If I was a Chelsea fan, I would be concerned about how recent events have developed, but there is also a more positive side to the story. BTW, I support Charlton and I expect Chelsea to win the FA Cup game by something like 3-1. Even by Chelsea’s standards, this is an extraordinary sequence of events. On December 12, Enzo Maresca was named Barclays Manager of the Month for November. Three weeks later, he is gone. The speed of Maresca’s departure at Stamford Bridge is pretty shocking. It was only in late November that Maresca engineered one of the most impressive wins of his tenure — a 3-0 victory over Barcelona in the Champions League. Five days later and Chelsea sent out a statement that they might be title contenders by securing a 1-1 draw with Arsenal, despite being down to 10 men for nearly an hour due to Moises Caicedo’s first-half red card. They were third in the Premier League, just six points behind their London rivals. Now they are a further nin...
Are Real Madrid the world’s top club? That’s a contested title, but they are formidable on and off the pitch. Here are a few salient financial considerations. Scour any list of the world’s richest football clubs and you’ll find Real Madrid at its business end. In 14 of the past 20 years, Madrid have registered football’s biggest revenues. Revenue doesn’t equal rich, but Madrid’s bottom line has been healthy for a while, too. Financials for the 2024-25 season, released last month, confirmed another profitable year in the Spanish capital; Madrid have now booked a surplus for 23 consecutive years, a streak that even withstood the Covid-19 pandemic. To the world’s highest turnover and long-run profitability, add a lack of debt. Madrid and their club president Florentino Perez have prided themselves on the latter, with low net debt regularly cited whenever their latest figures are announced. Madrid’s commercial profile is huge, but it’s far from their only growth...