Jump to content

Chelsea Transfers


Tomo
 Share

Recommended Posts

17 minutes ago, Vesper said:

 Nizaar updates

Christopher Nkunku, Nicolas Jackson and Trevoh Chalobah are among those who could be allowed to leave Chelsea for the right offer. But equally, those kinds of players could end up staying.

Chelsea are pretty happy with how the player sales plans have begun.

They will raise almost £80m when Noni Madueke completes his £52m move to Arsenal and Djordje Petrovic finalises his £25m switch to Bournemouth.

- @NizaarKinsella

Sorry Vesper but....

What a load of hogwash......they could be going but could also be staying..........

fook me, anything for clicks..... I'll wait to hear it from the club website for any more news on transfers completed.....🤨

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Top 20 valued LBs still available

 

Nuno Mendes
Josko Gvardiol I still say he is more of a CB
Alphonso Davies (injured anyway)
Alejandro Balde  overrated IMHO
Federico Dimarco overrated IMHO
Marc Cucurella 
Myles Lewis-Skelly
Milos Kerkez

Jorrel Hato big plus: he can play CB as well
Destiny Udogie
Rayan Aït-Nouri  
Riccardo Calafiori 
 
Andrea Cambiaso  a really hard pull
Antonee Robinson he turns 28yo on August 8th
Álvaro Carreras
Theo Hernández    
Lewis Hall  

Pervis Estupiñán he turns 28yo in 6 months
Alejandro Grimaldo too old already, turns 30yo in September
Ian Maatsen 

 

After Hato, I would probably go for Nathaniel Brown

7db59ce08f6a2da8037efa36c52f8959.png

 

Miguel Gutiérrez just got injured and will have surgery, so a no go now

eabdd3854b454557f1abfa979f606a4e.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Liverpool make Alexander Isak approach to Newcastle

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6495057/2025/07/15/alexander-isak-liverpool-transfer-newcastle/

isak-alexander-scaled-e1752585484852-102

By David Ornstein
July 15, 2025

Liverpool have made an approach to sign Alexander Isak from Newcastle United.

The Merseyside club say no formal offer has been submitted as they are well aware Newcastle’s stance has always been that Isak is not for sale. However, they have communicated their interest to do a deal in the region of £120million.

Liverpool’s admiration for the 25-year-old is long-standing, while Eintracht Frankfurt forward Hugo Ekitike has also been among those on their radar. There has been no official contact from Liverpool to Eintracht. Newcastle are working to recruit Ekitike but have yet to reach an agreement with Eintracht or the 23-year-old France youth international.

Sensitivities around Liverpool remain understandably high following the tragic death of Diogo Jota earlier this month, but there is an awareness they need to make further additions this summer. The Athletic reported on Tuesday that Liverpool’s focus when it comes to incomings is on finding a top No 9 as they seek to strengthen their forward line.

Liverpool have already broken their transfer record this summer with the addition of attacking midfielder Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen for an initial fee of £100m with a potential £16m due in add-ons.

Earlier on Tuesday, Liverpool rejected a €67.5m bid from Bayern Munich for winger Luis Diaz, with the Colombian making clear he wants to leave the Premier League side.

Isak has scored 62 goals in 109 appearances for Newcastle since joining from Real Sociedad in a deal worth in the region of £60m. Last season was his most prolific in England as he registered 27 goals in 42 games as Newcastle qualified for the Champions League with a fifth-place Premier League finish. He has three years remaining on his contract.

Liverpool are without an established first choice up front. Federico Chiesa is considered an option there, while Napoli and Al Hilal have been monitoring Darwin Nunez. It is expected that a move for him will progress again soon.


‘Liverpool mean business’

Analysis by Liverpool correspondent Gregg Evans

The interest in Isak highlights the determination at Liverpool to build on last season’s title success and dominate for years to come.

Discussions around strengthening the centre-forward position have taken place for some time and were likely to advance this summer, even before the tragic passing of Diogo Jota.

Liverpool have always been aware of the difficulty of doing a deal to take Isak out of Newcastle United, and understand that they would have to fix up Darwin Nunez with a move elsewhere to cover some of the cost.

Yet the desire to bring in a player of his quality, even after the club-record signing of No. 10 Florian Wirtz, shows they mean business and are serious about staying out in front.

They have remained patient in their pursuit of a new striker by allowing other opportunities to pass and insist that a new arrival would only be signed off if it represented a significant improvement to the current squad.

Isak with his proven Premier League record and tactical flexibility fits perfectly and would give an already-elite forward line another boost.

Adding him to a forward line with Mohamed Salah, Luis Diaz, and Cody Gakpo would create further competition and bring even more goals and creativity to the side.

‘A one-of-a-kind centre-forward’

Analysis by data writer Thom Harris

Isak is a one-of-a-kind centre-forward, standing tall at 6ft 4in (193cm), yet incredibly technically gifted and light on his feet when he moves forward with the ball. He likes to drift across the attacking third to get on the ball, where he can slalom away from defenders with a unique blend of agility and power.

His assist against Everton back in April 2023, leaving five defenders in his wake after a twisting run down the left flank, remains one of the greatest examples of his elusive dribbling ability.

On top of that, Isak is clinical in front of goal, a clean striker of the ball on both sides. He’s scored 21 and 23 league goals across his last two seasons with Newcastle, and we’ve seen a wide range of sweeping finishes into the corners, instinctive close-range finishes and thumping efforts from the edge of the box. His emphatic strike against Liverpool last December was named the most powerfully struck goal in the Premier League last season.

He’s also lethal on the counter-attack — only Mohamed Salah has generated more expected goals (xG) from fast breaks since the start of last season — an efficient decision-maker who is difficult to stop with momentum on his side. That bodes well for Arne Slot’s side, the highest scorers from such situations last season.

alexander_isak_2022-23_all_shots.png

After the signing of Florian Wirtz, this would be another resounding statement of intent from Liverpool, looking to assemble a front-line bursting with creativity, technical ability and ruthlessness at speed.

‘Potential loss of Isak would be seismic’

Analysis by Newcastle correspondent Chris Waugh

Just as an incoming deal for Ekitike is not yet close to being concluded, conclusions should not yet be raced to regarding Isak. This is a mammoth prospective offer but, if the bullish stance Newcastle have adopted publicly and privately all year is to be believed, then it is still significantly short of what they would want.

Newcastle have long insisted Isak is not for sale at any price. But that has always felt reliant on Isak’s own stance. The club have never expected him to push to leave but, should he be attracted by the prospect of moving to Anfield, perhaps that changes now an approach has been made.

The potential loss of Isak would be seismic and cannot really be understated. He has scored 54 goals in 86 Premier League games, including 23 last season, and has proven himself to be consistently world class.

Ekitike is a fine prospect and has decent pedigree, but he does not have Isak’s proven track record in the Premier League. Signing the Frenchman would definitely soften the blow of losing Isak, should the Sweden international depart, but that eventuality will still dent Newcastle, given they have been adamant that they would not lose their star striker.

The situation has not escalated as quickly as that yet but, whether incoming or outgoing wise, Newcastle’s transfer business is attracting worldwide attention right now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, MoroccanBlue said:

I’d honestly prefer Acheampong at LB at this rate and switch to a back 3 with the RB acting as a wingback. 

Has he ever played a professional game there, though?

We definitely won't have a chance of trialling such things in games with no Conference League.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, TheHulk said:

Getting Rogers and Hato to finish this summer would be perfect.

I still feel another GK is needed. Sanchez & Jorgensen for another season doesn't fill me with the greatest confidence.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, LAM09 said:

I still feel another GK is needed. Sanchez & Jorgensen for another season doesn't fill me with the greatest confidence.

Would be nice but I don't think it happens, also another top class CB would be welcome and getting rid of some we have but doubt it happens as well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

United fans are melting down on RedCafe over Jackson but I actually think he’d be pretty decent for them. He’s miles better than the dogshit they’ve got in Zirkzee and Hojlund.

If we can bleed them for a great fee AND avoid using that money to essentially swap him with Garnacho then I’m fine with it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...

talk chelse forums

We get it, advertisements are annoying!
Talk Chelsea relies on revenue to pay for hosting and upgrades. While we try to keep adverts as unobtrusive as possible, we need to run ad's to make sure we can stay online because over the years costs have become very high.

Could you please allow adverts on this website and help us by switching your ad blocker off.

KTBFFH
Thank You