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Chelsea Transfers


J.F.
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5 minutes ago, TheHulk said:

Looked nothing amazing against United, definitely not worth the 100m pricetag.

Yamal looked nothing amazing against us, but I will still spend plus 100 million if we could get him. 

One game does not define a player. 

That being said I would not mind if we get one of them, BUT not at the cost of blowing our budget on that and negate defense. 

Edited by Fernando
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🔵🗯Chelsea and Manchester United are reportedly set to battle it out for Brazilian wonderkid Luis Eduardo.

Eduardo, 17, has been in action at the Under-17 World Cup in Qatar over recent weeks, where Portugal emerged victorious.

One of those is Eduardo, with the centre back helping Brazil to come fourth, although they lost on penalties in both the semi-final and third place play-off.

And, according to Spanish outlet AS, Eduardo’s performances saw him emerge as one of the standout players at the World Cup.

The 17-year-old, who turns 18 next month, was Brazil’s captain and his traits, which include his incredible speed and tackling ability, have put clubs on alert.

The report goes on to add that Premier League rivals Chelsea and United have already entered negotiations over a move for the centre back.

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🚨 James Trafford wants out of Manchester City just five months after his £27M move in the summer.

Trafford had been signed as City's new No.1 before the club brought in Gianluigi Donnarumma on deadline day leaving him demoted to the No.2 spot.

Donnarumma has started every single Premier League game since.

(@Jack_Gaughan)

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EXCLUSIVE - Chelsea looking at Manchester United defender Leny Yoro after new scouting missions

Plenty of PL scouting happening

https://siphillipstalkschelsea.substack.com/p/exclusive-Chelsea-looking-at-manchester

 

Chelsea have been scouting and looking at a range of young players round the world but as well as that, they are also looking at players from the Premier League.

We recently bought you a report on Chelsea looking into signing Myles Lewis-Skelly from Arsenal, but he’s not the only young PL player we are currently looking at.

There are some players who have recently moved to the Premier League that Chelsea have previously had on their radar and potential transfer shortlists. And one of them is the subject of this exclusive story we have this morning.

Chelsea have always had Leny Yoro on their radar and were looking at him before he moved to Manchester United from Lille in 2024.

But SPTC Sources have heard over the weekend that Chelsea are now partaking in new scouting missions for Yoro whilst he’s been at United, and they continue to have ‘an admiration’ for the 20-year-old France U21 international.

He has a big frame standing at 6ft 3in and despite still being a young and developing player, there is a lot to love about him.

Any move to Chelsea seems massively unrealistic due to the fact he has only just moved to United and has a contract until 2029. But I guess that anything is possible in this game and Chelsea will not be looking at him for any immediate move - it would be more down the line.

Chelsea would also probably look to offer some players IF they did decide to approach United for Yoro anytime in the future. Chelsea do have a handful of players that United are keen on.

It’s one we can shelve for now though, but interesting all the same to hear that we are scouting him once again and still have a keen interest in the player.

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Konstantinos Karetsas, the winger adored by Europe’s largest clubs: ‘You see he is a special one, hey?’

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6833406/2025/12/01/konstantinos-karetsas-interview-transfer/

GettyImages-2247530443-scaled-e176448863

 

Konstantinos Karetsas does not have the ball, but he is still streaking down the right wing like a wind-up mouse.

It is Greece’s November World Cup qualifier against Scotland, and though the hosts can no longer qualify, Athenians have packed the Georgios Karaiskakis Stadium in pursuit of one player.

Veering infield as Greece’s counter-attack begins to slow, Karetsas picks out a bubble of space on the edge of the area between four Scotland defenders. He holds out both arms, imploringly, and the cut-back is perfectly delivered onto his left foot.

In the Scotland goal, Craig Gordon appears to be expecting Karetsas to shoot back across his body, taking a small shuffle-step to his left. Instead, the Greek winger whips it with his instep, beating a crumpled Gordon at his near post.

It is ball-striking of this purity that has made Karetsas a rare diamond. Having only turned 18 in the middle of last month, the Genk teenager is one of the most promising talents in world football.

“You just have to do whatever comes into your mind,” says Karetsas, speaking to The Athletic in the first in-depth interview of his career, two days before that month’s 3-2 win over Scotland. “You can’t be robotic. When you have a one-vs-one, take your man on — have a shot, get an assist, make a cross. Play a one-two. This is what beautiful football is to me.”

On his debut, eight months earlier, against the same opposition, Karetsas produced arguably an even better finish, opening up his body to curl a left-footed shot high into the roof of the net.

“There ought already to be a blue plaque at Hampden (Park) to mark where Diego Maradona scored his first international goal,” wrote The Scotsman’s chief reporter that night. “Might another ‘I was there’ moment have occurred here when Karetsas curled into the corner first time past a goalkeeper 25 years older than him?”

So, the fact file on Karetsas so far: a right-winger, born in Belgium, who stands just 5ft 7in (170cm) and has a left foot that is cinnamon sweet.

Technique is his strongest arrow, and though his compulsion to dribble may appear a throwback to the 1990s, several other traits are highly modern. He is a dynamo without the ball as well — in November’s game against Scotland, he threw himself in front of an open goal, twice, to block Che Adams’ shot and keep the score 1-0.

The teenager has already been the subject of an international tug of war — having grown up in Belgium, representing the nation’s youth teams, he switched his allegiance to Greece in the spring — and it is moments like these that mean he is already adored by some of Europe’s largest clubs.

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Karetsas celebrating his goal against Scotland in their November World Cup qualifierAngelos Tzortzinis/AFP via Getty Images

One former academy director of a continental giant texts mid-game: “You see he is a special one, hey?”

Karetsas understands the expectations — and the reality that he may soon be leaving Genk, his hometown club where he became the youngest scorer in the history of Belgian professional football.

“With my dad, we exactly planned out my trajectory,” he explains. “To first break through in Belgium, and then to go to a team either this year or next year, we’ll see. But it’s going as planned.”

Any league in particular? “I don’t have a preference,” he replies. “I think with the right mindset, I can handle anything. If I would have to choose, I would prefer La Liga — but I would go anywhere, to any top club. It just depends on what choice is there at that moment.”

Before speaking, he had recorded six assists in his past four games, numbers made possible, he says, by a significant shift in psychology over recent months. Having burst into the Genk team as a 15-year-old, he was briefly restored to the bench last season.

“I just changed my mindset,” he explains. “From being OK with being average to wanting to be the best. It feels like a big change. I talked a lot with my parents, and also Devon Maes (Genk’s head of performance) and (assistant manager) Michel Ribeiro at the club. He’s a technical coach, but he’s more than that. I’ve known him my whole life. They can speak from experience of difficult moments — of doing everything to get out of that.

“There’s always so much noise around a player coming up, especially if you’re young like this. So you just have to block off that noise and focus on what you want to become as a player and to help the team, which is the most important thing. I’ve been inspired by Michael Jordan. I’m not saying I will achieve what he did, because it’s almost impossible. But it’s about trying to be a better version of yourself every day. Doing everything for your job. I’m obsessed with it.”

Breaking through as a teenager takes more than footballing ability. Listening to Karetsas, the emotional resilience is also clear.

“I think in football you will have maybe 60 per cent bad moments and maybe 40 per cent good moments,” he says at one point. “But the good moments are incomparable to the bad. That’s why in the bad moments, you just have to keep going.”

Later, another thought occurred about the importance of balance in a young player’s life. “I try to separate my life with football. Obviously, I’ll watch the top games like El Clasico or Manchester City vs Liverpool (played a few days earlier). But I’m not going to spend my afternoon doing that. You have to think about other things; I think if you don’t do this, you will not survive, you will go crazy.”

Karetsas says he learned to stay grounded from his parents, whose families moved from Greece to Belgium to work underground in the coal mines near Genk. His father began his career working in construction before working his way up to become a team manager for a company installing paper dispensers in toilet cubicles. His mother worked long hours in a desk job.

“They both made a lot of sacrifices,” Karetsas says. “My father was a good player, but quit football for me and my brother, so we could have everything we needed. My mom is the heart of the house. So I had a really good childhood. I’m really, really grateful, because it’s not normal to have a good childhood. You hear a lot of stories today about kids growing up in difficult moments, and I never had that problem. I had the best parents, so I’m really grateful for that.”

His little brother Yiorgos is also at Genk in the youth academy. “He’s taller, stronger, faster than I was at 12 years old, so I would say he’s better. I hope he becomes so. I would never be jealous of him.”

It is also through his family that he ended up choosing to represent Greece, despite the Belgian youth set-up considering him the standout player in his age group. The Greek FA had dispatched a delegation including former internationals Dimitrios Papadopoulos, Vasilis Torosidis, and Dimitris Salpingidis to visit him in Belgium, but in truth, they need not have bothered. Despite playing for Belgium at the time, Karetsas knew his own mind.

He grew up visiting his ancestral homeland each summer. And Karetsas watched every game of Greece’s Euro 2004 winning campaign, a tournament which took place three years before he was born, over the course of a few weeks with his father.

“Every time I played for Belgium I felt honoured,” he explains. “But there was always a weird feeling because I knew I felt more Greek. So my decision was pure at heart. I love Greece, I travel every year. It’s like my second home. So I’m really grateful for everything Belgium did, but when it comes to the national team, I think you should choose from the heart. Nobody pushed me. It was my choice.”

He is now part of a talented young group of Greek prospects, including PAOK’s Giannis Konstantelias, Olympiacos’ Christos Mouzakitis, and Brighton pair Charalampos Kostoulas and Stefanos Tzimas. While they were too raw to qualify for next summer’s World Cup, their time will come.

As a smaller player, Karetsas says one of his main targets at the moment is improving his physicality. He was a member of the Futures project in Belgium, a scheme which sees the late developers in each age group banded together into a team, still under the FA’s umbrella, in order to improve against more suitable opposition.

“I wasn’t strong like everyone else, I wasn’t fast, I was still small,” he says. “But all the other guys at this age, they were already late into puberty, fully grown, and near their maximum capacity physically. So my body still had to develop and change, because every time in the duels, I would come up short. But technically, everyone knew what I could do — so the Futures project was really good for me.”

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Karetsas has been impressing for GenkJohan Eyckens/Belga Mag/Belga/AFP via Getty Images

Another target was to improve his end product. Having managed seven assists this season, he appears on the way to meeting that goal — backed up by more advanced metrics.

Compared to other high-volume dribblers in Europe’s top five leagues, Karetsas is amongst the leading players in shot-creating actions — placing him neatly between Savinho and Bukayo Saka. Shown his numbers, Karetsas pores over the numbers with intrigue.

“I get a lot of joy from assisting because I feel I can make my team-mates better,” he says. “If you have a striker who is in a difficult period, you can help them. It’s good for the team, but also for the player, he feels better, and this is a great feeling. Obviously, as an attacking player, nothing beats the feeling of scoring yourself, but to me, assisting is of at least as much value.”

His greatest weapon is his dribbling, holding the ability to easily beat a player one-on-one in order to take them out of the game, before finding the free man. He is determined to never lose that fearlessness.

“Basically, from the time I could walk, I had a ball at the bottom of my feet,” he says. “I was in love with it. And so then my dad always encouraged the dribbling, because he knew those are the most special players, the creative players, and he knew I had that in me. I’d watch videos on YouTube of the big stars — Messi, Ronaldinho, Neymar, the Brazilian Ronaldo, and then go outside to try and be my own person.

“Losing the ball was a fear I had to overcome. A lot of youth coaches told me to stop dribbling, to pass the ball, but my dad said, ‘Never stop’. And so I never did. You know, I’m not afraid to do something on the pitch. If it doesn’t work out three times, and then one time your team scores, nobody will remember the three times. It could be a turning point in the game.

“Players like (Jeremy) Doku, they bring something to the squad which I love. There’s a lot of robotic play nowadays, which I can’t stand. I can’t watch it. You have to be creative. That’s what’s beautiful to see.”

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