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Five Realistic Destinations for Marc Guéhi, Ranked by Likelihood

Guéhi stayed at Palace for 2025–26. Five clubs ranked by likelihood as his 2026 move approaches mid.

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Marc Guéhi remained a Crystal Palace player for the 2025–26 season after a summer transfer attempt collapsed when the Eagles failed to secure a replacement and Oliver Glasner stopped the move. Glasner has confirmed that Guéhi won’t be extending his contract at Selhurst Park, so a departure in 2026 appears inevitable. The immediate question is whether Palace will sell him in the winter or allow him to leave for free at season end. Some have suggested his exemplary behaviour during the saga perhaps cost him a big move.

It was Liverpool and only Liverpool in the summer, but other elite suitors could re-emerge next year. Below are five plausible destinations ranked by the likelihood that Guéhi will move there.

Tottenham — Likelihood Rating: 4/10
Tottenham searched for a left-sided defender late in the window but were beaten to Piero Hincapié by Arsenal. Guéhi is right footed but typically plays as the left centre back in a back three or four. Spurs have shown prior interest without a serious bid. Even with resources, Guéhi would likely be second choice behind Micky van de Ven and may prefer a bigger leap.

Chelsea — Likelihood Rating: 6/10
Guéhi came through at Chelsea and made his senior debut there before the club sold him for about £18 million in 2021. Enzo Maresca’s side have been keeping tabs. With centre-back depth and Levi Colwill set to return fit, Guéhi would still represent an upgrade on Trevoh Chalobah, Tosin Adarabioyo and Benoît Badiashile, and a return would carry a sense of unfinished business.

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Barcelona — Likelihood Rating: 7/10
“You wait ages for one Englishman—and then two come along at the same time!” There was little time to replace Iñigo Martínez late in the summer, leaving Hansi Flick a centre back short for 2025–26. Limited finances make Guéhi an intriguing option to partner Pau Cubarsí while Eric García has been a frequent starter.

Bayern Munich — Likelihood Rating: 7/10
There is thought to be genuine Bavarian interest. Vincent Kompany began the season with Dayot Upamecano and Jonathan Tah; Guéhi would need to earn a place but links to Harry Kane and Michael Olise add appeal.

Real Madrid — Likelihood Rating: 8/10
Xabi Alonso’s defence is ageing. At 25, Guéhi has been named among those considered to bring youth to the centre-back ranks as Madrid weigh options between him and Ibrahima Konaté.

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Bayern Munich

Michael Olise: Rejected by Academies, Forged at Reading and Blossomed at Bayern

Olise overcame early academy rejections to become Bayern’s creative force and France’s World Cup ace

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Michael Olise’s rise to a World Cup place is notable for how uneven his early pathway was. The London-born winger spent time in several top academies before finding a route to senior football via Reading, progressing through Crystal Palace and completing a 2024 move to Bayern.

Olise finished the 2025–26 season with 53 goals and assists in 52 appearances for Bayern and enters the tournament as a key player for pre-tournament favorite France. He signed off France’s final practice match against Northern Ireland with a hat-trick and has returned to his preferred right wing after spending much of 2025 and early 2026 in France’s No. 10 position. Olise’s relationship with Kylian Mbappé could be crucial.

The early stops on his journey were difficult. Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City all had him in their systems at youth level, but he did not remain at those clubs and Reading ultimately offered him the platform to break through. José Gomes, who was Reading’s manager when Olise debuted, described the struggles that followed those early exits.

“Before he was 14, he was at Arsenal’s youth academy, but he didn’t adapt,” Gomes said. He added: “Chelsea kicked him out for the same reason some tried to do so at Reading: because he didn’t attend classes and didn’t pay attention to his studies.”

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Gomes also recalled the Manchester City episode: “At [Manchester] City, it was because his teammates laughed at him. He had weak arms, and English boys were strong. When the fitness coach told them to do push ups, he struggled a lot, and his teammates mocked him. He felt humiliated and left.”

At Reading Gomes put Olise through a tough apprenticeship in training before handing him his debut. “I told my players not to hold back when it came to tackling him hard in training so he could learn what professional soccer is like. Michael complained and cried … he didn’t understand it at the time. I told him that if he could endure a week of his teammates’ defensive actions without crying, I’d call him up. In the end, it was two weeks, and when I thought he was ready, I called him up.” Olise made his Reading debut in March 2019 at 17.

That combination of resilience and subsequent form at Bayern has placed him among France’s influential options heading into the 2026/27 international season.

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Arsenal

Five transfer sagas set to dominate the summer window

Five transfer sagas to follow this summer: Diomande, Fernández, Álvarez, Anderson, Wharton. Details.

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Summer will bring the familiar long negotiations and headline-grabbing speculation as clubs pursue a handful of marquee targets. Here are five stories most likely to shape the window.

Yan Diomande’s rise has been swift. Up until November 2024 he was in a youth academy in Florida, then moved from the United States to Leganés before an eye-catching switch to RB Leipzig last summer. The 19-year-old has recorded 13 goals and nine assists in an astonishing debut season with Leipzig and is now attracting Liverpool and Paris Saint-Germain. Reports value him around €100 million (£87m, $116m). Diomande will represent Côte d’Ivoire at the World Cup, a factor likely to complicate and prolong any transfer.

Enzo Fernández publicly cast doubt over his future during the March international break after flirting with Real Madrid. Speculation over his Chelsea exit has intensified with Manchester City joining the race and Enzo Maresca seen as the likely successor to Pep Guardiola. There is a sense that Chelsea’s final day defeat to Sunderland was Fernández’s last outing for the club, and he looks increasingly unlikely to spearhead Xabi Alonso’s revolution at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea are reportedly demanding around £120 million ($161 million), and the player’s participation at the World Cup for Argentina will delay any resolution.

Julián Álvarez remains a central talking point. Having stayed at Atlético Madrid for the 2025/26 campaign, the 26-year-old appears destined to leave Spain’s capital before next season. Barcelona are favourites and are preparing to launch a first official bid of roughly €100 million (£87m, $116m), though Atlético may seek more. Arsenal are also interested despite already possessing Viktor Gyökeres, Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus.

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Elliot Anderson’s stock has risen sharply after a breakthrough season with Nottingham Forest and an England call-up for the World Cup. Interest from Manchester City and Manchester United looks significant, with City seemingly in the driving seat despite Guardiola’s exit. It could take about £100 million ($134 million) to complete that move. Anderson’s midfield compatriot Adam Wharton finished the campaign by leading Crystal Palace to Conference League glory, adding to the FA Cup won last term, and Palace face Europe-wide interest. Real Madrid, Arsenal, Liverpool, Man City and Man Utd have all been mentioned, with Palace valuing Wharton at approximately £100 million ($134 million).

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Arsenal Match Reports

Arsenal finish league campaign with rotated XI and 2-1 win at Selhurst Park

Arsenal ended the season with a rotated XI, a 2-1 win at Selhurst Park that preserved energy. Ahead.

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Arsenal closed the Premier League season with a 2-1 victory over Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park in a match that felt like a deliberate exercise in squad management. Gabriel Jesus opened the scoring in the 42nd minute after Gabriel Martinelli toe-poked the ball to him; Jesus broke past Jefferson Lerma and placed his near-post drive just beyond Dean Henderson.

Three minutes into the second half Noni Madueke added a second when he side-footed a volley from Martinelli’s corner to make it 2-0. Madueke was the most consistent attacking threat on the night and produced the game’s busiest offensive performance. Jean-Philippe Mateta pulled one back with a late header flick in the 89th minute, and Palace thought they had an equaliser in stoppage time only for it to be ruled offside.

Both clubs clearly prioritised upcoming fixtures. Arsenal had already secured the Premier League title and rested several regulars. Bukayo Saka, William Saliba, David Raya, Declan Rice and Gabriel were omitted from the starting lineup. The former three did not train on Thursday and each had individual programmes; Saliba and Raya were not called up. Gabriel entered as a second-half substitute.

Crystal Palace are also focused on the near future, preparing for the Europa Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano on Wednesday. The two sides used heavily rotated squads and a subdued tempo, with an emphasis on protecting fitness ahead of their cup finals.

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Substitutions had impact: Kai Havertz, introduced at half-time, set up the Madueke goal shortly after coming on. Eberechi Eze received a standing ovation from the home fans when he entered. Madueke later suffered an apparent left leg issue and was replaced by Victor Gyökeres.

Match metrics underline Arsenal’s control: 61% possession to Palace’s 39%, expected goals 2.56 to 1.11, 17 total shots to 8, seven shots on target to three, and a pass accuracy of 89% versus 79%. The result completed a low-risk finish to the league campaign as both clubs now turn attention to major cup finals.

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