EPL Index
·8 juillet 2026
Everything Fulham fans should expect from Arbeloa after Real Madrid raid

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·8 juillet 2026

Fulham have made their call. Alvaro Arbeloa is the new manager, on a three-year deal, and the job in front of him is clear enough. Marco Silva is gone after leaving for Benfica at the end of his contract, and Fulham have turned to a coach with strong pedigree, limited senior experience and a very obvious brief, keep the club moving forward without tearing up what already works.

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That sounds simple. It rarely is.
Arbeloa arrives after working his way through the Real Madrid academy and then stepping into the senior picture as interim boss after Xabi Alonso’s dismissal in January. This is his first permanent senior managerial post, which matters. Academy coaching and short-term senior management are useful background, but they are not the same as owning a Premier League season from August to May.
Fulham are no longer a club whose main achievement is surviving. Silva changed that. He gave them structure, credibility and consistency after years of bouncing between divisions. Since returning to the Premier League in 2022, they have looked like a settled top-flight side and have also kept making respectable cup runs, reaching at least a quarter-final in either the FA Cup or Carabao Cup in each season.
That is the baseline now. Arbeloa is not walking into a rescue mission. He is walking into expectation.
The attraction for Fulham owner Shahid Khan appears obvious. Arbeloa sold an attacking vision and placed real emphasis on youth development. Given Fulham have one of the oldest squads in the division, that is understandable. Clubs do not stay still in this league. If your squad ages together, your level usually drops with it.
Reports suggest Arbeloa has already identified three Real Madrid youngsters, Franco Mastantuono, Fran Garcia and Gonzalo Garcia, as possible additions. Whether Fulham can land all or any of them is another matter, but the theme is plain. He wants energy, technical quality and players moulded to his football.

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This is where the appointment makes sense. Arbeloa’s tactical ideas are not wildly different from the ones Fulham already know. His default shape has been an aggressive 4-3-3, with a high press, adventurous full-backs and a proper holding midfielder protecting the defence. Fulham have worked with similar principles under Silva, even if the starting formation often looked more like a 4-2-3-1 before shifting in possession.
So the transition should be manageable. Antonee Robinson looks especially important in this setup, because he can give Arbeloa exactly what he wants from a full-back, pace, width, recovery speed and leadership. Fulham’s existing structure should help too. This is not a squad in need of tactical re-education from scratch.

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Arbeloa has also shown some flexibility. Last season he used a 4-4-2 effectively to tighten up Real Madrid after a damaging 4-2 defeat to Benfica in the Champions League. That matters because the Premier League punishes ideological rigidity. Coaches who insist on one pattern regardless of context usually get found out.
Still, there is a risk here. When a new manager arrives with ideas, contacts and enthusiasm, the temptation is to overcorrect. Fulham should resist that. Silva’s recruitment model was built around identifying undervalued players, many with Premier League experience, and improving them in a lower-pressure environment than the established elite can offer. It was practical and smart.
If Arbeloa shifts too quickly toward youth-led recruitment, especially from abroad, he could weaken the reliability that has underpinned Fulham’s progress. Young talent is useful. Proven leadership is essential.
That balance will be even more important because Fulham need goals replaced. Raul Jimenez has gone to Wolves, and Harry Wilson’s output also has to be covered after a season in which he was voted player of the year. Between them, Fulham are losing a major share of last season’s attacking production. Replacing 19 of 47 league goals is not a minor squad tweak. It is a central problem.

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The projected shape for the opening game gives a rough idea of where this could go, Leno in goal, Tete, Andersen, Bassey and Robinson across the back, Berge and Iwobi in midfield, with Bobb, Mastantuono and Garcia supporting Kevin up front.
There is ambition in that lineup, and there is also uncertainty. That is normal. Arbeloa has enough tactical overlap with Silva to avoid a messy reset, but enough of his own ideas to reshape the side over time.
Fulham have chosen evolution with a bit of edge. Now comes the hard part, proving that a promising coach can turn a stable club into something more.







































