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40 minutes ago, Mário César said:

lukaku scored already four goals with Roma

he is far better player than jackson 

Lol no

Looking at Serie A performances we should replace the current team with RLC, Pulisic, Lukaku, Tomori, Abraham but it is very different in England. Jackson has played a lot better than Lukaku in his first six games. 

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  • Jeremie Frimpong is set to accept new long term deal proposal from Bayer Leverkusen. The Dutch right back is expected to sign new contract valid until June 2028, with the deal being sealed right now. Many clubs have been tracking Frimpong but he’s set to accept Leverkusen’s proposal.

  • https://thedailybriefing.io/i/137613868/bayer-leverkusen

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"Exclusive story, confirmed" - Fabrizio Romano provides major Newcastle United update

https://thedailybriefing.io/p/exclusive-story-confirmed-fabrizio

An agreement has finally been sealed for Bruno Guimaraes to sign a new contract with Newcastle United, according to Fabrizio Romano.

The Brazil international has been a big hit at St James’ Park since his arrival from Lyon in 2022, and fans will be delighted to see that he now looks set to commit his future to the club.

Bruno’s new deal will run until June 2028 and contain a release clause in the region of £100m, according to Romano.

Posting on X today, the reporter said: “Agreement finally sealed. Bruno Guimaraes and Newcastle, new deal until June 2028. Release clause in region of £100m. Exclusive story, confirmed.”

Romano had previously claimed this deal was ‘here we go’ towards the end of September, but now final details appear to have been clarified, moving things a step closer to completion.

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Ian Maatsen could be sold if he doesn’t sign a new deal

It’s been a more positive week for Chelsea at last as they got back to winning ways by beating Fulham, but there are still some things to resolve with the squad away from the pitch.

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One of those is the contract of Ian Maatsen - we know very well that he almost joined Burnley on Deadline Day, with Chelsea accepting an offer from Burnley, only for the player to decide not to accept the contract proposal as it was not what he wanted. He decided to stay and fight for his place at Chelsea.

So, what’s going on now? Maatsen is out of contract in the summer and so that’s why Chelsea want him to sign a new deal as soon as possible. Conversations will continue, Chelsea are still insisting, but at the moment there is no agreement. If there is still nothing agreed closer to January, then Chelsea will consider selling Maatsen in a permanent transfer in the January transfer window.

 

 

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7 hours ago, Vesper said:

No doubt we will bid £300m for him next window 😂

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Chelsea

  • Steve Cooper on Andrey Santos: “He’s been good. He’s obviously a really good young player. I had a really good chat with Chelsea this week. I didn’t realise some stuff had been written about him… his chance will come for sure.”

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Chelsea’s big transfer dilemma: Sign a No 9 – or stick with what they have?

https://theathletic.com/4932745/2023/10/06/Chelsea-transfer-striker-osimhen-toney/

Chelsea’s big transfer dilemma: Sign a No 9 – or stick with what they have?

The summer window is long closed but the business of transfers never stops, and the biggest recruitment decision facing Chelsea between now and the January window is already clear.

Do they pursue a premium, proven No 9 in the new year to provide an immediate boost to this team’s scoring potential, or stick with what they have?

Despite Chelsea’s chronic struggles to find the net over the past year, the answer is not straightforward.

Going down the transfer route is particularly enticing because, unusually for the winter market, at least two high-profile strikers could well be available: Victor Osimhen of Napoli and Brentford’s Ivan Toney, who is readying himself for a return to competitive action in January after serving an eight-month ban for breaching the English Football Association’s betting rules.

Both will be entering the final 18 months of their contracts, putting their clubs in relatively weak negotiating positions.

Osimhen’s future with the Italian champions looks more precarious than ever after he was subjected to offensive social media videos posted on the club’s official channels last month. Toney changed his representation last summer, signing with leading global agency CAA Stellar, in a move widely interpreted as preparation for a transfer.

GettyImages-1716529338-scaled.jpg

Osimhen is the more exciting target of the two and almost certainly the one with greater upside. Three years younger than Toney at 24 (he’ll be 25 by January), he won the Capocannoniere award as Serie A’s top scorer in 2022-23 with 26 goals, as Napoli won their first league title since 1990, as well as finding the net five times in six Champions League appearances.

He will also very likely be far more expensive and command greater interest from rival clubs than Toney, who also enjoyed the best season of his career in 2022-23: 20 Premier League goals, a first England cap and a leading role in Brentford’s most successful top-flight campaign since 1936.

Toney has the advantage of being a known Premier League quantity, something Chelsea head coach Mauricio Pochettino placed greater emphasis on towards the end of the summer window — and the Argentinian has already confirmed he is more engaged than ever in conversations with co-sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart on recruitment strategy.

“When the transfer window was closed I said I need to be more involved now in all the decisions,” Pochettino said last week. “I have started to work to identify what we need for January.”

But it would be dangerous to assume that Pochettino is lobbying for a new No 9. He actively pushed back on suggestions in August that Chelsea should sign another striker, pointing out that Armando Broja was nearing a return from his lengthy absence due to an anterior cruciate ligament knee injury last December.

His publicly stated belief that summer arrival Nicolas Jackson can become a Premier League star is more than a mere motivational strategy. At some point, Pochettino will also have use of the injured Christopher Nkunku, another newcomer, who is not a true No 9 but was the man he appeared to be building Chelsea’s attack around in pre-season and who the club hoped would assume the mantle as the primary goalscorer in this team.

Broja’s lively showing against Fulham on Monday in his first start since the injury — coming five days after Jackson had scored a slick winner against Brighton & Hove Albion in the Carabao Cup — did more than help Chelsea secure their first away win of this Premier League season. It also underlined that competition for the No 9 spot at Stamford Bridge is the healthiest it has been since 2019-20, when manager Frank Lampard had the emerging Tammy Abraham and the evergreen Olivier Giroud.

The false nine folly that Thomas Tuchel and then Graham Potter too-often favoured is in the past, even if it is proving harder for Pochettino to draw a line under Chelsea’s broader scoring struggles. Jackson’s gilt-edged misses in the early weeks of this season make it clear they still lack a truly reliable finisher; Broja, for all his promise, had a relatively modest scoring rate at senior level before his long layoff.

GettyImages-1713805587-scaled.jpg

Those players can be hard to find, and even harder to acquire. Arguably the most important team-building task facing Winstanley, Stewart and Pochettino between now and January is to decide whether Osimhen, Toney or another striker fits the bill or if they feel the best option is already in the squad.

Recent history should remind Chelsea that the market offers no guarantees.

Romelu Lukaku replaced Abraham for the second time in three years at Roma this summer, in far less auspicious circumstances than he did as a £97.5million signing at Stamford Bridge in the summer of 2021. Osimhen may cost even more despite his contract situation, yet 2022-23 was his first truly prolific season by modern elite-striker standards.

Advanced statistics back up the notion that Osimhen is the real deal; his 0.66 non-penalty expected goals (npxG) per 90 minutes last season was within sight of Erling Haaland’s otherworldly 0.75 for Manchester City. Toney was some way behind both on 0.4, his tally of 20 league goals boosted by six converted penalties, though it is also fair to note that his success as the focal point of Brentford’s attack went beyond pure scoring.

Neither will be cheap to buy in January but the most important expense for Chelsea might be the lost opportunity of finding out what they have in Jackson, Broja and Nkunku. A season with no European football does not provide enough minutes for them to sustain three senior No 9s, so a big mid-season attacking acquisition would be bad news for that trio.

It is less a case of picking one of the two paths now, more of keeping one foot on each.

High-end modern transfers take a long time to negotiate, with months of groundwork often required to talk to the would-be selling club and the player’s camp, regardless of whether the deal ultimately comes off. Any significant player that Chelsea are targeting for January will be the subject of many private conversations in the preceding months.

But, at the same time, Chelsea will be evaluating Jackson, Broja and eventually Nkunku, and they will need to keep an open mind about what each player is, and can become in the Premier League.

“Football is very dynamic and it is about the present always,” Pochettino said. “Things can change until January. We need to work to recover Nkunku and Broja to try to provide the team with more goals and become solid. But, of course, we have already started to work (on transfers).”

 

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10 hours ago, Vesper said:

Chelsea’s big transfer dilemma: Sign a No 9 – or stick with what they have?

https://theathletic.com/4932745/2023/10/06/Chelsea-transfer-striker-osimhen-toney/

Chelsea’s big transfer dilemma: Sign a No 9 – or stick with what they have?

The summer window is long closed but the business of transfers never stops, and the biggest recruitment decision facing Chelsea between now and the January window is already clear.

Do they pursue a premium, proven No 9 in the new year to provide an immediate boost to this team’s scoring potential, or stick with what they have?

Despite Chelsea’s chronic struggles to find the net over the past year, the answer is not straightforward.

Going down the transfer route is particularly enticing because, unusually for the winter market, at least two high-profile strikers could well be available: Victor Osimhen of Napoli and Brentford’s Ivan Toney, who is readying himself for a return to competitive action in January after serving an eight-month ban for breaching the English Football Association’s betting rules.

Both will be entering the final 18 months of their contracts, putting their clubs in relatively weak negotiating positions.

Osimhen’s future with the Italian champions looks more precarious than ever after he was subjected to offensive social media videos posted on the club’s official channels last month. Toney changed his representation last summer, signing with leading global agency CAA Stellar, in a move widely interpreted as preparation for a transfer.

GettyImages-1716529338-scaled.jpg

Osimhen is the more exciting target of the two and almost certainly the one with greater upside. Three years younger than Toney at 24 (he’ll be 25 by January), he won the Capocannoniere award as Serie A’s top scorer in 2022-23 with 26 goals, as Napoli won their first league title since 1990, as well as finding the net five times in six Champions League appearances.

He will also very likely be far more expensive and command greater interest from rival clubs than Toney, who also enjoyed the best season of his career in 2022-23: 20 Premier League goals, a first England cap and a leading role in Brentford’s most successful top-flight campaign since 1936.

Toney has the advantage of being a known Premier League quantity, something Chelsea head coach Mauricio Pochettino placed greater emphasis on towards the end of the summer window — and the Argentinian has already confirmed he is more engaged than ever in conversations with co-sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart on recruitment strategy.

“When the transfer window was closed I said I need to be more involved now in all the decisions,” Pochettino said last week. “I have started to work to identify what we need for January.”

But it would be dangerous to assume that Pochettino is lobbying for a new No 9. He actively pushed back on suggestions in August that Chelsea should sign another striker, pointing out that Armando Broja was nearing a return from his lengthy absence due to an anterior cruciate ligament knee injury last December.

His publicly stated belief that summer arrival Nicolas Jackson can become a Premier League star is more than a mere motivational strategy. At some point, Pochettino will also have use of the injured Christopher Nkunku, another newcomer, who is not a true No 9 but was the man he appeared to be building Chelsea’s attack around in pre-season and who the club hoped would assume the mantle as the primary goalscorer in this team.

Broja’s lively showing against Fulham on Monday in his first start since the injury — coming five days after Jackson had scored a slick winner against Brighton & Hove Albion in the Carabao Cup — did more than help Chelsea secure their first away win of this Premier League season. It also underlined that competition for the No 9 spot at Stamford Bridge is the healthiest it has been since 2019-20, when manager Frank Lampard had the emerging Tammy Abraham and the evergreen Olivier Giroud.

The false nine folly that Thomas Tuchel and then Graham Potter too-often favoured is in the past, even if it is proving harder for Pochettino to draw a line under Chelsea’s broader scoring struggles. Jackson’s gilt-edged misses in the early weeks of this season make it clear they still lack a truly reliable finisher; Broja, for all his promise, had a relatively modest scoring rate at senior level before his long layoff.

GettyImages-1713805587-scaled.jpg

Those players can be hard to find, and even harder to acquire. Arguably the most important team-building task facing Winstanley, Stewart and Pochettino between now and January is to decide whether Osimhen, Toney or another striker fits the bill or if they feel the best option is already in the squad.

Recent history should remind Chelsea that the market offers no guarantees.

Romelu Lukaku replaced Abraham for the second time in three years at Roma this summer, in far less auspicious circumstances than he did as a £97.5million signing at Stamford Bridge in the summer of 2021. Osimhen may cost even more despite his contract situation, yet 2022-23 was his first truly prolific season by modern elite-striker standards.

Advanced statistics back up the notion that Osimhen is the real deal; his 0.66 non-penalty expected goals (npxG) per 90 minutes last season was within sight of Erling Haaland’s otherworldly 0.75 for Manchester City. Toney was some way behind both on 0.4, his tally of 20 league goals boosted by six converted penalties, though it is also fair to note that his success as the focal point of Brentford’s attack went beyond pure scoring.

Neither will be cheap to buy in January but the most important expense for Chelsea might be the lost opportunity of finding out what they have in Jackson, Broja and Nkunku. A season with no European football does not provide enough minutes for them to sustain three senior No 9s, so a big mid-season attacking acquisition would be bad news for that trio.

It is less a case of picking one of the two paths now, more of keeping one foot on each.

High-end modern transfers take a long time to negotiate, with months of groundwork often required to talk to the would-be selling club and the player’s camp, regardless of whether the deal ultimately comes off. Any significant player that Chelsea are targeting for January will be the subject of many private conversations in the preceding months.

But, at the same time, Chelsea will be evaluating Jackson, Broja and eventually Nkunku, and they will need to keep an open mind about what each player is, and can become in the Premier League.

“Football is very dynamic and it is about the present always,” Pochettino said. “Things can change until January. We need to work to recover Nkunku and Broja to try to provide the team with more goals and become solid. But, of course, we have already started to work (on transfers).”

 

Well, we have to wait till Jan anyway. 

So plenty of time to assess our current strike force. Just wish Nkunku was also fit sooner rather than later (as in closet to Jan). His recovery could make a difference.

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Really is kind of a serious dilemma this January regarding the #9 position. A massively expensive new striker basically kills Broja’s chances of ever playing meaningful Premier League minutes barring injuries. If the highly unlikely happens and we spend mega money on Osimhen he’ll be starting every match. And then Nico Jackson is the perfect rotational striker. So where would that leave Armando? As someone so young he can’t rot on the bench for the odd cup game or he never develops further.

So on the one hand we can of course use a world class goal scorer in January but in the other it’s super risky. It may perhaps be best if we wait until next summer and hope that the eventual return of Nkunku + our current attackers getting better can see us through to a respectable finish.

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Chelsea

  • Chelsea have already fixed an exit fee for Romelu Lukaku in summer 2024 — and it’s around £37m. There’s an agreement to make the player available for that fee next year.

  • More on Lukaku’s future here.

  • Mauricio Pochettino: “Cole Palmer surprised me when I arrived because it was the day before the transfer window closed, the way he reads the situations and the games... wow. He can be the player who can link with his teammates, he has great personality and great talent.”

  • What does the future hold for this Chelsea midfielder?

  • Chelsea are not worried by Axel Disasi injury as he left French national team yesterday. Chelsea believe it's just a small problem. More to follow in the next days as Disasi will be back at Cobham.

  • Is this Chelsea’s next wonderkid signing?

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