Portal dos Dragões
·01 de junho de 2026
FC Porto return to Champions League, new chapter for André Villas-Boas

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Yahoo sportsPortal dos Dragões
·01 de junho de 2026

The future is already on FC Porto’s horizon, and André Villas-Boas is getting ready to mark yet another first as president of the blue-and-white club. At stake is the Champions League, a competition he has already experienced as a coach and which now opens a new chapter in the Porto leader’s first term.
After a season in which they won their first national championship title, there is still plenty of work to be done, especially after the team has already lost some players who were crucial to that achievement.
With a coach who will also be making his debut in Europe’s top competition, it will certainly be a special moment for André Villas-Boas and Francesco Farioli to hear the Champions League anthem once again at the Estádio do Dragão.
As a coach, the current FC Porto president never went beyond the quarter-finals, when he was in charge of Zenit of Russia in 2015/16, and was eliminated by Benfica.
In order to try to overcome that mental barrier, Villas-Boas will have to create the right conditions for Francesco Farioli, with signings capable of making up for the already confirmed departures of Thiago Silva, Seko Fofana, Terem Moffi and also Luuk de Jong, players who brought a great deal of experience to the blue-and-white squad.
Winning the Primeira Liga did not just bring another trophy to the FC Porto museum. It also secured direct qualification for the Champions League league phase and, with that, boosted the club’s coffers with millions available to invest in the new squad for 2026/27.
Although the exact amount that will go into the accounts of the blue-and-white club’s SAD has not yet been defined, the figures are expected to be at least similar to this season’s, when each team reaching the league phase received around €18.62 million.
In this context, FC Porto now has a significant budget to decide whether to keep investing heavily in the first transfer windows of the season or opt for more targeted moves to strengthen the squad and cover the departures.
It is worth remembering that the Dragons had the most expensive transfer market in their history last summer, spending a total of €111.35 million, including the €17 million paid to acquire the remaining share of Samu Aghehowa’s rights.
That investment paid off for the blue-and-white club, which may take a calmer approach this offseason and could even once again bet on world stars with short-term contracts, as happened with Thiago Silva and Luuk de Jong, or on one-season loans, such as Seko Fofana, who had a very strong impact on FC Porto’s style of play, especially on Francesco Farioli’s ability to rotate the squad.
With the absence of national teams such as Denmark or Poland, it is less likely that the 2026 World Cup will become a headache for FC Porto when it comes to planning.
So far, only Diogo Costa is in Portugal’s final squad and, if he has a great World Cup, it could trigger a real earthquake in the Dragons’ goalkeeping department.
Deniz Gul has also been included in Turkey’s 35-man preliminary squad, so it is still unknown whether he will represent his country or remain at home following the matches.
As a result, the Polish trio of Bednarek, Kiwior and Pietuszweski, as well as Victor Froholdt, are less exposed to a possible departure this summer, since the World Cup usually serves as a shop window for surprise performers that Europe’s giants look to snap up.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.







































