Friday, September 13, 2024
spot_img

Chaos at Chelsea: Spending spree leaves club vulnerable

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

London, Aug 22: In the years to come, the experiment unfolding at Chelsea under their American investors will be a fascinating case study in how to run a soccer club.
Because no one in England has ever seen anything like what has been happening at Stamford Bridge over the last two years.
Just take this in: Chelsea has spent nearly $1.3 billion on 39 players across five transfer windows since a consortium fronted by Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital bought the Premier League club from its long-time owner, Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, for $3.2 billion in May 2022.
Throw in the club having four different full-time managers in this period – plus another coach on a temporary basis – and the revolving door at Chelsea, a six-time English champion and two-time European champion, simply hasn’t stopped spinning.
“It’s not a mess like it looks from the outside,” Enzo Maresca, the latest Chelsea manager, said as he attempted to explain the wisdom behind taking the number of players in the squad to 43 by signing two wingers – Pedro Neto and Joao Felix – for a combined $130 million over the past week.This while already having five wingers in the squad, including one – Mykhailo Mudryk – signed for more than $100 million just last year and another – Raheem Sterling – who was the first signing of this unprecedented two-year trolley dash for nearly $60 million.Sterling has been stripped of his squad number following the arrival of Neto and is one of around 20 players “training apart,” Maresca said. Among them is striker Romelu Lukaku, signed three years ago for a then-club record of $135 million, and goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga, the world’s most expensive keeper signed for $92 million.Not much seemingly makes sense in Chelsea’s brave new era.“It’s been a crazy one to follow so far,” Dr. Dan Plumley, sports finance expert at Sheffield Hallam University, told The Associated Press, “and it shows no sign of slowing down.”
Plumley said the Chelsea owners’ initial “aggressive” play in the transfer market to overhaul the squad was not unexpected, even if spending $280 million in the summer of 2022, $350 million in January 2023 and more than $400 million in the offseason of that year was unprecedented for a soccer club. In the current window, the outlay is more than $250 million on 10 players.
“You are thinking, That’s the initial burst but now you have to rein it in a little bit,’” Plumley said in a phone interview.
“But they seem to be carrying on, which raises a few question marks around what the actual strategy is there and what are the owners looking to do.” With their background in private equity and venture capital, Boehly and Clearlake are coming at soccer ownership very differently and have moved the goalposts in their efforts when dealing with the sport’s financial fair-play constraints.
They’ve typically given contracts of seven-to-nine years to new signings to spread “amortization” costs of transfer fees across the whole deal. That prompted UEFA and then the Premier League to tighten their rules, and it’s a risky strategy as a whole because it leaves Chelsea extremely vulnerable if the players recruited prove to be flops and can’t be moved on.
They’ve focused on selling homegrown or academy players, essentially because they can be sold for pure profit in the annual accounts which facilitates the purchase of other more high-profile players on amortized deals. Hence the departures of Conor Gallagher, the team’s vice-captain last season, this week and those of youngsters like Ian Maatsen, (AP)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Why Opposition’s criticism of PM Modi-CJI meet at Ganesh Puja is unwarranted?

New Delhi, Sep 12: Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the residence of Chief Justice of India (CJI) DY...

‘Spanned political divide’: President, PM condole passing away of CPI-M chief Yechury

New Delhi, Sep 12:  President Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday condoled the passing away...

Student’s death: Media groups flay IIT-G move to prevent scribes from entering campus

GUWAHATI, Sep 12: Media associations in Assam have condemned the IIT-Guwahati’s decision to prevent on-duty journalists from entering...

Shimla mosque authorities agree to seal illegal portion: Himachal ministers

Shimla, Sep 12:  A day after massive protests erupted in the Himachal Pradesh capital over demand to demolish...