Chelsea
Liam Rosenior: the coaching profile Chelsea’s owners favour
Former Hull and Strasbourg coach known for empathy, pressing style and player development at Chelsea
Liam Rosenior arrives at a point in his career shaped by long preparation and a clear coaching identity. From doing scouting reports for his father Leroy at Gloucester City as an 11-year-old, to taking his Uefa Pro Licence aged 32 while still a player at Brighton & Hove Albion, Rosenior has methodically built the experience he now brings to Chelsea.
His pathway included spells learning from Chris Coleman, Steve Coppell, Brendan Rodgers, Steve Bruce and Chris Hughton. He worked at Brighton as an assistant with the Under-23s and later as a specialist first-team coach, then moved to Derby County with Phillip Cocu before working with Wayne Rooney. One early lesson came when Rooney noticed a player distracted at breakfast and handled it quietly; Rosenior absorbed that approach to managing people.
“Top coaches have to have empathy,” Rosenior told me once. “Yes, you can be tough, but you have to understand people. You can’t shout at players like you used to.” That outlook informed his time as a pundit on Sky Sports programmes, notably The Debate, and underpinned the culture he created at Hull City after his appointment in 2022.
Rosenior encouraged a collective spirit. He showed players a video of his assistant Justin Walker towing his car from a flooded puddle to make a point. “Life isn’t perfect but your mate needs to have your back,” Rosenior told his players. “The first person I called was my best friend Justin.” He also admires the attacking risk-taking of Roberto De Zerbi and learned from Pep Guardiola and Mikel Arteta at Brighton.
Hull’s work under Rosenior won loans from Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp, including Liam Delap, Tyler Morton and Fabio Carvalho. Delap’s goal at the King Power ended Leicester’s perfect start in September 2023, and Rosenior reflected on progress: “I’ve been here for eight months and we wouldn’t have been capable of doing that when I first came in,” Rosenior told BBC Radio Humberside afterwards. “That’s why I keep saying it’s a process.”
Players have responded to his demands and his stance against discrimination. “Give 100 per cent in and out of possession, love and respect your team-mates, and don’t hide from the ball. You have to be brave.” He was sacked by Hull after narrowly missing the play-offs, then appointed Strasbourg head coach, qualifying them for the Uefa Conference League. BlueCo now view him as the man to succeed Maresca at Chelsea. Rosenior remains candid about his approach: “I’m a giver,” Rosenior told me in 2022. “I like seeing people achieve. I like helping them.”
Chelsea
Left-back targets Chelsea might pursue under Alonso
Chelsea left-back options under Alonso: young prospects, experienced choices and tactical fits. 2026.
Chelsea’s recruitment direction looks set to shift with Mauricio Alonso thought to have increased sway after a sporting-director structure that presided over a 10th-place Premier League finish last season. An incoming coach will likely prioritize left-back options that fit his preferred patterns, blending ball progression with defensive reliability.
Myles Lewis-Skelly is exactly the type of versatile, silky, ball-centric player that would suit Alonso. Chelsea also have a history of poaching Arsenal’s homegrown left-back talents. However, any deal would be costly given the teenager’s lengthy contract and Arsenal’s apparent reluctance to part ways.
“La minestra riscaldata non è mai buona, reheated soup never tastes as good.” Still, a return could appeal if presented as a clearer pathway than the one Lewis Hall currently faces at Newcastle United. Hall left west London for the north east in 2023 and has blossomed into a well-rounded defender who offers creativity and solidity. Newcastle, as a collective, have not mirrored Hall’s rise and managed to finish even lower than Chelsea last term. It remains to be seen if Alonso would want to tempt Hall back south, but he wouldn’t be the first gem Chelsea bought back after initially letting go.
Antonee Robinson presents a different profile. During the 2024–25 season, he became the first Fulham player to ever register 10 Premier League assists in a single campaign. The tireless force of nature was just as productive defensively, earning links to some of the division’s elite. Robinson hasn’t created a top-flight goal for any teammate since February 2025. Knee surgery last summer derailed his start to the 2025–26 campaign, which largely served as a setting for the U.S. international to work his way back to full health ahead of a home World Cup. Now fit and firing once again, Robinson’s stock is back on the rise and Manchester United are reportedly sniffing around. At 28, he is older than the talents Chelsea have typically targeted under BlueCo, but some experience could be valuable for a squad that has struggled with excessive youth.
Less than two years ago, Arsène Kouassi was playing in France’s third tier. The 22-year-old took Ligue 1 by storm last season, operating chiefly as a wingback in Lorient’s 3-4-2-1. Kouassi racked up six assists, a tally bettered by only one other defender in the French top flight. If Alonso experiments with a back-three, Kouassi could be an ideal outlet down the left.
Chelsea
Real Madrid reach verbal agreement to sign Marc Cucurella from Chelsea for club left-back record
Real Madrid and Chelsea have a verbal deal to sign Marc Cucurella for €60m, a club left-back record.
Real Madrid and Chelsea have reportedly reached a verbal agreement to make Marc Cucurella the most expensive left back in the club’s history. A verbal agreement between all involved parties was first claimed by Fabrizio Romano on Sunday. José Mourinho, Madrid’s freshly reappointed manager, was thought to have singled Cucurella out as his ideal left back target in a position which caused plenty of problems for the Spanish giants last term.
Madrid are expected to pay $69.4 million (£51.8 million, €60 million) for the 27-year-old, with a fixed fee of €55 million supported by a further €5 million in potential bonuses, per The Athletic. The move follows Cucurella’s earlier big-money switch from Brighton to Chelsea and, if completed at the reported numbers, will place the Spain international among the highest fees paid for players at his position.
Transfer figures cited in the available data place Cucurella among the top left-back moves globally, behind only a small number of other high-value deals. The published ranking lists include moves such as Lucas Hernández to Bayern and Benjamin Mendy to Manchester City, with Cucurella appearing twice because his Chelsea transfer is listed and his reported move to Real Madrid is included separately. All figures are attributed to Transfermarkt and converted from euros to dollars.
Less than one year earlier Real Madrid made Álvaro Carreras the club’s most expensive left back with a €50 million deal, a record set to be surpassed by Cucurella. That Carreras transfer was described in the draft as “something of an embarrassment for Madrid,” noting the club had Carreras in its academy for three years without giving him a senior appearance before letting him join Manchester United for free.
Carreras’ return to Madrid began brightly, with a time when Spanish media billed every starting XI as Carreras plus 10 others, but he soon lost his starting spot to a half-fit Ferland Mendy and failed to re-establish himself. A chastening night against Bayern Munich and a physical confrontation with teammate Antonio Rüdiger on the training ground were cited as low points.
Chelsea
Cucurella open to staying after positive meeting with Xabi Alonso
Cucurella says Alonso “inspired a lot of confidence” and leaves future at Chelsea open. Transfer nod
Marc Cucurella has confirmed he has already spoken with incoming Chelsea manager Xabi Alonso and described the conversation as confidence building. The defender, who has been linked with both Barcelona and Atlético Madrid and has expressed interest in returning to Spain, nevertheless suggested Alonso’s message left a clear opening for continued life at Stamford Bridge.
Asked by MARCA for his feelings towards Alonso’s project, Cucurella revealed: “I’ve spoken with him and he inspired a lot of confidence in me. I’ve also spoken with [Alejandro] Grimaldo and Borja [Iglesias], who have worked with him, and they spoke very highly of him.
“The project seems very interesting.”
Cucurella has regularly been central to whichever tactical plan his Chelsea managers have chosen. Under Maresca he often operated as an inverted attacking midfielder, encouraged to get involved in central attacks while still expected to defend his left wing. That hybrid usage has been a defining feature of his time at the club.
How Alonso uses Cucurella will depend on the formation he selects. Alonso’s 3-4-3 at Bayer Leverkusen turned Grimaldo, Cucurella’s Spain teammate, into one of the deadliest wing backs in Europe, a season that produced 12 goals and 20 assists in 2023–24. By contrast, Alonso’s spells at Real Madrid tended to favour 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1 systems, both of which call for a more traditional left back.
Cucurella’s ability to perform as both an advanced inverted midfielder and as a traditional left back gives him flexibility that could suit multiple Alonso systems. That tactical versatility, combined with the positive endorsement from figures who have worked with Alonso, frames the defender’s situation: interest from Spain remains, but a convincing conversation with the new Chelsea coach has left the option of staying at the club very much alive.
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