Hooligan Soccer
·11 de agosto de 2025
Premier League Preview: Fulham

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Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·11 de agosto de 2025
Fulham appears to have shrugged off the “yo-yo club” label stuck to them after relegation in 2019 and 2021, but they’ve not quite graduated to “mid-table” status. Last season’s 11th place finish was certainly better than the year before (13th), but losing three of their last four isn’t exactly the type of momentum you want going into the break.
Fulham’s transfer window so quiet even the crickets have stopped chirping. The club has completed one signing, French goalkeeper Benjamin Lecompte. He’s not even a first-stringer; he’s been brought on as Bernd Leno’s backup. You’d have thought the entire soccer operations team took an extended vacation. Supporters are entirely justified wondering just what the hell is going on.
Ten players have departed Craven Cottage in the same spell, four out on loan and six permanent. Biggest among those is the Brazilian Willian, whose second term wasn’t the resounding success many thought it would be. Winger Lemar Gordon, who spent last season with the second team, opted to join League One’s Leyton Orient.
Is it too much to ask that the club break last season’s points tally of 54? It shouldn’t be. On the flip side, will the defense be solid enough to not concede 54 goals like they did last season? Let’s hope so. If these two things come to pass, Fulham should finish in the top half and possibly be competing for a European spot. Unlike other squads, they do not have to integrate new recruits or a new system. There are no excuses.
Many folks will be studying manager Marco Silva’s body language on the touch line. He’s been the gaffer for five years now, a long tenure in this day and age. When asked about this summer transfer window, the Portuguese gaffer has been politick but there’s an undercurrent of frustration in his replies.