What's happening to Conor Gallagher? Plus the odd world of shirt numbers


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A transfer is never done until it’s done. Even if you’re on the pitch.

Coming up:


The summer’s big transfer saga

The Athletic’s Adam Hurrey is the doyen of football terminology and a couple of years ago he boldly stated that transfer sagas were dead. “Something weird has happened,” Adam wrote. “Transfers are taking ages (instead).”

And along comes a deal which both proves and disproves that theory: Conor Gallagher’s sale to Atletico Madrid. Or his proposed sale to Atletico. Or his in-danger-of-being-aborted sale. TAFC has spent the best part of a fortnight waiting to publish confirmation of the transaction — but no cigar.

The Gallagher switch is a bona fide saga. It’s also taking an inordinate amount of time. It’s six days since he flew to Spain for a medical (after the process of getting on the plane, which alone took forever). It’s four days since Atletico’s social accounts impulsively published a photo of him on their pitch (above). All this needs is Atletico to pull the lever — but they haven’t and, ridiculously, Gallagher returned home to London yesterday.

This is what we know for sure:

  • A fee is agreed for the England international. Chelsea will receive £36million ($47m) if payment ever arrives.
  • Gallagher has no future at Stamford Bridge. He’s declined the offer of a contract extension and Chelsea aren’t prepared to lose him for nothing when his deal expires next summer.
  • The terms of a five-year deal with Atletico are already finalised, and Gallagher’s medical is done. In theory, it’s all systems go.

The Chelsea-Atletico dynamic

Samu Omorodion won't be joining Chelsea


Juan Manuel Serrano Arce/Getty Image

Why the delay? It’s not 100 per cent clear, although money will be at the root of it. Atletico have been shaping up to spend a lot in this window, including more than £81million on Julian Alvarez from Manchester City. That transfer, at least, is finalised and signed off.

There’s a complex dynamic between Chelsea and Atletico at present. They’ve been dealing on numerous fronts. Beyond the Gallagher negotiations, Chelsea offered £34.5m for Atletico striker Samu Omorodion… only to then back out. That didn’t help Atletico, who are trying to offset purchases with incoming cash.

Since then, talk sparked up about Chelsea signing Joao Felix instead (he had a loan with them from Atletico in 2023). We’ll see if that gets anywhere, or if a successful negotiation is simply beyond these clubs.

No resolution in sight

 Javi Guerra is an alternative to Gallagher for Atletico

To top it all, there’s Javi Guerra, the Valencia midfielder who Atletico bid for in tandem with their offer for Gallagher (almost a case of hedging their bets).

When the Guerra deal went cold last week, Valencia’s sporting director, Miguel Angel Corona, muddied the waters by claiming publicly Atletico had tried to kill the Gallagher deal to make Guerra happen — but couldn’t. The insinuation was that Atletico lacked the money to finance both.

It’s a mess, and it leaves Gallagher, a proven Premier League campaigner, in limbo.

He’s had the offer from Atletico. He’s seen his contract. He’s been in Madrid and he’s been on Atletico’s pitch. All of that and he still can’t say if he’s joining — or if, deep down, Atletico even want him.


News Round-Up

Mattjis de Ligt has signed for Manchester United


Manchester United via Getty Images

The bizarre world of shirt numbers

Trent Alexander-Arnold wears number 66, but why?


Michael Regan/Getty Images

Leeds United are the breed of wild club who have a story for every occasion. When I read Stuart James on shirt numbers this morning, I thought immediately of Leeds’ ex-owner Massimo Cellino banning 17 from the squad list at Elland Road — on the grounds of it being unlucky.

Cellino was that way out but squad numbers, all of which have been allocated for the year ahead, can be extremely political.

Some carry special status. Others are sentimental, such as Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma picking 99 to match the year of his birth (though he’s pivoting to No 1 this season). A few, such as Ivan Zamorano asking for 1+8 at Inter Milan, are just brilliantly petty.

The power of brands can complicate matters too: Edinson Cavani was shunted out of No 7 to make way for a returning Cristiano Ronaldo at Manchester United, and women’s superstar Sam Kerr made absolutely sure she got 20 at Chelsea. Top names use these digits to market themselves, and they’re non-negotiable.

Personally, I admire John Moncur’s style. When Paulo Futre insisted on taking number 10 from Moncur at West Ham United in 1996, Moncur said yes — but only after Futre agreed to let him use his villa in Spain. Well played.


Inside the mind of Kieran McKenna

Kieran McKenna is preparing for his maiden bow as a Premier League boss


Stephen Pond/Getty Images

The best way for a Championship coach to earn a job in the Premier League is to get promoted with their existing club. Top-flight teams don’t often recruit managers from the EFL. Something about the step up presents too much of a risk.

Kieran McKenna is an exception. Even if Ipswich Town had fallen short of promotion last season, his performance there — second in League One in 2023, immediately in contention in the Championship — shows major promise. Ipswich didn’t fall short. They smashed their way into the Premier League with 96 points.

There are traits about them which you’ll spot as you watch them. They love a cutback and they try to cash in on the sweet left foot of full-back Leif Davis, (below). He’s a neat budget Fantasy Premier League option. It’ll be a stretch to avoid relegation but their stability gives them a chance.

Leif Davis is a superb set piece taker

Brighton had a close look at McKenna earlier in the summer. Chelsea considered him too.

He’s one to watch because Ipswich was his first senior job after a stint in Manchester United’s academy, and the spectacular success of it — along with Michael Walker’s look inside his mind — tempts you to think that bigger things await.


Injuries, fatigue… and Mbappe’s big debut?

Eduardo Camavinga will miss the Super Cup after injuring himself in training


Sergei Gapon/AFP via Getty Images

Stand by for Kylian Mbappe’s Real Madrid debut today. Possibly. It’s the Super Cup, where Champions League holders Madrid play Europa League holders Atalanta. Carlo Ancelotti is free to unleash the beast.

We’ll take a quick look at La Liga’s big two because Spain’s domestic season starts tomorrow and between Real and Barcelona, there’s plenty going on:



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