Chelsea
Chelsea’s Starting XI After the 2025 Summer Window
Chelsea’s strongest XI after the 2025 summer window: transfers, injuries and emerging starters. Read.
Chelsea enter the 2025/26 campaign strengthened by a summer that mixed heavy recruitment with continuity. After a turnaround in 2024–25, the squad assembled by Maresca aims to press for honours, and on paper this is the side most likely to start given the club’s transfer business and injury situation.
GK: Robert Sánchez
Goalkeeper was largely untouched during the window. Chelsea explored a deal for AC Milan’s Mike Maignan but ultimately kept Robert Sánchez as the starter. Sánchez remains prone to the occasional mistake but has shown improvement, notably at the Club World Cup. Mike Penders, on loan at sister club Strasbourg, is viewed as a possible long-term option.
RB: Reece James
Now largely free of the injury problems that disrupted two seasons, Reece James has been managed carefully by Maresca and is expected to be a major factor when fit. Chelsea’s captain offers physical defence, technique and wide passing range, and will be preserved for key moments while contributing across the season.
CB: Trevoh Chalobah
After his loan at Crystal Palace was ended in January, Trevoh Chalobah has established himself back at Cobham and into Maresca’s plans. With Levi Colwill sidelined long-term with an ACL injury and Wesley Fofana still struggling for fitness, Chalobah’s role in the back line has grown in importance.
CB: Tosin Adarabioyo
Signed from Fulham for depth, Tosin has become a regular given the defensive injury list. A strong aerial presence, he has been embraced by the dressing room and nicknamed “Uncle Tosin.” At 27 he is one of the senior leaders in the squad.
LB: Marc Cucurella
Cucurella’s career regained momentum after Euro 2024 and he led Chelsea in appearances in 2024–25. Tenacious defensively, he added attacking output last season with seven goals and four assists. Jorrel Hato arrived as cover but Cucurella looks set to start.
DMs: Moisés Caicedo and Enzo Fernández
Caicedo, signed from Brighton for £115 million, anchors midfield with relentless duels and ball-carrying. Enzo Fernández provides vision, passing range and has evolved into a goal threat, becoming a key creative and attacking presence.
AM: Cole Palmer
Palmer is the focal point of attack, capable of decisive moments from the right or as No. 10 with a special left foot.
RW: Estêvão
The 18-year-old Estêvão Willian has shown glimpses of top potential after signing in 2024, and Maresca appears ready to bring him through carefully.
LW: Pedro Neto
Pacy and effective on either flank, Neto has found form since joining last summer and delivers dangerous crosses from the left.
ST: João Pedro
João Pedro, the only summer 2025 arrival to start, hit the ground running with five goals and two assists in his first six matches and helped secure the 2025 Club World Cup. With Liam Delap injured and Nicolas Jackson now at Bayern Munich, Pedro is the primary striker option with Marc Guiu as cover.
Chelsea
UK Government Moves to Sue Over Frozen Chelsea Sale Funds
UK government moves to sue to gain access to frozen funds from Roman Abramovich’s 2022 sale. In U.K.
The UK government is preparing legal action to obtain access to the $3.2 billion held from Roman Abramovich’s sale of Chelsea in 2022. A consortium led by Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital paid a total of $5.2 billion (£4.25 billion) for the club, with $3.2 billion the final sale price and a pledge of $2 billion in investment over the next 10 years.
The $3.2 billion remains frozen in a U.K. bank account controlled by Fordstam, Abramovich’s company, because the parties have not agreed on the funds’ intended use. The government now says it will pursue litigation to secure the money after negotiations failed to reach a resolution.
A government spokesperson said: “We gave Roman Abramovich his last chance to do the right thing. Once again, he has failed to make the donation he committed to.
“We will now take further steps to ensure that the promise he made at the time of the Chelsea sale is kept.”
The disagreement stems from the wording of the 2022 agreement. Both sides say the money should support victims of the war, but they differ on how that is defined. The government wants to send the entire sum to Ukraine, while Abramovich has argued there are victims of the conflict outside of Ukraine, including in his native Russia.
Legal action was seen as the likely outcome more than 12 months ago, and another year of unsuccessful talks has left the government concluding there is no alternative. Reports of an investigation in Jersey, where some of Abramovich’s money was managed, have added to the uncertainty surrounding the funds.
The draft sale and much of Abramovich’s Chelsea investment were funded through a series of offshore loans, including more than $2 billion interest-free from a Jersey company, Camberley International Investments.
Chelsea
Enzo Fernández’s Plain Reply Deepens Doubts Over Chelsea Direction
Enzo Fernández’s short answer has left Chelsea and Liam Rosenior with serious questions about future.
Chelsea’s European exit left the club with clear on-field problems and a new layer of uncertainty after Enzo Fernández offered a terse assessment of his immediate plans. The Blues were beaten 8–2 on aggregate by Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League round of 16, a tie settled by goals from Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Bradley Barcola and Senny Mayulu.
Fernández, the club’s vice-captain, was asked about his future and responded: “I don’t know,” Fernández said. “I don’t know—right now, I’m thinking here. There are eight games left [in the Premier League ] and the FA Cup and then there’s the World Cup and then we’ll see, we’ll see.”
The midfielder’s sombre mood followed a night in which Mamadou Sarr’s early mistake allowed Kvaratskhelia a simple opening goal after six minutes, and Barcola rifled an uncontested strike into Robert Sánchez’s top corner before the 15-minute mark. Rosenior made significant changes around the hour, withdrawing Cole Palmer, João Pedro and Fernández.
Asked about Fernández’s comments, Rosenior said: “I haven’t seen that. It’s hard for me to speak on speculation after a game,” he mused. “I need to focus right now on the most important things, which is making sure we get a result against Everton on Saturday.”
Rosenior also reflected on the scale of the defeat. “When you go two goals down so early and five goals down on aggregate, it’s a really, really difficult evening,” Rosenior sighed. “We wanted to obviously put up more of a fight than what we did. Credit to PSG. Their possession play was really, really top in the game and over the two legs they deserve to go through.”
Pressed on the wider impact, he added: “That’s my job,” he continued when probed on how he’ll prevent the past seven days from defining Chelsea ’s season. “How I go about that is how we always go about it. We need to be resilient. We need to make sure we go to Everton with an organization, with a freshness and intensity in our team because we want to be in this competition next season … if we perform how I know we can, we can get there without the individual mistakes that we’re making at the moment.”
Fernández has started more games than anybody during 2025–26 and logged the most minutes across all competitions. He is enjoying his best goal return with 12 in all competitions, eight in the Premier League, as Chelsea fight to secure Champions League qualification for next season.
Chelsea
Pedro Neto Given Formal Warning After Ball‑boy Incident, Cleared to Play at Stamford Bridge
Pedro Neto received a formal warning from UEFA’s CEDB after pushing a PSG ball boy in Paris. He said
UEFA’s Control, Ethic and Disciplinary Body (CEDB) has issued a formal warning to Chelsea winger Pedro Neto after he pushed a ball boy during last week’s Champions League defeat by Paris Saint-Germain. Neto faced an accusation of unsporting conduct but avoided a fine or suspension.
Neto spoke immediately after the match and expressed clear remorse. “I’m not like this,” he told TNT Sports. “It was in the heat of the moment and I want to apologise. I gave him my shirt. I’m really sorry about it—I feel I have to apologize to him.
“My French is not very good, and Vitinha came over and said to him I was not like this. I said sorry about 35 times. He could see what happened and was happy with the situation.”
Under Article 15 of the UEFA Disciplinary Regulation, unsporting conduct can carry a one-match ban. The CEDB noted only a formal warning was required, and it is possible Neto’s immediate contrition influenced the outcome. The regulations also allow typical suspensions to be reduced “if the circumstances of the case so require.”
That decision means Neto is available for the Champions League return leg at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday night. He made a positive contribution in Paris, assisting Chelsea’s second goal in the game.
Neto has been a regular this season. Only Enzo Fernández (44) has made more appearances than Neto’s 42 across all competitions. Neto ranks fifth for total minutes on the pitch and has produced 16 goal contributions, with 10 goals and six assists. Those figures are bettered only by Fernández (12 goals, six assists) and João Pedro (18 goals, nine assists).
He should also be reasonably fresh for the midweek fixture, having served a domestic suspension in the Premier League over the weekend as Chelsea lost to Newcastle United.
The formal warning closes the disciplinary chapter, and Neto is free to play as Chelsea prepare to host PSG for the second leg.
