Chelsea accepts Sunderland’s decision to keep Granit Xhaka, and crypto markets don’t care

Chelsea accepts Sunderland’s decision to keep Granit Xhaka, and crypto markets don’t care

A football transfer saga offers zero signal for digital asset markets, but the Premier League's growing financial muscle tells a broader story about sports and blockchain convergence

Chelsea will not be signing Granit Xhaka. Sunderland said no, the Swiss midfielder said he’s staying, and the Blues have moved on.

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Sunderland rejected Chelsea’s £8 million bid for Xhaka last week, calling him “never for sale.” The 33-year-old captain, who joined Sunderland from Bayer Leverkusen for an initial £13 million with £4 million in potential add-ons, has a contract running through 2028. He’s staying put to lead the club into the Europa League after their seventh-place Premier League finish.

Xhaka’s situation is a micro case study in player valuation economics. Chelsea, now managed by Xabi Alonso (who coached Xhaka at Leverkusen), thought the reunion would be worth £8 million. Sunderland thought their captain’s on-pitch leadership plus his contractual security made him worth far more than any bid Chelsea could table.

Chelsea, meanwhile, will redirect their midfield search elsewhere.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Chelsea accepts Sunderland’s decision to keep Granit Xhaka, and crypto markets don’t care

Chelsea accepts Sunderland’s decision to keep Granit Xhaka, and crypto markets don’t care

A football transfer saga offers zero signal for digital asset markets, but the Premier League's growing financial muscle tells a broader story about sports and blockchain convergence

Chelsea will not be signing Granit Xhaka. Sunderland said no, the Swiss midfielder said he’s staying, and the Blues have moved on.

Advertisement

Sunderland rejected Chelsea’s £8 million bid for Xhaka last week, calling him “never for sale.” The 33-year-old captain, who joined Sunderland from Bayer Leverkusen for an initial £13 million with £4 million in potential add-ons, has a contract running through 2028. He’s staying put to lead the club into the Europa League after their seventh-place Premier League finish.

Xhaka’s situation is a micro case study in player valuation economics. Chelsea, now managed by Xabi Alonso (who coached Xhaka at Leverkusen), thought the reunion would be worth £8 million. Sunderland thought their captain’s on-pitch leadership plus his contractual security made him worth far more than any bid Chelsea could table.

Chelsea, meanwhile, will redirect their midfield search elsewhere.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.