FOOTBALL

Paul Merson Made a Bold Claim: Chelsea transfer model

Manchester United

The transfer model of Chelsea “doesn’t allow them to buy a top goalkeeper”, said Paul Merson.  He argued that Chelsea only invests in players they can later sell at a profit. He also believes that this logic doesn’t work well for goalkeepers.  He said, “If there’s no profit in it, the player won’t be bought. They buy young at the right market value — that doesn’t really work for a goalkeeper.”  Merson also questioned whether Chelsea’s current goalkeepers and defensive setup can actually win the Premier League.

Is Paul Merson opinion about Chelsea accurate?

The answer is: partly yes — but with important caveats.

First, Chelsea under their current ownership and leadership often emphasize investment in youth and a long-term model of buying players with resale value.  That sort of model can make clubs cautious about paying large sums for established players who may not hold or increase their value. In that sense, Merson’s interpretation is consistent with what many analysts say is Chelsea’s recruitment style.

Chelsea’s Goalkeeper Transfer Policy

However, to say it “doesn’t allow them to buy a top goalkeeper” is too absolute, according to sources. Chelsea has bought high-cost goalkeepers in recent times. For example, Kepa Arrizabalaga was signed in 2018 for a record fee (for a goalkeeper at that time). That shows the club is not entirely closed to making big goalkeeper investments when it sees value. (Though that signing was controversial and did not fully deliver.)

Also, the market for top goalkeepers is different. Their resale value tends to be lower or less predictable compared to field players (forwards, midfielders). This happens because as goalkeepers often age into decline more sharply. So Merson is correct in asserting that profit motive is harder in that position. But clubs can stretch to sign top keepers if they judge it essential. But the risk is higher.

Paul Merson is Unhappy with Robert Sanchez

Another point: Merson’s critique is partly based on Chelsea’s decision not to replace Robert Sanchez. Despite criticism of his performances, there is no new arrival at that position.  Whether that was a prudent decision or a mistake depends on internal considerations (budget, strategy, alternatives) we don’t fully see.

Author’s Insight

Merson’s claim has a valid core: Chelsea’s model leans toward youth, value, and resale potential.

But it’s an overstatement to say the model cannot allow a top goalkeeper signing. Exceptions do exist and decision depends on trade-offs.

And criticism of Chelsea’s current goalkeeping setup is subjective . Others (fans, pundits) echo it, but performance data and context matter.

As featured on Chelseanews.com

To Top