The dust has settled, and the numbers are in. Since June 10, when the summer transfer window opened, Chelsea has spent more than €600 million on new signings ($650m): 14 permanent signings and two on loan. In that time frame, covering the past two transfer windows, they released players to other clubs for a total of just over €65m ($70m), putting their net spend for 2022-23 at a number approaching $600m. During that time, they also changed owners, manager, chairman, scouting director and recruitment staff.
There may be other examples, but what springs to my mind was what happened at Real Madrid in the summer of 2009. There was a new president — Florentino Perez, back for his second stint — a new coach (Manuel Pellegrini) and eight new signings that revolutionised the club, among them Kaka, Karim Benzema, Xabi Alonso, Raul Albiol and somebody named Cristiano Ronaldo. The total spend was €258.5m — around $370m at the time — and the net spend came to €170m ($243m).
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Chelsea’s spend dwarfs those numbers, but you have to remember that this was nearly 14 years ago, when the revenue of most top clubs was less than half what it is now. If you look at it as a percentage of revenue, you’re in a similar ballpark.
Remember the old tech motto attributed to Mark Zuckerberg: “Move fast and break things”? Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali, who lead the club’s ownership group, are doing just that in West London. Eghbali said in December that the Chelsea he took over from Roman Abramovich was “not terribly well-managed on the football side, sporting side or promotional side” and that European sports were some 20 years behind the U.S. in terms of “sophistication” on the commercial side, as well as the data side. Hence, the opportunity to disrupt and to grow for his clients.
(Lest we forget, while Eghbali and Boehly are very wealthy, they don’t own the club themselves. Not only are there other investors, they themselves have clients who have chosen to invest with them and to whom they have to answer.)
There are two vantage points from which to consider Chelsea’s transfer spending: on the pitch and financially. They’re obviously related because resources, for even the wealthiest clubs, are finite and if you spend on one thing, you can’t spend on another that may have been a better option. Plus UEFA’s new financial sustainability rules — which replace financial fair play from next season — mean that you have to somehow move towards balanced books fairly quickly. But it also makes sense to view them separately as an indicator of where the club are.
This window is entirely different. Each of the eight new arrivals is 22 or younger (other than on loan Joao Felix, who is 23). Five of them have less than 50 top-flight starts to their name. These are guys who you bring in more for what you think they can become rather than what they are now, simply because their body of work thus far is limited.
Chelsea are currently 10th in the table, a function partly of injuries, partly of the difficult transition from Tuchel to his successor, Graham Potter. Of the January intake, you can expect Benoit Badiashile to be part of the center-back corps and you imagine Enzo Fernandez will go straight into midfield. Mikhaylo Mudryk is also penciled in as a starter while Joao Felix, you presume, will compete with Raheem Sterling and Christian Pulisic for playing time once they return.
Do they move the needle enough — and bear in mind these are youngsters adjusting to a new league — to help Chelsea make up 10 points and seven places over 18 games to get into the Champions League? Probably not.
Does the team now feel complete and ready for a title run next season? From where I sit, unless some of the other youngsters suddenly turn into world-beaters, most likely you’ll still need a defensive midfielder — N’Golo Kante has been injured most of the season and is out of contract in the summer — and a center-forward, unless they decide to deploy Christopher Nkunku, who is joining in June, in that latter role and he proves to be productive. Clearly then, on the pitch at least, this is still part of a process.