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Joao Felix


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3 hours ago, LAM09 said:

There for less than two months. 😄

Who’d of thought? And now, we are lumbered with him 😂

You don’t burn through spells at as many big teams by his age if you are any good.

But yep, another one we shouldn’t have signed. Even the first time round on loan. Ludicrous.

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13 minutes ago, OneMoSalah said:

Who’d of thought? And now, we are lumbered with him 😂

You don’t burn through spells at as many big teams by his age if you are any good.

But yep, another one we shouldn’t have signed. Even the first time round on loan. Ludicrous.

I was only on board if the deal worked in our favour. The moment Samu wasn't included, we should have ran away as fast as we could and sold Gallagher to Villa, etc.

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  • 1 month later...
On 02/04/2025 at 00:30, LAM09 said:

I was only on board if the deal worked in our favour. The moment Samu wasn't included, we should have ran away as fast as we could and sold Gallagher to Villa, etc.

Nope. Villa couldn't spend in the Summer. Only way he Conor went there is if they let Duran come the other way. 

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Any word on if anyone wants to sign this guy yet? Who will have some actual money to spend 25-30m on him at least?

I seen Flamengo were linked but never getting anything close to that from them. 

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6 minutes ago, OneMoSalah said:

Any word on if anyone wants to sign this guy yet? Who will have some actual money to spend 25-30m on him at least?

I seen Flamengo were linked but never getting anything close to that from them. 

We signed him to do a favor to Mendes who also helped with Neto. He is influential so he'll find him another club. 

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7 hours ago, King Kante said:

Nope. Villa couldn't spend in the Summer. Only way he Conor went there is if they let Duran come the other way. 

Erm, how did they afford Onana & Maatsen then?

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7 hours ago, NikkiCFC said:

We signed him to do a favor to Mendes who also helped with Neto. He is influential so he'll find him another club. 

Pedro Neto was the gain for signing Felix? I didn't really read many teams were after him.. He has Barcola, Vitinha, Joao Neves, Antonio Silva and we cashed in favour for Neto? I hope he still owes us one..

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4 hours ago, LAM09 said:

Erm, how did they afford Onana & Maatsen then?

Maatsen only happened because we took Kellyman. Onana was their main target. After that they had no money. 

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1 hour ago, King Kante said:

Maatsen only happened because we took Kellyman. Onana was their main target. After that they had no money. 

Exactly, afterwards. They initially had the money for him when rumours started to float around. 

Our board is the reason any deal was unlikely to happen. As the post you quoted mentioned, Samu was effectively a Chelsea player until they decided to intervene.

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23 hours ago, NikkiCFC said:

We signed him to do a favor to Mendes who also helped with Neto. He is influential so he'll find him another club. 

I doubt that.

This was a BlueCo driven signing by the chuckle brothers, I mean its obvious isn’t it? Who signed him under Harry Potter also? Same pair of clowns.

It was nothing to do with a favour for Neto deal/Mendes.

 

Edited by OneMoSalah
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  • 3 weeks later...

Farewell, Joao Felix: Twice a Blue but Chelsea rarely saw the best of you

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6527136/2025/08/02/joao-felix-Chelsea-goodbye-al-nassr/

GettyImages-2174466962-scaled-e175396900

No one has bothered to make a YouTube compilation of Joao Felix’s second Chelsea spell.

Historically, it has never been hard to find lovingly curated footage of the Portugal international, who has plenty of online devotees and whose flashy game is particularly well suited to highlights packages. Click on one, mute the inevitably awful soundtrack, and you can expect to see sharp stepovers, neat nutmegs, flamboyant flicks and deft drops of the shoulder.

Many of the clips will abruptly cut off at the precise moment when a goal or an assist might follow. (NARRATOR: it did not.)

To balance out what is going to follow, it’s worth noting that my colleague Jack Lang wrote a piece this year supporting Joao Felix. As he wrote, everyone sees something different in him.

But it seems not even the most die-hard Joao Felix fans had the heart to cobble together the footage of him scoring the sixth goal in a 6-2 win against Wolverhampton Wanderers on his second Chelsea ‘debut’ last August, followed by perfunctory cup doubles against Panathinaikos, FC Noah and Morecambe. Even with the additional padding of assists against Barrow and Southampton, the video would struggle to break the three-minute mark. Much better to look forward with fresh hope to the next chapter of a bewildering career.

Two and a half years after first arriving at Stamford Bridge from Atletico Madrid on loan, less than 12 months after signing permanently in a £44.5million transfer, and a little under six months since swapping west London for Milan on loan, Joao Felix has left Chelsea and the Premier League to join Saudi Pro League club Al Nassr in a deal worth £26.2m (€30m; $35.2m) as an upfront fee, with add-ons taking the total valuation to £43.3m (€50m; $57.2m).

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Joao Felix has joined Al Nassr (Crystal Pix/MB Media/Getty Images)

“Once a blue, always a blue,” he replied with a blue heart emoji to Chelsea’s post on Instagram, confirming his departure this week. Give yourself more credit, Joao, it’s twice a Blue and once of Benfica, Atletico, Barcelona (another loan) and Milan. That is five clubs (soon to be six with Al Nassr) represented in seven professional seasons, and potentially north of £200m in transfer fees generated, putting him fourth in football’s all-time cumulative list, behind Neymar, Romelu Lukaku and new club-mate Cristiano Ronaldo — all by the age of 25.

No other high-profile footballer in the world has followed such a strange career arc, one that for at least two years has been leading him, circuitously but inexorably, to Saudi Arabia. “I’m here to spread joy,” he said, smouldering into the camera in his Al Nassr announcement video. “Let’s win together.” Watching him pose, stride, drape himself in a scarf and cross his arms in sultry silhouette, it is hard not to conclude that he has at least become world class at unveiling himself.

The fact that the jokes about Joao Felix come so easily is a little depressing. This was the Golden Boy winner in 2019, comfortably seeing off competition from Bundesliga sensations Jadon Sancho and Kai Havertz, and an emerging monster in Salzburg called Erling Haaland, to win the prize for Europe’s best under-21 player. Atletico’s decision to pay £113m to prise him from Benfica in July of that year after one phenomenal season was patently absurd, but the notion that he could blossom into their version of Lionel Messi or Ronaldo seemed very legitimate.

Six years on, Joao Felix has played 15,429 career minutes across all competitions at club level, an average of 2,204 per season. He has never started more than 21 league matches in a single campaign, and never beaten either the 15 league goals or the seven league assists that he registered for Benfica in 2018-19 as a teenager. Admittedly, he did miss 168 days of the 2021-22 season through injury, a total of around 20 games for club and country, according to Transfermarkt.

As recently as January 2023, when Chelsea talked themselves into paying a €11m loan fee to bring Joao Felix to Stamford Bridge for five months in a vain attempt to save a lost season, it was still easy to be convinced that his struggles were circumstantial. He had performed well enough to be named Atletico’s player of the season in 2021-22, but maybe he was simply a poor fit there, an artist lost in Diego Simeone’s team of soldiers.

His straight red card for a studs-up tackle on Kenny Tete to kneecap 58 encouragingly bright minutes on his Chelsea debut instantly became a defining tragicomic image of the worst season of the club’s modern history. It also remains by far the most memorable contribution of Joao Felix’s two spells at Stamford Bridge, and of a Premier League career that extends to just 28 appearances, 14 of which were starts.

There was little in that first Chelsea stint that merited a sequel. Joao Felix showed more on loan at Barcelona in 2023-24, contributing 10 goals and five assists in 44 appearances across all competitions. Barcelona’s finances were a barrier to a permanent deal the following summer, but they still found a way to sign Dani Olmo, another attacking midfielder.

Reports that Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca did not want Joao Felix last summer were denied strongly by club officials, but his selection in the first half of last season spoke volumes; the former Atletico man started only three times in the Premier League against the three promoted (and soon to be relegated) sides: Leicester City, Southampton and Ipswich Town.

“It’s a shame for Joao and I would like to give him more minutes in the Premier League, but we need defensive balance and we cannot play with Joao, Cole Palmer and Christopher Nkunku,” Maresca said when asked about Joao Felix’s lack of league minutes in a press conference in November. “I’d like to put all of them on the pitch, but then you need to defend, and you need the right balance.”

Joao Felix’s value was degraded rather than enhanced by an underwhelming loan spell at Milan and Chelsea’s decision to sell this summer, for a much lower initial price than they paid a year ago, with the potential to recoup close to the full amount after add-ons, is more of an escape than a win.

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Joao Felix had a tough time at Chelsea. Twice (George Wood/Getty Images)

Even so, there is a sense that the move to Al Nassr might only be for the short term. Joao Felix is 25 and has signed a two-year contract, suggesting he is keeping one eye on a relatively swift return to Europe. And even if he stayed longer, Al Hilal did perform well at the Club World Cup. Saudi teams could compete for major honours in the future.

He also still has plenty of fans as well as detractors within the game. Aston Villa head coach Unai Emery has never hidden his admiration, creating the potential for a more satisfying third act in the Premier League. Benfica would be the destination to warm the heart above all others, but as was demonstrated this summer, modern football’s market forces generally push players away from such romantic reunions.

There is no telling where Joao Felix’s career will take him next, but the YouTube compilations documenting his time at Al Nassr have already begun to surface.

Two moments in particular from his first friendly appearance against Toulouse this week stand out. The first is Ronaldo running into Joao Felix at the back post as both men attempted to tap a low cross from the left into an empty net, in what felt like a friendly but firm introduction to Al Nassr’s scoring pecking order.

The second was Joao Felix receiving the ball just outside his own penalty area with a stepover to his right and then a quick shift to his left, winning a free kick with the kind of high-risk, low-reward skill move that perfectly divides his fans from his critics. Al Nassr fans can expect more of that for as long as he sticks around.

Hopefully, they will get some memorable, and even consequential, goals and assists too. It will take more than empty highlights to make European football fans pine for Joao Felix’s return.

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