Home Back

Transfer News: Chelsea agrees personal terms with Anselmino; Man Utd set sights on Paulo Dybala

opera.com 2 days ago

Chelsea agrees personal terms with Anselmino

Chelsea and Aaron Anselmino have an agreement on personal terms, with the West London club closing in on signing him from Boca Juniors. According to Graeme Bailey on HITC , Aaron Anselmino is closing in on joining Chelsea in the summer transfer window. The 19-year-old defensive sensation has agreed on personal terms with the West London club. Meanwhile, the Boca Juniors wonderkid is also a target for Manchester United, with the Red Devils losing the race to secure his services.

Man Utd set sights on Paulo Dybala

Manchester United have expressed interest in signing Paulo Dybala, as the Argentine forward's contract situation with AS Roma remains unresolved, according to Calciomercato.BThe 30-year-old playmaker, who has become an integral part of the squad, believes he deserves an increase in the fixed portion of his salary to at least €7.5 million. Despite ongoing negotiations, Roma have yet to meet his demands, leaving his future at the club in doubt.

Man Utd coach Benni McCarthy to leave club

Manchester United coach Benni McCarthy will not continue with the team past this summer despite being popular among the players. As per The Athletic, McCarthy will not sign a new deal with Manchester United and will end his primary two-year contract. As per the report, the South African wants to become a manager again having been Cape Town City and AmaZulu's manager previously.

Tottenham keen on Eze

According to The Times, after Euro 2024 is over, Tottenham will try to negotiate a transfer with Crystal Palace for Eberechi Eze. A number of elite Premier League clubs have expressed interest in the 25-year-old due to his £60 million release clause in his Selhurst Park deal. However, Spurs are "confident" that they are in the lead in the race to sign Eze, and they intend to move quickly to finalise the deal after the playmaker returns from the 2024 Euros with England.

People are also reading