At this point, football is most likely going
to restart so that clubs can keep the TV money most of them have already spent.
Right or wrong was never going to come into play here as much as survival.
What
that allows us, however, is a little bit of direction with which we can build
out projections for at least the financial and athletic futures of football
clubs. Not only clubs in the United Kingdom, but in Europe as a whole.
The
easy bet is transfer fees and salaries will come back down to the ‘still
healthy, but less extortionate’ state they were in before the football economy
broke. A certain realm of caution and realism will prevail. In the end, if it
simply costs us four to five months of football to save the future of the game,
that’s a relatively easy price to pay.
This
was a particularly interesting season for Chelsea, even without the dramatics
provided by the Coronavirus. The club appeared to be doing everything right. It
was patient in its coaching and planning. It was decisive and meticulous in its
scouting and negotiating of new additions to the side. It was measured in its
reactions to both success and failure. The Blues put together a better season
on the back of all of that than they realistically had any right to have in the
first place.
Then
Coronavirus struck and threw the footballing world into a mass frenzy.
Chelsea
had already agreed to the transfer of Hakim Ziyech from Ajax. The Moroccan
international is a good transfer no matter how one looks at it. He can play
multiple positions, he’s entering his prime and Chelsea paid the proper amount
for him. A club like PSG, Manchester United, Real Madrid or Barcelona, who are
more used to paying wistful sums for players of his level, would easily have
spent £50-60 million. Chelsea, on the other hand, spent £35 million. Should
Ziyech not so much as kick a ball in competition at Chelsea for the foreseeable
future, his talent, age and resale value make this a good move for the club.
Chelsea
should entertain the idea of Ziyech being the only player that the club signs
this season. It’s unlikely, I admit, because there will be deals to be had when
the market opens. This is due to the desperation of clubs throughout Europe.
Atletico Madrid is an example of a financially desperate club, as is AC Milan.
They have players like Jose Gimenez, Jan Oblak, Alessio Romagnoli and Gianluigi
Donnarumma between them, who may tempt the clubs to sell.
Chelsea is lucky to have a masterful and
opportunistic businessman and tactician at the helm in Roman Abramovich. He may
feel that now is the time to be aggressive and build another 15-year dynasty,
but the Blues should at the least allow the thought of such prudency to cross
their minds. Even if only in the name of mental jousting.
The
Blues could do with another season of development and herd-thinning anyway. The
loan army is still a ridiculous distraction that provides too little to the
first team. The youth players who were meant to have a full-season of
experience this year didn’t receive it. Particularly, by the way, the important
and character-building, serious end of the season.
Chelsea
have a good enough side, even with the departures of Pedro, Willian and
possibly even Jorginho, to simply play through this mess. It could prove
invaluable in terms of the money saved and the experience gained.
For instance, in the lineup above. With the
recalled loan players and those who have returned from injury, Chelsea have
plenty of options in the side already. Ampadu didn’t play much at
Leipzig. This is mainly because he was kept out of the side by Dayot Upemacano,
a £65 million defender. That can’t really be held against a teenager in a
foreign country for the first time. He even showed admirable character and
spine two things Chelsea could use in the matches he did partake in. He was
fantastic in those matches and better than any of the defenders Chelsea already
have, for a side better than Chelsea. The defence will also be aided by the
return of N’Golo Kante, the one true king. Kante returns to the position he has
done nothing but win trophies at both the international and domestic levels
playing.
Ruben
Loftus-Cheek is something of an unknown given his injury. This allows for his
move back to defensive-midfield where his intelligence can supplement his
possibly diminished athleticism while also allowing him to deputize Kante. He
can perhaps provide a bridge to the future after the French dynamo.
For what it’s worth, Mason Mount is in my
own opinion better played higher up the pitch. He’s not a traditional wing
player. His ability to shoot often and in peculiar, off-balance circumstances
adds an interesting element to the attack. His positioning strangely draws both
the right back and centerback on his side out of position because he’s such a
threat from distance. This provides room for Abraham to run in behind.
Subsequently, the attacking presence of striker-in-left-back-form Marcos Alonso
gets forward into space. The interplay with Gilmour, whose vision to play
players into space, is maximized providing the fourth threat in that area of
the pitch. He also presses with intelligence in a way Chelsea’s other players
do not. The battle in that position between he and Hudson-Odoi who we must
remember was always rated as better than Sancho is going to be interesting, but
will provide fantastic options.
Of
course, there are obvious weaknesses. However, Chelsea is not the best side in
football, of course there are. The goalkeeping situation is a true worry and
another striker to push Tammy into his full Ian Wright-esque excellence would
be a positive. That said, current-form Abraham with continuity, the players
around him and a full season of Premier League experience, is a 20-goal-per
season striker. He, with experience, will likely become the most lethal striker
in the division over time.
Chelsea will probably do a lot of business this summer. The good news is
that for the first time in a very long time, the Blues will be operating from a
position of strength. They are in good financial position and have options
should their favored deals fall through. That is the sort of place to be and
when this whole mess of a year ends, Chelsea will be all the better for it.



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