EPL Index
·3 de febrero de 2026
Report: Real Madrid eyeing move to sign €100m Chelsea star

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·3 de febrero de 2026

Even players signed on contracts stretching to 2032 are no longer immune from market gravity. Enzo Fernández, a World Cup winner and one of Chelsea’s most influential performers, is now edging towards the centre of the 2026 transfer conversation.
That alone tells a story. Contracts once symbolised certainty, stability, a statement of intent. Now they are closer to starting positions in negotiation, flexible instruments shaped by ambition, cash flow, and outside interest. Caught Offside are reporting interest from a European giant.
Fernández sits at the intersection of all three.
Fernández remains fundamental to Chelsea’s structure. He is described internally as “a reference point for both the present and the future”, language that matters. On the pitch, his numbers underline that importance. Eleven goals and four assists from midfield this season speak to responsibility rather than freedom, output rather than reputation.

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Yet the article makes clear that Chelsea’s broader picture complicates everything. “Even players tied down on lengthy contracts cannot be considered entirely untouchable.” That sentence captures the reality of modern squad building at Stamford Bridge. Investment has been vast, amortisation relentless, and financial obligations unforgiving.
Chelsea may want Fernández to be central, but wanting and being able to insist are not always the same thing.
Real Madrid’s interest, as reported by Caught Offside, feels measured rather than urgent. Fernández is viewed as a potential heir to Jude Bellingham, should the unthinkable occur. “A scenario Madrid are not actively planning for but cannot ignore.”
That phrasing matters. Madrid are observing, not pursuing. Their midfield is deep, their planning deliberate. Any move would require “significant outgoings”, which slows momentum and lowers immediate pressure on Chelsea.
For now, this feels like reconnaissance rather than a call to arms.
Paris Saint Germain present a different challenge. Fernández is viewed as “a flagship signing who could anchor their next cycle”, and crucially, they can meet Chelsea’s valuation. That valuation, “in the region of €100-110 million”, is less a deterrent than a declaration.
Chelsea’s public stance remains firm. Head coach Liam Rosenior has “repeatedly shown his desire to build around Fernández.” But football’s economic reality has a habit of intruding. If a club must sell, even conviction bends.
Fernández’s future, then, becomes a test of how much Chelsea’s project is driven by design, and how much by necessity.
From a Chelsea supporter’s perspective, this report provokes as much unease as intrigue. Fernández feels like the type of player clubs are meant to keep, not debate. He represents continuity in a squad that has often lacked it, a midfielder who blends control with edge, authority with output.
There is also fatigue here. Fans have been told repeatedly that long contracts mean long term planning. If a player under contract until 2032 can still be priced up for €100m, it invites scepticism about what permanence actually means at Chelsea.
At the same time, there is realism. Supporters understand the financial pressure points. The article’s line that Chelsea’s “financial obligations mean tough decisions may loom” rings true. This is a club that has spent aggressively and now must prove it can also sustain.
PSG’s interest is the most worrying element. Madrid’s feels distant and conditional, PSG’s feels actionable. If an offer arrives that reshapes the balance sheet, fans fear history suggests Chelsea may listen.
Still, many would argue that selling Fernández risks repeating an old cycle. Resetting just as something coherent begins to form. If Chelsea truly see him as a reference point, this summer may define whether that belief holds when tested by serious money.








































