Chelsea's owners are rational actors so what is their strategy? Under the ownership of free-spending oligarch Roman Abramovich Chelsea Football Club lost about £1mn a week for almost two decades. The losses racked up by the club’s current owners have made the Abramovich era appear restrained by comparison. Chelsea this month reported a £262 mn pre-tax loss in 2024-25, a record for a Premier League club, as owners Clearlake Capital and financier Todd Boehly try to wean the club off Abramovich’s millions. When US investment firm Clearlake and financier Boehly bought Chelsea for £2.5 bn almost three years ago, the football industry expected a new era of financial rigour at the west London club. But they have since spent about €1.7bn (£1.5bn) on players, parted ways with four head coaches and have yet to agree on a critical revenue driver: whether to modernise Chelsea’s existing stadium or move elsewhere. With the club at risk of missing out on a place in next season’s lucrative Ch...
The dismissal of ‘Linkedin Liam’ solves one problem at Chelsea, but one has to ask why he was appointed in the first place. Most Chelsea fans would acknowledge there are far deeper problems under the current ownership. Do the owners really understand what is involved, particularly emotionally, in running a top football club? As was remarked on Radio 5 this morning, it’s hardly the same as turning round a ball bearings company in Wisconsin. Nevertheless, the owners clearly think they will eventually be able to cash in on their investment. So let’s step back and see what the Swiss Ramble has to make of their 2024/25 accounts from his Zurich fastness. Chelsea’s strategy has been far more reliant on player sales than any other major English club, so they have generated an impressive £859m from this activity in the last decade. In this period, they made more than £100m on four occasions. They made £273m in the three seasons since BlueCo got involved, w...