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Calum McFarlane Reinstated as Chelsea Interim for Remainder of 2025/26

Calum McFarlane returns as Chelsea interim manager for the remainder of the 2025/26 season. Reviews.

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Calum McFarlane has been named interim manager of Chelsea until the end of the 2025/26 campaign, marking his second temporary return to the first-team dugout this season. The club confirmed the move as Chelsea continue a search for a long-term replacement following the latest change in the touchline setup.

Rosenior, who was appointed Enzo Maresca’s successor in January, is now the fifth permanent manager to lose his job in the four years of BlueCo’s ownership. With Rosenior departing, Chelsea confirmed McFarlane will fill the now-vacant position until the end of the campaign.

McFarlane’s profile is rooted in youth coaching. He made his name within Manchester City’s academy and became an assistant manager of the Citizens’ U-18 squad in 2021. He remained in that role until a move to Southampton in 2023, where he spent two years managing the club’s U-18 side and then the U-21s.

He later joined Chelsea’s academy and went on to manage the U-21s in 2025–26. The 40-year-old was suddenly thrust onto the senior touchline earlier in the season following Maresca’s sudden departure and led the first team for two matches at the start of the year before Rosenior took over. Instead of returning to the U-21 side after Rosenior’s appointment, McFarlane stayed with the first team as an assistant on Rosenior’s staff.

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The sample of McFarlane’s work with the senior side is small and produced mixed outcomes. He oversaw the Blues’ 1–1 draw with Manchester City on Jan. 4 and then a 2–1 defeat to Fulham on Jan. 7. The draw at the Etihad featured a last-gasp winner from Enzo Fernández to snatch a point. Chelsea’s next meeting with Manchester City in April resulted in a 3–0 home defeat.

The Fulham match highlighted the volatility of those early games: Marc Cucurella was sent off 22 minutes into the contest, the Blues fell behind, but Liam Delap’s equalizer in the 72nd minute briefly steadied the performance. McFarlane now faces the task of steadying a turbulent season while the club evaluates its long-term managerial direction.

Chelsea

UEFA Settlement Puts Chelsea’s Finances Under Pressure as Champions League Slip Threatens Compliance

Europa ban threat looms if Chelsea miss Champions League and fail to meet UEFA settlement terms soon

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Chelsea’s recent run of poor results has intensified a financial problem that was always tied to performance on the pitch. UEFA included further fines and a suspended one-season ban in the settlement should Chelsea breach the rules again in the next four years. Financial commentators cited by The Times say failing to secure Champions League income would leave the Stamford Bridge club at “serious risk” of breaching the agreement.

The settlement also sets out the potential sporting consequence. “In case of breach of settlement, the CFCB shall terminate the Settlement Agreement, and the club agrees on an exclusion from the next one applicable UEFA club competition for which it would otherwise qualify in the following three seasons,” the statement reads, via The Times.

Those possibilities are not expected to materialise this season because Champions League revenue from 2025–26 and prize money from winning the 2025 Club World Cup should make meeting the settlement feasible. The longer term concern is what happens once those income streams are no longer available.

Some have urged Chelsea to consider the path taken previously by AC Milan and Juventus and accept a one-season ban, on the basis that they may miss qualification for the Europa League or Conference League. The Times reports that Chelsea are not considering a voluntary one-year exclusion.

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On the pitch, the situation makes sporting results urgent. Chelsea dismissed Liam Rosenior during the slump and appointed Calum McFarlane as interim manager. The club sit eighth, seven points behind fifth place, with a two-point gap to sixth. If Aston Villa finish fifth and win the Europa League, sixth would be enough for Champions League qualification, a scenario that would substantially ease the financial pressure.

If Champions League qualification is not achieved next season, the most obvious alternative to generate the required revenue would be player sales for major profit. Long-term contracts signed during the BlueCo era complicate that route and would make it harder to produce the necessary transfer gains to avoid breaching the settlement.

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How Chelsea’s break clause limited the cost of the Rosenior episode

Break clause limits Chelsea payout after Liam Rosenior exit; total outlay still around $7.2 million.

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Chelsea’s decision to include a break clause in Liam Rosenior’s contract has materially reduced the club’s payout following his dismissal, reports say. The clause was triggered after a run of poor results and, because Rosenior’s stay lasted less than a year, the club is set to pay the equivalent of one year’s salary rather than a larger settlement.

Before wages and the small compensation are tallied, Chelsea also paid Strasbourg for Rosenior’s services after parting company with Enzo Maresca. The BlueCo investment group own both clubs, an arrangement that prompted widespread coverage of the negotiations. It was reported that Chelsea paid “market rate” for Rosenior’s services, although no figure was disclosed to substantiate that term.

When Rosenior’s short-term wages are combined with the compensation fee, the article calculates a total in the region of $7.2 million — roughly $67,000 for each day’s work, or $650,000 per win. That sum marks a costly episode, even if the break clause limited the final bill.

BlueCo have now gone through five permanent managers in less than four years. The list of departures and reported compensations reads: Thomas Tuchel, September 2022, $17.5 million; Graham Potter, April 2023, $17.5 million; Mauricio Pochettino, May 2024, $13.5 million; Enzo Maresca, January 2026, $5.4 million; Liam Rosenior, April 2026, $5.4 million.

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Tuchel and Potter received the largest payoffs during an early, turbulent period under the new ownership. The Daily Mail reported Tuchel was entitled to $17.5 million in September 2022 and that his staff were owed $2.7 million. Potter left with $17.5 million after nine months.

Pochettino completed the 2023/24 season and departed after a post-campaign review of a sixth-placed finish; he was helped out of the door with as much as $13.5 million, and Chelsea had arrangements to reclaim some of that sum if he joined another top-six Premier League club, per Mark Ogden of ESPN. Maresca chose not to seek the full compensation available to him and reportedly settled on terms similar to Rosenior’s — one year’s salary worth $5.4 million, according to ESPN.

As Malcolm Allison put it, “You’re not really a manager until you’ve been sacked.” Chelsea’s pattern of frequent changes has so far carried a heavy price tag.

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Man City Consider Early Move for Chelsea Midfielder Enzo Fernández

Man City hold early interest in Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernández ahead of the summer window in 2026

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Manchester City are reported to have opened early discussions over a summer move for Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernández as the 2025–26 season reaches its final weeks. The Athletic says City’s interest is at an “early stage,” with alternative targets also under consideration.

City’s playing and coaching situation remains unsettled, with Guardiola’s future unclear and speculation that Fernández’s former Chelsea boss, Enzo Maresca, has been earmarked as a potential replacement at the Etihad Stadium. Regardless of managerial developments, the club is preparing further squad work this summer and has identified the midfield engine room as a priority.

Chelsea, who have now parted ways with manager Liam Rosenior, are said to be reluctant to sell their vice-captain. The Blues may, however, face a difficult decision if Fernández pushes to leave. The Argentine was suspended internally after comments made following Chelsea’s comprehensive Champions League exit to Paris Saint-Germain. He then said he ”didn’t know”” where his future lay at the end of a disappointing 2025–26 season.

During the March international break Fernández reportedly suggested he would like to live in the Spanish capital amid links to Real Madrid. His agent, former Paris Saint-Germain player Javier Pastore, said his client would consider his options in the summer after he was disciplined by Chelsea, before backtracking his claims.

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Contractually Fernández is tied to Stamford Bridge until 2032. Chelsea paid as much as £106.8 million ($144.2 million) to sign him from Benfica in 2023, meaning any transfer would require a mammoth fee to persuade the club to sell.

City have already invested in midfield since losing Rodri to an ACL tear and after confirming the departures of Kevin De Bruyne and Ilkay Gündoğan following the 2024–25 season. Some recruits, including González and Reijnders, have struggled to establish themselves, while Guardiola has embraced playmaker Rayan Cherki, the Frenchman leading City’s charge toward an unexpected league title.

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