Roman Abramovich exit leaves Chelsea braced for change of owner and new set of rules


Ian Hawkey
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On a wet night at the compact, old-fashioned stadium of Luton Town, Romelu Lukaku poked in the goal 12 minutes from full-time that restored Chelsea’s sense of hierarchy. The Club World Cup winners and Champions League holders had trailed twice to the second-tier club on the way to a 3-2 win. Their most costly footballer, Lukaku, had been picked in a mix-and-match XI after starting the two, important previous fixtures only as a substitute.

If that was all slightly topsy-turvy, it was nowhere near as unsettling as the announcement, not long before the kick-off of Tuesday’s FA Cup tie, that the individual who has owned Chelsea since 2003, Roman Abramovich, is actively seeking the sale of the club. Abramovich has been willing to listen to offers for most of the last four years, but circumstances directly related to the military invasion by Russia, Abramovich’s native country, of Ukraine, have added urgency to his distancing himself from two decades of transformative influence and vast financial support of Chelsea.

Buyers are being sounded out, with a view, according to parties involved in brokering the would-be sale, to a quick transfer of ownership. Abramovich announced that the estimated £1.5 billion in loans that he has provided to the club would not be repayable by new owners and that net proceeds from the sale of a club he bought for £140m almost 20 years ago would be channelled to relief and recovery projects in Ukraine.

Whoever takes over Chelsea, the club will change the way it operates. There is certainly a market for the leading London club in football’s most globally popular domestic competition, the Premier League, but the potential for growth that likely investors would seek must be mapped out around certain hurdles. An initial, ambitious asking price of close to £4bn is a very high hurdle indeed.

Chelsea have a glamorous address in one of the wealthiest districts of London. But the stadium is relatively small for a modern superclub, at just over 40,000. That impacts on the matchday revenue, and the obstacles to expanding the site, or relocating to a new stadium with bigger grandstands were a source of long-term frustration to Abramovich. When the INEOS Group, now owners of French club Nice, explored a possible purchase of Chelsea in 2019, the stadium issues were deemed significant. The group’s CEO, Sir Jim Ratcliffe, said the club were “overvalued”, at a price then set at closer to £2.5bn.

Abramovich has been a unique sort of patron. He bankrolled marquee signings, year after year, and authorised the sort of player salaries that helped lurch a club who had not won the English league for 50 years into a superpower with five Premier Leagues and two Champions League titles. The ‘brand’ grew with that, but the need for Abramovich’s personal backing remained. Chelsea’s last published accounts revealed losses of over £140m.

Chelsea player ratings in FA Cup win over Luton

  • CHELSEA RATINGS: Kepa Arrizabalaga 5 - A bizarre few days continued as he found himself picking the ball out of the net inside two minutes as Reece Burke’s looping header had him rooted, and he was comfortably beaten by a fine Harry Cornick finish. AP
    CHELSEA RATINGS: Kepa Arrizabalaga 5 - A bizarre few days continued as he found himself picking the ball out of the net inside two minutes as Reece Burke’s looping header had him rooted, and he was comfortably beaten by a fine Harry Cornick finish. AP
  • Antonio Rudiger 6 - Very much the experienced head in the Chelsea back three, but you wouldn’t have known as the visitors were at sixes and sevens from the first whistle. Hammered an ambitious strike straight into Lukaku, but he was much better after the break. AFP
    Antonio Rudiger 6 - Very much the experienced head in the Chelsea back three, but you wouldn’t have known as the visitors were at sixes and sevens from the first whistle. Hammered an ambitious strike straight into Lukaku, but he was much better after the break. AFP
  • Ruben Loftus-Cheek 7 - Looked out of his comfort zone and found himself on the wrong side of the impressive Burke as Luton threatened to add a second inside 10 minutes. More assured after the interval and he picked out Timo Werner with a fine pass the German made it 2-2. AP
    Ruben Loftus-Cheek 7 - Looked out of his comfort zone and found himself on the wrong side of the impressive Burke as Luton threatened to add a second inside 10 minutes. More assured after the interval and he picked out Timo Werner with a fine pass the German made it 2-2. AP
  • Malang Sarr 3 - Beaten to the ball by Burke who headed an excellent opener and he was punished for taking a needless risk when he tried to play the offside trap which presented Cornick with the hosts’ second and led to Sarr receiving a yellow card for dissent. AP
    Malang Sarr 3 - Beaten to the ball by Burke who headed an excellent opener and he was punished for taking a needless risk when he tried to play the offside trap which presented Cornick with the hosts’ second and led to Sarr receiving a yellow card for dissent. AP
  • Callum Hudson-Odoi 4 - Didn’t have much chance to influence the game as Chelsea’s success came through Saul and Mount. When he did try to play, he didn’t quite get enough on the return ball to Antonio Rudiger and Luton raced down the pitch to make it 2-1. Getty
    Callum Hudson-Odoi 4 - Didn’t have much chance to influence the game as Chelsea’s success came through Saul and Mount. When he did try to play, he didn’t quite get enough on the return ball to Antonio Rudiger and Luton raced down the pitch to make it 2-1. Getty
  • Jorginho 5 - Normally so assured, but the Italian failed to stamp his authority on the tie and Chelsea were completely take apart in the middle as Luton restored their lead with a brilliant counter. AP
    Jorginho 5 - Normally so assured, but the Italian failed to stamp his authority on the tie and Chelsea were completely take apart in the middle as Luton restored their lead with a brilliant counter. AP
  • Saul Niguez 8 - Showed brilliant feet to skip away down the left only to shove his opponent to the ground and he was lucky to avoid a booking for blasting the ball away in frustration. He played some neat stuff though and levelled with a lovely finesse strike. AP
    Saul Niguez 8 - Showed brilliant feet to skip away down the left only to shove his opponent to the ground and he was lucky to avoid a booking for blasting the ball away in frustration. He played some neat stuff though and levelled with a lovely finesse strike. AP
  • Kenedy 7 – Almost turned the game on its head when he latched onto a loose ball and unleashed an absolute piledriver that was beaten away by Harry Isted. Kept chipping away and did well to recycle an overhit Rudiger cross as Chelsea started the second half brightly. Reuters
    Kenedy 7 – Almost turned the game on its head when he latched onto a loose ball and unleashed an absolute piledriver that was beaten away by Harry Isted. Kept chipping away and did well to recycle an overhit Rudiger cross as Chelsea started the second half brightly. Reuters
  • Mason Mount 8 - Showed his quality for the first time when he picked out the run of Saul at the back post and he was involved again in the equaliser, feeding the intelligent run of Werner, before creating yet another chance when he pulled the ball back for Lukaku. AP
    Mason Mount 8 - Showed his quality for the first time when he picked out the run of Saul at the back post and he was involved again in the equaliser, feeding the intelligent run of Werner, before creating yet another chance when he pulled the ball back for Lukaku. AP
  • Romelu Lukaku 7 - Forced yet another save from Isted when his low effort was tipped around the post, but he finally struck gold when he stabbed home after more good work from Werner. 15 goals for the season now for the Belgian. AFP
    Romelu Lukaku 7 - Forced yet another save from Isted when his low effort was tipped around the post, but he finally struck gold when he stabbed home after more good work from Werner. 15 goals for the season now for the Belgian. AFP
  • Timo Werner 9 - Involved in every Chelsea goal. He produced an excellent run to pick up Mount’s pass and find Saul’s before making it 2-2 when he took the ball down and calmly rolled into the corner, and he completed a fine night’s work when he delivered for Lukaku to slide home. Reuters
    Timo Werner 9 - Involved in every Chelsea goal. He produced an excellent run to pick up Mount’s pass and find Saul’s before making it 2-2 when he took the ball down and calmly rolled into the corner, and he completed a fine night’s work when he delivered for Lukaku to slide home. Reuters
  • SUBS: Christian Pulisic (on for Kenedy, 62) 6 - A couple of runs in and around the Luton penalty area, but he didn’t really have much opportunity to make an impact. Getty
    SUBS: Christian Pulisic (on for Kenedy, 62) 6 - A couple of runs in and around the Luton penalty area, but he didn’t really have much opportunity to make an impact. Getty
  • Harvey Vale (on for Hudson-Odoi, 62) 6 - A fourth senior appearance for the 18-year-old who replaced the ineffective Hudon-Odoi. PA
    Harvey Vale (on for Hudson-Odoi, 62) 6 - A fourth senior appearance for the 18-year-old who replaced the ineffective Hudon-Odoi. PA
  • Reece James (on for Jorginho, 76) NR - Brought on to tighten things up. Survived a late handball shout and managed to hook the ball away to safety. AP
    Reece James (on for Jorginho, 76) NR - Brought on to tighten things up. Survived a late handball shout and managed to hook the ball away to safety. AP

On the up side, the club developed an excellent academy, and fetched significant fees and profit from the sale of players nurtured there. Two seasons ago, Chelsea provided a glimpse of what they were capable of without major, annual forays in the transfer market. A Fifa-imposed ban on registering new players meant a summer transfer window without new recruits. It put a greater emphasis on home-grown players. Chelsea, under Frank Lampard’s management, finished in the Premier League’s top four, the key requirement given that it brings Champions League participation.

But as manager Thomas Tuchel, who replaced Lampard last year, acknowledged, the Abramovich model is one Chelsea have become so used to that change poses many awkward questions. “I can only think about Chelsea with Roman Abramovich,” said Tuchel on hearing of the proposed sale. “It is very hard for me. It has not sunk in yet.”

Abramovich said in his statement announcing the potential sale that “it will not be fast-tracked,” but in an insecure political climate, where British parliamentarians push for punitive sanctions against the UK interests and properties of Russians linked to the government of Vladimir Putin — Abramovich denies any links — potential buyers detect a haste in the seller.

When the circumstances around a club’s ownership change abruptly, employees become acutely aware they are, at bottom line, commodities.

Lukaku could tell his teammates all about that. A year ago, he was firing Inter Milan towards their first Italian title in more than a decade, to be then told that economic crises affecting the Milan club’s stakeholders in China meant he had to be sold.

The 28-year-old striker became Abramovich’s most expensive signing, at just under £100m, for a Chelsea who, in the middle years of the Abramovich era, had already signed Lukaku as a teenager and then loaned him out and sold him in his early 20s. Lukaku’s has been a strange sort of journey in, out and back again to a club run according to its own logic. Whatever happens next, the rules will be different.

Left to right: Chelsea's John Terry, Roman Abramovich, Frank Lampard and Eidur Gudjohnsen celebrate winning the Premier League in 2005. Reuters
Left to right: Chelsea's John Terry, Roman Abramovich, Frank Lampard and Eidur Gudjohnsen celebrate winning the Premier League in 2005. Reuters
Updated: March 04, 2022, 6:47 PM