Girma, like Kerolin and Jenna Nighswonger moved from the NWSL to England this summer, but there's no reason for alarm
While Chelsea’s men’s team struggle to get a single signing over the line this January – and in fact have almost as much trouble in shifting some of the players who they’ve had up for sale
Chelsea agreed an £800,000 deal for England international Keira Walsh to join on the Women's Super League's transfer deadline day.
KEIRA WALSH is set to become Chelsea’s latest high profile signing with the club closing in on a deadline day swoop for England ace. The midfielder, previously linked with Arsenal, is set to
Chelsea have reportedly reached an £800,000 agreement to sign England midfielder Keira Walsh on the final day of the Women’s Super League transfer window. Earlier this month, the Blues paid a world record sum of £900,000 for American defender Naomi Girma, and Walsh’s signing makes her the second most expensive female footballer in the world.
Women's soccer has gained momentum. There is no more field, there is no other scenario in which at least one paradigm is not being broken. Women's soccer changed: if discussions used to occur based on visibility and equality,
Keira Walsh set to return to WSL after winning back-to-back Champions Leagues and Spanish league titles with Barcelona; Chelseas £500,000 signing of Euros-winning England midfielder follows their capt
United States women's national team defender Naomi Girma has joined Women's Super League champions Chelsea for a world record transfer fee of over $1 million.
Walsh moved to Barcelona from Manchester City in 2022 for what was then a world record fee of €470k (a record she would hold until our signing of Mayra Ramírez in 2024), and al
Chelsea have reportedly reached an £800,000 agreement to sign England midfielder Keira Walsh on the final day of the Women’s Super League transfer window.Earlier this month, the Blues paid a world
Clubs worldwide made a record 22,779 international transfers in men's soccer in 2024 for a total spend of $8.59 billion, world soccer's governing body FIFA said in its Global Transfer Report published on Thursday. The figure is the second-highest spend after a record-breaking 2023 when clubs spent $9.63 billion on international transfers.