Monday, December 23, 2024

Chelsea keep spending as PSR forces Leicester, Newcastle and Villa to sell stars

Must read

Leicester City, Aston Villa and Newcastle United have been locked in transfer negotiations over the past few days, prepared to listen to offers for their star players to avoid a sanction for breaching profit and sustainability rules – yet Chelsea, while not quite on their own, have been able to carry on buying.

There were reports that Newcastle were prepared to let Anthony Gordon go to Liverpool and they have given the green light for homegrown favourite Elliot Anderson to head to Nottingham Forest. Villa have sold ace midfielder Douglas Luiz to Juventus for £42.35 million despite qualifying for the Champions League.




And Leicester are ready to wave goodbye to Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, one of the driving forces behind promotion back to the Premier League, despite landing back into the top flight riches. Chelsea have agreed a £30m deal.

READ MORE: Business that must be done by June 30 for City to avoid PSR nightmare

READ MORE: Join our City WhatsApp group and get transfer news sent to your phone

Chelsea have also spent about £10m in compensation to bring in Leicester boss Enzo Maresca plus his coaches from the King Power Stadium. They are lining up $20m full-back Caleb Wiley from Atlanta too and are said to be targeting Forest’s key defender Murillo, who could cost about £70m despite already bringing in free agent Tosin Adarabioyo from Fulham. Omari Kellyman has joined from Villa for £19m.

A striker remains on their agenda and there have been links with Newcastle’s Alexander Isak, who would apparently cost more than £115m, Villa’s Jhon Duran and Atletico Madrid’s Samu Omorodion are also under consideration.

football.london admits that some supporters might see Chelsea owner Todd Boehly exploiting a PSR loophole by funding these purchases through the sales of youth graduates like Ian Maatsen to Villa or Michael Golding to Leicester, if that one gets over the line.

Get free Amazon Prime membership

Fancy free takeaway delivery, exclusive discounts, free music streaming and access to some of the best sports documentaries being made? These are just a few of the perks of Amazon Prime. Usually £8.99 a month, you can now get a 30-day free trial just in time for Amazon Prime Day, which brings the sites best deals of the year exclusively to Prime members.

Latest article