has suggested players with long contracts at Chelsea will be a waste in the long-term while claiming Enzo Fernandez will 'never reach the level' the club hopes for.
More than £1billion has been spent on new signings since took over in 2022. The club have gone for young stars of the future on long contracts - an approach that has been criticised by many.
Since the start of the 2022/23 summer transfer window, have signed 39 players - twice makes it 40 deals in total after Boehly and Clearlake took over. Not to mention that the Blues have had six coaches since Boehly took over, including .
As for players, the likes of and have proven to be the right signings while others haven't quite worked out. As a result, the club were forced to take big losses in the transfer market.
meanwhile, cost Chelsea £105million - becoming the most expensive transfer in British football after swapping Lisbon's Benfica for London in January 2023. He currently finds himself behind and in Maresca's pecking order.
Speaking on the podcast, Souness said: "‘It’s still very early to pass any sort of judgement on Chelsea. With their current group of players, they have a chance of finishing in the top four, but they’re still some way off winning the Premier League or Champions League.
READ MORE:
READ MORE:
"From the current squad, I think there’ll be an enormous wastage of players and a lot of them will never live up to the levels that people think they will. The most obvious one for me is someone who isn’t even in the team at the moment, Enzo Fernandez, on whom they spent £105million. They’ve bought a load of players who won’t reach the level they would’ve hoped.
"I think there was a different way they could’ve done it. They just went out with a scattergun approach, buying everyone and anyone of a certain age that popped up. They’re just storing up more problems for themselves further down the line. The case in point would be Raheem Sterling, who they’ve basically had to give away.
Souness continued: "They’re going to be confronted with that same situation at least another half-a-dozen times. Players will not live up to the expectation, become surplus to requirements, be sat on seven-year contracts and not want to leave unless they get offered a big golden handshake to walk out the door.
"Chelsea will get no value for them when they sell them because they’re deemed to be a failure, and they’ll have to pay them to leave. That’s not a sustainable business model."
You may also like
Peridot: The Gem Of Abundance, Healing, And Spiritual Renewal
Woman marries ex who forgot they broke up day before he suffered concussion
Boeing to face civil trial over 2019 MAX crash
No mention of Bangladeshi influx in BJP ally Ajsu's manifesto
Rice comes out 'perfectly fluffy every time' with Jamie Oliver's 15-minute method