Everything posted by Vesper
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wrong side of the pitch Quenda is a left-footed RWer we need a right-footed (or ambipedal) LWer a pretty extensive list (some are pipedreams, some are dice-rolls and some are youth) some are more AMFs than wingers (in italics), but I wanted to be as maximal as possible, and all of those types listed deffo play winger: Vinicius Junior Jamal Musiala Kenan Yıldız Khvicha Kvaratskhelia Désiré Doué Morgan Rogers Bradley Barcola Yan Diomande Fermín López Rafael Leão Nico Williams Rodrygo Anthony Gordon Dani Olmo Said El Mala Iliman Ndiaye Ibrahim Mbayee Crysencio Summerville Rodrigo Mora Malick Fofana Jesús Rodríguez Assane Diao Kevin Dan Ndoye Antonio Nusa Jean-Mattéo Bahoya Matías Fernández-Pardo Bazoumana Touré Oskar Pietuszewski Jeremy Monga Kerim Alajbegovic
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https://football-observatory.com/WeeklyPost532 Thanks to the data exclusively produced by our partner Impect, the 532nd CIES Football Observatory Weekly Post presents the ball-friendliest teams in the world. The ranking was established according to four indicators: the proximity of passes (the shorter, the better), the pace of passing during possession, the duration of possessions and the percentage of balls received in the opponent's third below knee height (on the ground)*. Of the 915 teams in the 58 leagues analysed, the highest score was recorded for Bayern Munich (Vincent Kompany). The Germans are ahead of Paris Saint-Germain (Luis Enrique), with FC Barcelona (Hansi Flick) in third place and Bayer Leverkusen in fourth (Kasper Hjulmand). Among teams outside Europe's big-5, Columbus Crew (5th overall) are ahead of Denmark's FC Nordsjælland (7th) and French second division’s AS Saint-Étienne (8th). Manchester City (6th), Celtic FC (9th) and Olympique de Marseille (10th) round up the top 10. The top 20 also notably includes Norway’s Bodø/Glimt (Kjetil Knutsen) and Spain’s Elche CF (Eder Sarabia). At the opposite end, the least ball-friendly teams out of the sample analysed are Irish sides Galway United and Drogheda United, ahead of Belgium’s Patro Eisden, Portugal’s CD Feirense, Austria’s SKU Amstetten and Czech Republic’s FC Zlín. *The data is presented as a ratio relative to the average recorded across the 915 teams analysed (current or last completed domestic league matches only). Ball-friendliest teams, 58 leagues worldwide Domestic leagues matches, current or last completed season until 30/01/2026 Proximity: proximity of passes Tempo: pace of passing during possession Duration: duration of possessions Ground: % of balls received in the opponent's third below knee height snip
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Chelsea January window review – and what they are planning for the summer https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7016835/2026/02/04/Chelsea-transfer-window-january-review-latest/ You can always rely on there being a lot of talk around Chelsea when a transfer window is open. Even though the club did not intend to be too busy in the winter edition, Chelsea still managed to be part of the conversation throughout — whether it was about incomings or outgoings. As it turned out, not much took place in either department. But there was enough to keep people talking about them until deadline day. The information found within this article has been gathered according to The Athletic’s sourcing guidelines. Sources with knowledge of transfer dealings, who asked to be kept anonymous to protect relationships, have been spoken to before offering the clubs involved the opportunity to comment. Here’s The Athletic’s review of what took place. Was this window a success or a failure? Neither. If you go back to the first Transfer DealSheet about Chelsea, previewing this window, it was expected to be pretty quiet unless the right opportunity to do something, as far as new signings presented themselves. Chelsea have earmarked strengthening at centre back, midfield and in attack for 2026. This is still the case and will be the focus for the summer, as was kind of planned to begin with. However, fans will question why their pursuit of Jeremy Jacquet ended with the player opting to join Liverpool (more on that below). As far as outgoings are concerned, coming to an agreement with Raheem Sterling so that he can leave for good was the biggest positive. He was the highest-paid player on over £300,000 a week but has not been part of the plans since the summer of 2024. The contract still had 17 months left to run, too. Facundo Buonanotte’s season-long loan from Brighton and Hove Albion being cancelled made sense for the player. He was brought in as cover while Cole Palmer was coping with his injury issues, yet made only eight appearances. The attacking midfielder is now at Leeds United. Tyrique George has a great chance to prove himself on loan at Everton. Outcast Axel Disasi, who was frozen out like Sterling, at least gets a chance to play senior football again on loan at West Ham. The management of other loans was also a primary focus. Sterling left Chelsea in the windowEddie Keogh/Getty Images How much did they spend and how much did they bring in? Not much in either category, although Chelsea have made a profit. By getting Sterling off the books now, Chelsea feel they have made some major savings compared to if he had seen his contract out. Loan fees always generate a tidy bit of extra income. The sales of academy talent Leo Castledine and Ato Ampah, who have healthy sell-on clauses attached, improved their bank balance a little too. Who have they signed? There was only one significant addition in the end, the decision to recall centre-back Mamadou Sarr from loan at Strasbourg. The 20-year-old will compete for a first-team spot from the get-go. He is highly rated at the club and, significantly, is also admired by new head coach Liam Rosenior, who worked with him for 18 months at Strasbourg. Chelsea see him as a similar profile to Dean Huijsen, who they tried to buy from Bournemouth last summer before he opted for Real Madrid. On the academy front, Chelsea beat Manchester United to the signing of highly-rated left back Yisa Alao. The initial fee is a six-figure sum, but add-ons can take it well past the £1million mark. Were there any deals they wanted to do that they didn’t get over the line? Chelsea wanted to buy Jacquet from Rennes but lost out to Liverpool. They were in discussions for most of the month, but the player opted to move to Anfield. The switch will be officially completed in the summer. Chelsea believe a major factor in Jacquet’s decision could have been the competition he faced from other young centre-backs at the club. This includes Josh Acheampong, who they do not want to sell, and Sarr. There are no regrets that they missed out on Jacquet because of their decision to keep Acheampong and Sarr as part of their plans. The club did make an enquiry to Juventus over a loan for Douglas Luiz, who spent the first half of the campaign on loan at Nottingham Forest. With Dario Essugo being ruled out until March, having not played all season, and Romeo Lavia being sidelined since November, they thought about adding some more depth to midfield. In the end, they decided against it, partly because Lavia is close to a first-team return and the form of Andrey Santos. After pulling out, Douglas Luiz went to Aston Villa instead. Are there still any obvious gaps in the team? As explained, Chelsea desire a centre-half (regardless of Sarr), midfielder and attacker. It should not be forgotten that a deal for Sporting CP winger Geovany Quenda is already in place for him to join in the summer. A decision will also be made whether goalkeeper Mike Penders, currently on loan at Strasbourg, will increase competition in that position. Do they have the squad to achieve their goals for the season? Chelsea started the season aiming to qualify for the Champions League again via a top-five finish and compete in the three cup competitions they are in. The club have been able to challenge on all four fronts up until this week, at least, so what little has taken place in the window is not going to change that. Will the manager/head coach be happy? Liam Rosenior has made a point of saying how happy he is with the squad he has inherited since taking over from Enzo Maresca a month ago. Chelsea’s new head coach has revealed how often he is speaking to the recruitment team about their plans, so he is fully up to speed with what the thinking is. Being reunited with Sarr is another major plus point. After winning six games from his opening seven matches, Rosenior will be more pleased about the start his squad has made and the talent he has to work with. Rosenior will be happy to be reunited with SarrrightSebastien Bozon/AFP via Getty Images What will their priority be in the summer? To sign players in the three positions highlighted above. Will they have money to spend? Yes. Chelsea became the first Premier League club to make over £300million in sales last summer, and they will have more assets to sell in the next window to help fund further purchases. The fact that they were prepared to do business during January is a strong indication of where they stand financially. Do not forget Chelsea accrued in excess of £84m from winning the Club World Cup and have already brought in another £80m by progressing to the last 16 of the Champions League, with the possibility of more to come. What is their strongest XI now the window is shut? (4-2-3-1): Sanchez; James, Fofana, Chalobah, Cucurella; Fernandez, Caicedo; Estevao, Palmer, Neto; Joao Pedro. The full list of ins and outs IN Mamadou Sarr (recalled from loan at Strasbourg) Yisa Alao (Sheffield Wednesday add-ons will take fee in excess of £1m) Caleb Wiley (recalled from loan at Watford) Teddy Sharman-Lowe (recalled from loan at Bolton) Kiano Dyer (recalled from loan at Volendam) OUT Raheem Sterling (free agent) Tyrique George (loan to Everton with option to buy) Axel Disasi (loan to West Ham) Kendry Paez (recalled from loan at Strasbourg, loaned to River Plate) Aaron Anselmino (recalled from loan at Borussia Dortmund, loaned to Strasbourg) David Datro Fofana (recalled from loan at Fatih Karagumruk, loaned to Strasbourg) Facundo Buonanotte (season-long loan from Brighton & Hove Albion cancelled) Leo Castledine (Middlesbrough fee in excess of £1m) Ato Ampah (Stoke City undisclosed) Frankie Runham (loan to Ipswich Town) Dujuan Richards (loan to Leicester City) By Simon Johnson Chelsea Correspondent
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yes, he and Neto both failed see this: https://www.standard.co.uk/sport/football/Chelsea-fc-injury-update-james-neto-rosenior-b1269492.html Liam Rosenior has provided an injury update on Reece James and Pedro Neto after they missed the Carabao Cup decider against Arsenal. Neto and James both failed late fitness checks on Tuesday morning and neither was involved as Chelsea fell to a 1-0 defeat at the Emirates Stadium. The result means Arsenal have progressed to the Carabao Cup final at the expense of their London rivals who failed to overturn a 3-2 deficit from the first-leg last month. Before the second leg, Rosenior revealed Neto and James had not been passed fit but said he was optimistic they could be involved against Wolves on Saturday, which is Chelsea’s next game. The Chelsea head coach also revealed he usually names the starting line-up the day before the game but waited until Tuesday to pick his team against Arsenal to see if either could be available. “Pedro and Reece had small knocks,” Rosenior said after the Arsenal match. “They were just in too much pain for tonight. “They're giving everything. They would always put their hand up to play. Reece is an incredible captain and leader. I know Pedro is an outstanding professional and a great player. "We've had a lot to contend with the last couple of days, a couple of fitness tests this morning. Normally I name the team the day before. I named the team this afternoon when I had the full details of who was available." Rosenior continued: "I have to give the players so much credit. Our schedule has been incredible. So for them, to put in the energy, the fight, the spirit was there. “Estevao, I have to say, for him, 18 years old, to go through something very personal for him, to fly to Brazil and fly back in two days to make sure he could play in this game, says everything about the character and spirit I want for this team.” Estevao had missed the 3-2 win over West Ham on Saturday after being granted compassionate leave to see to a personal matter back home in Brazil. Cole Palmer started on the bench against Arsenal and only came on in the 60th minute along with Estevao. “In terms of Cole [Palmer], Cole gave us an incredible 90-minute performance, the reason we fought back against West Ham,” Rosenior said. “We have to take care of him. He's a gem. “We have to take care of him and make sure he's right for the whole season. But when he came on, his moments were top. “So, all in all, [I am] disappointed not to go through against what will be a very, very good team, but we can't let this setback affect our future.”
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What Mamadou Sarr will bring to Chelsea and why Liam Rosenior might have wanted him back https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7015638/2026/02/03/mamadou-sarr-Chelsea-analysis-liam-rosenior/ Speaking to British journalists in impressively fluent English during last summer’s Club World Cup, Mamadou Sarr was asked about then-Strasbourg coach Liam Rosenior’s public insistence that he has “world-class” potential. “When I was a kid, I had a dream,” he replied. “It was to be the best centre-back in the world. I trust him (Rosenior), and I trust me.” It was a response that revealed so much about Sarr, and also sheds light on why Rosenior is so keen to have the 20-year-old at his disposal for the rest of this season at Stamford Bridge. The defender’s loan spell at Strasbourg was cancelled on Monday, with Sarr coming back to west London. Sarr joined Chelsea permanently last summer and was part of the squad for the Club World Cup on the back of a 2024-25 season in which he had established himself as a key contributor for Rosenior, making 27 starts in Ligue 1. His experience in the United States was positive for his development — and his medal collection — but it was clear that Enzo Maresca did not deem him ready for a big role; he played just eight minutes from the substitutes’ bench in a comfortable 3-0 group-stage win over ES Tunis. Returning to Strasbourg and Rosenior last summer was the logical choice, and it gave Sarr six months more seasoning as a regular starter in Ligue 1. But circumstances at Chelsea have now shifted considerably; Rosenior has replaced Maresca, and Levi Colwill, the left-sided centre-back who was principally blocking the Senegal international’s path to the starting XI, remains a long-term absentee as he recovers from an ACL injury. Benoit Badiashile has not managed to seize what appeared to be his best opportunity to establish himself in the heart of Chelsea’s defence in Colwill’s absence. Rosenior could be seen talking to him several times about his passing out from the back in the first half against West Ham on Saturday. The Frenchman was then substituted at the break. Wesley Fofana and Trevoh Chalobah are currently Rosenior’s favoured centre-back pairing, but neither man is particularly confident with his left foot. While technically also right-footed, Sarr is very comfortable using his left, and that matters because of the additional angles it opens up when Chelsea are attempting to play out of defence, through and around opposition pressure. During his breakthrough campaign for Strasbourg in 2024-25, Sarr marked himself out as being capable of breaking the opposition lines with passes punched through the middle of the pitch, as well as less risky balls down the left side… It was a similar story for Sarr in the first half of this Ligue 1 season, with a slight shift towards more passes angled out towards the left touchline… Sarr is also comfortable defending high up the pitch with space behind him, which should make him a good fit for Rosenior’s aggressive man-to-man approach out of possession… During their time together at Strasbourg, Rosenior encouraged Sarr to be more vocal on the pitch. It is something Sarr has also prioritised in his choice of role models. “I want to be like Virgil van Dijk,” Sarr said last summer. “He’s a leader. For a defender, it’s very important to be a leader. I love Van Dijk, but some people tell me I play like Ibrahima Konate. It’s very similar.” Chelsea’s desire for a centre-back with this particular blend of qualities was underlined by their exploration of signing Van Dijk as a free agent last summer, before he re-committed to Liverpool. It also manifested in their January pursuit of Rennes starlet Jeremy Jacquet, who ultimately decided on a move to Anfield instead. There is a world in which recalling Sarr proves to be a better football decision than paying the market rate for Jacquet, as well as being the cheaper option. For starters, he is available to help Chelsea immediately, rather than being acquired as a marquee summer signing six months ahead of time. Sarr also knows exactly what he is walking into at Cobham. He spent a very productive summer with this Chelsea squad and is particularly familiar with Malo Gusto — a former team-mate at Lyon — and Andrey Santos, who captained his Strasbourg team. Premier League football will be a big step up, but there will be no surprises in what Rosenior wants from him on the pitch. What You Should Read Next Andrey Santos: The key cog in the way Chelsea want to play under Liam Rosenior The young Brazilian is flourishing alongside Moises Caicedo in a double midfield pivot, with Rosenior having also leant on him at Strasbourg Competition for minutes in Chelsea’s defence in the second half of the season will be fierce, even if Colwill does not return. Fofana and Chalobah have developed a productive chemistry through regular starts, while Badiashile and Tosin Adarabioyo are seasoned professionals who will expect to be involved when fit. Then there is Josh Acheampong, nine months younger than Sarr, whose lack of opportunities in recent weeks has become a source of growing angst for some in the fanbase. But if the increased prominence of Santos since Rosenior’s arrival is anything to go by, it would not be hugely shocking if Sarr ends up being much more than squad ballast at Chelsea. By Liam Twomey and Anantaajith Raghuraman
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they could win at least 7 trophies linearly (going into next season) League Cup FA Cup EPL CL UEFA Super Cup (August 12, 2026, IF they win the CL this season) Community Shield FIFA Intercontinental Cup (December 2026, IF they win the CL this season. PSG won it in 2025, Real Madrid in 2024, the first time it was played since the old IC was last played in December 2004, won by Porto on pens, under Víctor Fernández, who took over for Mou as he came here to Chels after Porto won the CL in 2004. Porto also earlier had won the UEFA Super Cup in August 2004, also under Fernández. Mou never won the IC, nor the FIFA Club World Cup nor the UEFA Super Cup, as he left after he won the CL both times, and lost the UEFA Super Cup twice, in 2003 with Porto, to AC Milan after he won 2002-2003 Europa League with Porto, and then lost it again, this time with with us in 2013, to Bayern, after Chels had won the 2012-2013 Europa League under the FSW)
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agree, he is miles off it his instincts, spatial recognition, and burst moves are shot to hell the ball used to be glued to him now it gets taken away far too often
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no idea very shitty reaction not at all happy with that
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bitter way to end the game I destest Havertz (other than the CL winner, which I will admit was huge)
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yes, you could clearly see it, very rare hesitancy from us
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I never want to see Delap as a winger again deffo not up to it
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damn
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6 added minutes
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damn another moonshot
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Trevoh CLEARLY got the ball first
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pretty close that was a real chance
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no way was that a foul!! the ref has went to shit and is killing us
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Garnacho coming on
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another bullshit yellow (on Estevao)
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good shift by Hato he looked solid
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and Josh now on for Gusto maybe (injury)
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Estevao and Palmer on
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bullshit yellow Delap barely touched him
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No, you are off by a year. That (Chels trying to buy him) was in summer 2018. In summer 2017 Alisson was coming off a year of being the Roma backup keeper, but I so wanted him then as my Brasilian/Swedish friend in Porto Allegre (she is a huge Gremio fangirl) tipped me off about him from his Internacional (Gremio's hated Porto Allegre derby rival) days. I knew then, in 2017, that there was no chance Cuntois would renew, as we stupidly loaned him for three straight years to Aletico Madrid, and he put down roots with the city. Marina was in utter denial of this, insisting he would renew. She turned down insane money from Real that summer of 2017. Then, in summer 2018, when Marina finally realised Cuntois was not going to renew she cocked it all up. Tried to buy Allison but he said no, I want to be a scouser. Then she met Atletico's €100m release clause for Oblak but he told us to piss off. So we panic bought shit Kepa for £72m (inflation-adjusted to around £97m in February 2026 pound sterling) and panic sold Cuntois to Real for likely 2 and a half or so times LESS cash than we could have had the year before.