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Chelsea Open to Loaning Young Striker Marc Guiu for 2025/26 Season

Chelsea consider loaning young striker Marc Guiu for the 2025/26 season to aid his development.

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Chelsea are reportedly open to loaning out promising young striker Marc Guiu for the upcoming Premier League season. With competition for the club’s No. 9 spot stiffened by players like Liam Delap, João Pedro, and Nicolas Jackson (assuming he remains at the club), Chelsea believe Guiu could benefit from regular first-team football elsewhere.

Reliable journalist Fabrizio Romano has highlighted Sunderland’s interest in the Spanish forward, one of three clubs that have made enquiries about a potential loan move. Chelsea are willing to approve a temporary transfer without an option to buy but insist that the receiving club cover Guiu’s full wages during the loan period.

Chelsea have no intention of severing ties with Guiu and expect the striker to return to the club next summer. Sunderland, preparing for their first Premier League campaign in eight years, have invested heavily with nine new signings. Their outgoing transfers have amounted to more than £124 million (approximately $164.7 million), partly offset by sales of Tom Watson and Jobe Bellingham to Brighton & Hove Albion and Borussia Dortmund.

Last season, Sunderland secured promotion through the Championship play-offs without a prolific top scorer. Wilson Isidor led the team with 13 goals across all competitions, while young Spanish forward Eliezer Mayenda contributed nine goals.

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Carabao Cup

Maresca Keeps Focus on Cardiff After Refusing to Explain ‘Lack of Support’ Remarks

Maresca refused to expand on comments about a lack of support, insisting his focus is Cardiff. again

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Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca declined to elaborate on recent comments about a perceived lack of support during a press conference held ahead of the Carabao Cup quarterfinal against Cardiff City. Journalists repeatedly asked for clarification but Maresca steered the conversation back to the match and refused to name a target for his earlier remarks.

Asked what he meant by his strong words, Maresca set the tone for the entire press conference. “I already spoke about that and I don’t have nothing to add,” he shrugged. “It’s Cardiff tomorrow, please.”

Reporters pressed him over suggestions that his comments signalled a breakdown with sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart or tensions with co-owner Behdad Eghbali. Maresca did not confirm any of those reports and continued to avoid detail.

“We are in an era where everyone can say what they think,” he said. “I respect people’s opinion, I respect your opinion, but again, I don’t have nothing to add, my focus is just on tomorrow’s game.”

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When asked about his command of language and clarity, he replied at length, referencing the languages he speaks before reiterating his position. “I can speak Italian, my language, Spanish very well, French very well, and English more or less,” he continued. “I think when I want to say something, I’m quite clear. I already spoke after the game, I don’t need to add more.

“Italian, Spanish, French, so you all are aware. It’s done, it’s finished. It was after the game, I said what I said after the game. Now it’s focused on Cardiff.”

Reports linking the manager to a possible departure were also dismissed by Maresca, who was unequivocal about his commitment to the role. When asked if he was happy as Chelsea manager and 100% committed to the position, Maresca firmly stressed: “Absolutely, yes.”

The briefing concluded on a lighter note with a routine question about the form of Malo Gusto, the same subject Maresca had used to change the topic following the Everton game.

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Chelsea

Rooney: Maresca’s public outburst may have cost him the board’s protection

Rooney says Maresca’s public complaint clears the air about targets but may cost him protection for

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Enzo Maresca’s recent public criticism has left a fresh dilemma at Stamford Bridge after he signalled frustrations aimed away from supporters and declined to confront the media. The exact target of Maresca’s remarks remains unclear, but speculation has focused on those in the club hierarchy, including sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart and possibly co-owner Behdad Eghbali.

The incident escalated quickly and has been compared to Mohamed Salah’s recent decision to call out those in charge at Anfield. Wayne Rooney, speaking on his self-titled BBC podcast, drew a direct parallel between the two episodes.

“For me it was very similar to the Mo Salah situation last week where it was very premeditated,” Rooney told his self-titled BBC podcast. “He knows exactly what he is saying and who he is aiming it at and the board and owners at Chelsea will know it is aimed at them.”

Maresca made his comments after Chelsea ended a run of three underwhelming performances. The general narrative around the club had been negative, though not irreparable, and Chelsea still finished the weekend inside the top four.

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Rooney warned that Maresca’s decision to speak out publicly could have consequences for the manager’s relationship with those who employ him. He urged respect for club owners while questioning the wisdom of confronting them in public.

“You’ve got to respect the owners of a football club,” Rooney continued. “They employ you and bring you in, so it’s their way and I feel he’s gone a bit against that.

“It is something that’s clearly happened, whether it’s a disagreement or he feels his job is under pressure and he doesn’t feel it should be because of the two trophies he’s won and the points he’s picked up.

“I don’t feel like he’s a manager that will backtrack. He has got a passion about him and a drive about him. Whether he has heard things, like the club might want him out and he’s been proactive to go on the front foot, you don’t know why he’s done it. It’s very strange.

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“I don’t think he’ll get the protection now he’s come out and done what he has done. That will be very difficult for the club to come and protect him, which is a shame.”

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How the Left Back Became Football’s Essential Position

The modern left back has evolved into a match-winner: concise profiles of the game’s top performers.

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The left back has shed its old reputation as a defensive afterthought and become one of the most influential positions in modern football. Versatility, attacking intent and defensive responsibility now define a role that can decide matches on both ends of the pitch.

Reinildo arrived at Sunderland from Atlético Madrid on a free transfer and quickly became one of the summer’s most talked-about signings. His Simeone-forged defensive tenacity helped Sunderland adapt rapidly to Premier League life.

Diego Moreira carries the attacking enthusiasm and defensive proficiency that has prompted comparisons with a future Chelsea move. If he maintains that blend, the Blues will face a competitive fight for the 21-year-old’s future.

Nathaniel Brown has been tracked by several clubs after clocking 35.8 km/hr (22.2 mph) this season, the fastest defender in the Bundesliga. “He is a young talent with huge potential,” Julian Nagelsmann said of the World Cup hopeful after his first call-up.

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West Ham’s El Hadji Malick Diouf, signed from Slavia Prague in summer 2025, offers pace, agility and a quality cross. He can play as a free roaming wing back or an attacking left back and likes to contribute goals, though his defensive positioning needs refinement.

Antonee Robinson’s rise has been steady: after loans and a £2 million move to Fulham in 2020 he became one of the Premier League’s most complete left backs, voted Fulham Player of the Season in 2023–24 and the league’s highest-assisting defender in 2024–25. Injuries have hampered his start to 2025–26.

Adrien Truffert, Rennes captain signed for £14.4 million by Bournemouth, showed the one-v-one defending and crossing that made him a standout in Ligue 1. His dynamism and endurance have marked him as one of the best buys of the 2025 window.

Players such as Jorrel Hato, Destiny Udogie, Raphaël Guerreiro, Tino Livramento, Lewis Hall and Andrea Cambiaso illustrate different templates for the role: leadership, raw athleticism, tactical versatility, crossing quality and reliability. At Manchester City, Nico O’Reilly impressed with pace and intelligence. “He has incredible pace and is so intelligent,” the City boss gushed earlier this season.

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The position’s evolution is clear: every top team now expects the left back to defend fiercely, attack with purpose and adapt tactically across competitions.

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