losses (increasable to €90m if various ‘good’ financial conditions are showcased, though English clubs generally fail to do so) in the three seasons spanning 2025-26 to 2027-28. If Chelsea exceed any of those individual targets by less than €20m, they’ll receive a fine proportional to the excess (up to €20m). If they exceed any of those by more than €20m, UEFA will deem them in breach of the settlement agreement, terminate it and ban them from its competitions for a season. What does that have to do with European qualification? Compliance with the settlement agreement looks feasible for the 2025-26 season, but next season or the one after look more difficult without Champions League football. As explained above, the prize money for competing in the Europa or Conference League is far lower. Also, fans and sponsors will not stump up the same money as they would for a Champions League campaign. Many of Chelsea’s players are on incentivised contracts and will see their wages fall in a campaign without Champions League football. Yet even in 2023-24, when Chelsea played no European football and did not qualify for the Champions League during that season (and so had no such bonuses to account for), the club’s wage bill was still £338m. They would have other costs that a failure to qualify will not take away, either. For example, their player amortisation bill was £212.2m in 2024-25, and that will be a higher figure in UEFA’s calculations as they limit player amortisation periods to five years. If Chelsea did receive a ban, when would it be enforced? If UEFA find Chelsea in breach of their settlement agreement, the terms of the agreement say that the club would be excluded “from the next one applicable UEFA club competition for which it would otherwise qualify in the following three seasons”. In that event, the settlement agreement would be terminated and the club would effectively start afresh, with the same regulations as any other side, after serving that ban. That applies equally whether that competition is the Champions, Europa, or Conference League. There is therefore a theory that the club could somehow engineer things to serve a ban in a season where they qualified for the Europa League or Conference League, missing out on those less prestigious and less lucrative competitions rather than a Champions League campaign, then starting over. However, that is not really the case. To use a hypothetical example, let’s say Chelsea finish eighth this season and qualify for the Conference League. They cannot simply decide to take a ban next season. Firstly, it seems likely they can comply with the settlement agreement this season anyway. But even if they were in breach, loss limits are adjudicated upon retrospectively — so any 2025-26 breach would likely be discovered during 2026-27, while they would already be competing in the Conference League in our hypothetical scenario. The ban would be applied to the following season instead. By the same logic, if Chelsea were to breach the agreement next season, a ban would likely await in 2028-29. A ban would apply to any European competitionDean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images What impact could this have on transfer business? As well as the obvious point that being in the Champions League helps attract talent, the missing revenue from not being in the competition means Chelsea will need to take extra care to stay within the settlement agreement. That includes their transfer spending, which has been enormous in the past few seasons. As The Athletic have reported, Chelsea are intending to sign at least two starting-calibre players this summer. Given the financial situation, it is even more important that those are the right players for the right prices. What’s more, Chelsea’s business model involves player trading and generating profitable sales. The club’s financial statements detail the two most important factors in determining whether future extra funding is required from their BlueCo owners: “the net impact of future player transfer activity and on-pitch performance of the men’s football team”. If one of those drops off, the other will be even more important to club finances. Chelsea need Champions League football for BlueCo’s project to add up; without it, player sales, at a level beyond that already baked into the club’s strategy, will be required. Cerys Jones| Football Writer Chris Weatherspoon| Football Finance Writer
  4. We’re already going to need a high quality striker with JP here! The idea that we can ever consider selling him this summer is crazy. Unless he himself literally begs the club to let him go AND Barca can come up with £85-90m we shouldn’t even be picking up the phone. I don’t know of any striker of JP’s level who we could go out and easily replace him with.
  5. Today
  6. 💥🔵I think J. Pedro is going to leave us this summer. Barcelona has turned his head, and the rumors just keep coming❗️❗️
  7. Yesterday
  8. ^ @Vesper For me we need a Jorginho type but with significantly more mobility. A controlling, deep sitting midfielder with excellent technical ability. Lavia was supposed to be just that for us of course and does that defensive screen role perfectly but we need to move him on this summer because he can only play 5 games per season. Andrey Santos does the job well in this role but I’m not sure he’s every match starter level at a club like ours. Very good squad player who gets starts here and there. We really need to replicate the Kante, Jorginho, Kova midfield. We have Caicedo and Enzo who can be the box to box guys but we need a super high quality string puller this summer. You plug a Anderson/Wharton/Scott type right at the base of our midfield and it transforms how we can play.
  9. In terms of DMFs First type: the great ones, but ones who are very unrealistic for multiple reasons, especially as we missed out on CL, but not just limited to that, as some simply will not want to leave their club for Chels, or are simply too expensive Sandro Tonali Adam Wharton Aleksandar Pavlovic Aurélien Tchouaméni 2nd Type: DMFs that we probably have a shot at Carlos Baleba Amadou Onana Nico González Morten Hjulmand Angelo Stiller Boubacar Kamara James Garner Alan Varela Marc Bernal Máximo Perrone Hayden Hackney Aleksandar Stanković Leon Avdullahu Mandela Keita
  10. In terms of CMFs I rate first type the great ones, but ones who are very unrealistic for multiple reasons, especially as we missed out on CL, but not just limited to that, as some simply will not want to leave their club for Chels, or are simply too expensive Federico Valverde Elliot Anderson Bruno Guimarães Warren Zaïre-Emery Tijjani Reijnders Nicolò Barella Eduardo Camavinga Frenkie de Jong 2nd Type: CMFs that we probably have a shot at (bold ones I really rate): Pablo Barrios Ayyoub Bouaddi Felix Nmecha Senny Mayulu Tom Bischof Lucas Bergvall Johan Manzambi Lamine Camara João Gomes Archie Gray Alex Scott Mateus Fernandes Habib Diarra Hugo Larsson Victor Froholdt Noah Sadiki Yegor Yarmolyuk Mamadou Sangaré Jobe Bellingham Assan Ouédraogo Nathan De Cat Christos Mouzakitis Lewis Miley Kees Smit Javi Guerra Quinten Timber Breno Bidon Thiago Pitarch Patrick Zabi off the board now, will move this summer to Paris FC Christ Inao Oulaï Rodrigo Mendoza Ezechiel Banzuzi André Sport Club Corinthians Rudy Matondo
  11. Interesting way of thinking about it... I think about it rather differently, if we play a back 4, we need to sign 2 top CBs. If we play a back 3, we need to sign 3 top CBs. The higher the % of the XI that is a CB, the more extremely high quality CBs we need in the squad. Otherwise we're just putting out more mediocre players in an XI and taking room away from better players we have in CM and elsewhere. You can argue that by having 3 of them out there they can be mediocre and cover for each other better, but really it just means in the aggregate you are a worse, more defensive team that can't attack or defend well imo. I don't think Alonso is wed to a particular formation or is limited to a back 4 or back 3 specific setup tho like an Amorim. He will play various systems depending on opponent like Maresca did imo.
  12. LBs to replace CuCu Nico O'Reilly Nathaniel Brown Alphonso Davies Lewis Hall Davide Bartesaghi Dayann Methalie youth Vinicius Lira
  13. Pretty sure though that no one has a read on Chelsea's transfer plans yet. Lot of names being circulated but it could change once Xabi takes charge.
  14. when healthy (a big if) he is a goal machine 8 goals, 2 assists in only 896 minutes
  15. I don't know about Emegha, was unavailable every time I saw Starsbourg this season(so was Anselmino). Diego Moreira turned out to be a surprisingly good player but still not our (wannabe) level. I can only see him in the squad if Xabi opts to play 3-4-3 with wingbacks, still not the best choice defensively.
  16. Agree. Penders 2nd. Emmanuel Emegha probably 3rd.
  17. A great start would be sacking ALL the directors and ball-gagging Egg Balti.
  18. They have a real shot to become a dominant team for years to come if they get some of those. They and (even more atm) PSG are loaded AF (Arse if they upgrade at CF and winger).
  19. He is by far the best player at RSC. Pretty sure he will play as midfielder, and he will be great. Andrey Santos is okay but this guy offers much more.
  20. Does Palace potentially winning the Conference league not have any impact? There isn't one rule for all. We have no idea what will happen, and I'm sure we will outspend (or wish to) both of those sides during said periods. Also, are you forgetting they have drastically bigger stadiums than us?
  21. More than anything this summer I just hope we target ONLY highly technical ballers. Whether they’re “big” names or not, we need to stop going after players who are nothing but runners or physical specimens like Delap or Garnacho. I’m sick of seeing our rivals going for super skillful, classy wizards like Cherki, Eze, Wirtz etc whilst we get dudes who can’t dribble past a training cone and whose only abilities are running in a straight line when theres’s a mile of open space. We have enough big and strong or powerful players. I’m hoping that with Alonso now here we target EXCLUSIVELY highly skilled players who can’t dribble past excel in one touch, fluid football. It’s why I’m actually warming to the idea of us going for Alex Scott from Bournemouth. Whilst our rivals are going for the bigger names like Anderson/Wharton/Tonali etc I feel like Scott is much more easily attainable for us. Has been one of the best CM’s in the league this season and fits that deep sitting Xhaka role Alonso loved at Leverkusen.
  22. I remember standing in the away end at Roker, people pissing behind you and the piss running between your legs and down the steps. Great times.
  23. Don't have money to splurge either. Have to be smart about recruitment. Can't waste another year in a league where standing still is as good as falling behind
  24. Depressing to read who Arsenal are targeting - Kroupi, Alvarez, Kvicha, Barcola, Nico Williams, Gordon, Tonali.
  25. I would say im worried about the names we are being linked with but im not surprised at all. We are looking to buy players from relegated teams. No money to do anything else.
  26. Many a miserable day/night spent in Sunderland at Roker and SoL with Chels and they currently have their best team in about 40 years. Sunderland often reminds me of Rotterdam minus the weed and worthwhile hookers.
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