Women’s Super League 2025-26 previews No 4: Chelsea

A picture


Guardian writers’ predicted position: 2nd (NB: this is not necessarily Suzanne Wrack’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)Last season’s position: 1stHow do you follow up on a sixth successive league title and a domestic treble, secured in the manager’s first season? For most teams the answer would be “with great difficulty”, but Chelsea are a different beast,Terrifyingly, despite their domestic dominance, the Blues left room for improvement last season,As Sonia Bompastor told the club’s website: “We did well in terms of trophies and results last season but we were not always happy with the performances and didn’t show as much consistency as I would like,We’re working on giving even more clarity to the players for them to execute what we want them to achieve on the pitch,”The difference going into the new campaign is they have a more settled squad and a more settled manager.

There have been incomings, Ellie Carpenter the highlight, but this has been a summer of consolidation and of building towards the performances they want to see week in, week out,“I wouldn’t say there will be a big difference from last season,” said Bompastor,“This season, we will go further and in more detail on what we were trying to achieve last season,“Last season was about getting to know each other on the pitch,Now, we are in a better position to go into the details of how we want to work together.

”The challenge of maintaining their stranglehold on the league title is getting harder each year.This season Arsenal are buoyed by their Champions League win and Manchester City are helmed by a new manager and welcoming back their injured cohort.Both clubs are desperate to unseat Chelsea, who face a stern test in the season opener when they welcome City to Stamford Bridge.It will be a chance for the champions to make a statement.Chelsea are still searching for their missing piece, too, their tough exit from the Champions League at the hands of Barcelona only made worse by Arsenal’s eventual triumph.

With Barcelona’s financial struggles well documented and Arsenal’s underdog victory a surprise, the European door is open for whichever team push hardest at it.Bompastor’s first season was phenomenal.Improving on the success of the preceding season while adapting to a new country and culture with your family is remarkable and has resulted in a well-deserved place on the shortlist for the Ballon d’Or women’s coach of the year award.Known for being a ruthless competitor, Bompastor has proven herself a worthy successor to Emma Hayes.The Champions League frustrations aired by Bompastor and her team after they had secured a domestic treble speak to the drive and ambition of the manager and her players.

Chelsea have never been afraid to spend big to get the players they want, with Naomi Girma’s signing in January showing that is not about to change.The women’s side of the club was controversially split from the men’s and sold to Blueco, Chelsea’s parent company, for £200m in April.The valuation was justified in May when the Reddit co-founder, and husband of Serena Williams, Alexis Ohanian bought a 10% stake in the club for £20m.Ohanian has spoken publicly about the big ambitions he has for Chelsea and the deal prompted a lot of teams to turn green with envy.Sign up to Moving the GoalpostsNo topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women’s footballafter newsletter promotionChelsea have had a less star-studded window than in recent years, with the goalkeeper Livia Peng joining from Werder Bremen, the German forward Mara Alber coming from Hoffenheim and Becky Spencer’s loan deal turned permanent.

The arrival of the Australia defender Carpenter from Bompastor’s former side Lyon is the highlight, though.Carpenter has twice won the Champions League with Lyon and has played in two World Cups and three Olympics with the Matildas.“Everyone has been so welcoming, the staff and the players,” she said.“I’m enjoying the sessions; it’s a great environment to work in, and it will bring the best out of me.It’s all very positive, and I’m excited to see more.

”There are so many exciting young players at Chelsea it is hard to choose.Aggie Beever-Jones and Hannah Hampton arguably had their “stepping up” campaigns last term.This season it’s Wieke Kaptein’s turn.The midfielder has shown flashes of brilliance when she has come into the side.“She just brings to the team a lot of quality out of possession,” said Bompastor when Kaptein played during the unusual four back-to-back games against Manchester City last season.

“She’s a young player but she is really confident on the ball but also works so hard off the ball.”As with Arsenal, it would be unfair to not mention all of Chelsea’s Euro 2025 winners.Niamh Charles scored her penalty in the final shortly after coming on, Lauren James scored twice against the Netherlands despite injury struggles during the tournament, Beever-Jones shone in her cameos and scored against Wales, Keira Walsh is the metronome of England’s midfield, battling Lucy Bronze was sensational in so many ways and Hampton shrugged off Mary Earps’s shadow and then some with two heroic performances in penalty shootouts to add to a breakthrough tournament.Chelsea announced way ahead of the season details of the four WSL games they will play at Stamford Bridge, in an attempt to get fans committed to showing up en masse.They mostly picked showpiece games, having previously tended to play lower-level opposition there, choosing their opener against City, their fixture against promoted London City Lionesses and games against Arsenal and Manchester United.

They have sold The Bridge Pass, which enables fans to buy a ticket for all four fixtures.Chelsea supporters will have their travel subsidised and capped at £15 for domestic games outside London again.
politicsSee all
A picture

Nigel Farage rolls back on vow to deport all small-boat arrivals to the UK

Nigel Farage has rolled back on his pledge to deport “absolutely anyone” arriving in the UK on small boats just 24 hours after making it at a combative press conference in Oxford that led to accusations of ugly and destructive rhetoric.Farage announced plans to deport hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers in the first five years of a Reform government and to pay despotic regimes such as the Taliban to take them back. He also said: “Yes, women and children, everybody on arrival, will be detained.”At a press conference near Edinburgh on Wednesday, however, when asked whether his comments on securing women’s safety in the UK rang hollow when he had committed to deporting women and girls back to countries where they faced oppression and sexual violence, Farage said that was not true.At an event to introduce the MSP Graham Simpson as the latest defection from the Scottish Conservatives to Reform, Farage said: “We’re not even discussing women and children at this stage, there are so many illegal males in Britain

A picture

Farage aims for hardline vibes with his mass deportation plan

Halfway into his press conference on Tuesday – during which he announced his party would deport asylum seekers en masse if it entered government – Nigel Farage sounded a note of triumphalism.“One of the most interesting things about this press conference … is the questions being asked are about the practicalities of individual pieces of implementation,” he said. “What I notice is there is very little pushback from the media against the idea that we really are in very, very big trouble in this country.”At the heart of the Reform leader’s speech was a political gamble. In the past, Farage has been sparing in his use of hardline rhetoric around migration, cautious not to get too close to the arguments of the far right

A picture

Farage attacked for ‘ugly’ rhetoric of plan for mass deportation of asylum seekers

Nigel Farage has been accused of “ugly” and “destructive” rhetoric after announcing plans to deport hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers and pledging to pay despotic regimes such as the Taliban to take them back.Unveiling Reform UK’s “Operation Restoring Justice” at a combative press conference in Oxford, Farage said he would rip up the UK’s postwar human rights commitments, contained in a range of international conventions, to deport “absolutely anyone” – including women and children – arriving by small boat.Calling asylum seekers a threat to national security and to British women, he claimed his plans would stop Channel crossings “within days” and “save tens and possibly hundreds of billions of pounds”.Downing Street accused Farage of not being serious about his plans, but in a sign of how Reform has set the tone for public debate, the prime minister’s spokesperson refused to criticise his references to irregular migration as an “invasion” and a “scourge” or his prediction that Britain is “not far away from major civil disorder”.Pushed on whether it would be a good idea to sign a returns deal with Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, as Farage proposed, the spokesperson said the government was “not going to take anything off the table”

A picture

The moral and economic costs of Farage’s plan to deport up to 600,000 asylum seekers

Nigel Farage has set out a plan that he claims would lead to the mass deportation of up to 600,000 asylum seekers if Reform were to be elected to power. The plan involves ripping up human rights law, building costly detention infrastructure and potentially paying corrupt and totalitarian regimes billions to accept people put on deportation flights.Here are the key planks of the policies – and what the moral and economic costs would be.The UK would be an outlier among European democracies, in the company of only Russia and Belarus, if it were to leave the European court of human rights (ECHR).Opting out of treaties such as the 1951 UN refugee convention, the UN convention against torture and the Council of Europe anti-trafficking convention would also be likely to do serious harm to the UK’s international reputation

A picture

Nigel Farage accused of ‘ripping up’ human rights laws after unveiling plans for mass deportations - as it happened

The Liberal Democrats have condemned Reform’s mass deportation plans for “ripping up” human rights and involving potential payments to autocratic regimes.The party’s deputy leader Daisy Cooper said:(Nigel) Farage’s plan crumbles under the most basic scrutiny. The idea that Reform UK is going to magic up some new places to detain people and deport them to, but don’t have a clue where those places would be, is taking the public for fools.Of course Nigel Farage wants to follow his idol Vladimir Putin in ripping up the human rights convention. Winston Churchill would be turning in his grave

A picture

Peers who do not participate enough in House of Lords face sack

Labour plans to remove peers who do not contribute enough to the House of Lords and to press ahead with plans for a retirement age of 80 from the upper house.Writing for the Telegraph, the leader of the House of Lords, Angela Smith, said a select committee would consider the next stage of Lords reform after the abolition of hereditary peers.Lady Smith said that removing the last hereditary peers was “by no means the limit of the government’s Lords reform ambitions” but said the new committee would consider carefully how the next phase would work.The final stages of the bill, which will abolish the seats for the 86 remaining hereditary peers, will go through parliament this year.“The introduction of a mandatory retirement age for peers and a participation requirement are both clear among our stage-two manifesto commitments,” Smith said in her article, but said there should be a “collaborative way forward”