
EPL Index
·30 de junho de 2025
Joao Pedro adds balance to Maresca’s Chelsea rebuild

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·30 de junho de 2025
Joao Pedro to Chelsea may not carry the same shock factor as other Stamford Bridge arrivals, but behind the £50million deal is a strategic recruitment step that aligns perfectly with Enzo Maresca’s evolving system.
The 23-year-old will join Chelsea’s pre-season tour in the United States — and the Club World Cup campaign — subject to a medical. This is no speculative acquisition. It’s a considered addition with Maresca’s tactical preferences front and centre.
Chelsea’s transfer activity under BlueCo has often veered into excess, particularly in attacking areas. But Joao Pedro represents something different: functionality over flair, system over stardom.
While Nicolas Jackson and Liam Delap thrive when making darting runs in behind, Pedro offers a contrasting skill set — one that links midfield to attack with intelligence and timing. Able to play as a centre-forward, second striker, or attacking midfielder, Pedro often drops deep or moves wide left to build play and offer passing options when midfield space is tight.
This is precisely the kind of player that Maresca values — a technically secure forward who enables positional play and encourages sustained spells of possession.
Data from SkillCorner highlights Pedro’s suitability for Maresca’s blueprint. Compared to other centre-forwards in Europe’s top seven leagues, his off-ball movement tells the story:
These aren’t the numbers of a poacher or traditional No 9. They reflect a facilitator — someone who draws defenders out, creates overloads, and finds advancing runners in dangerous areas.
There’s a standout moment from Brighton’s clash with Leicester City late last season. As Carlos Baleba carries the ball forward, Pedro drifts from the defensive line, checks his shoulder, and receives in space. He then turns and threads a perfectly weighted ball through to Simon Adingra, who has peeled in from the wing. It’s a prime example of Pedro’s spatial awareness and decision-making.
Pedro has averaged 0.22 non-penalty goals per 90 minutes across two seasons at Brighton — not prolific, but that’s not why Chelsea are signing him. His main contributions lie deeper in the build-up phase.
Pedro won’t be asked to spearhead the line in the mould of Erling Haaland. Instead, he offers something akin to what Roberto Firmino brought to Liverpool — a connective presence who can retain the ball, manipulate defensive lines, and feed more direct runners.
That suits Maresca’s insistence on control through possession. As Juanma Lillo once put it, “The quicker the ball goes forward, the quicker it comes back.” Maresca adheres to that philosophy and Pedro fits the bill.
With Pedro dropping in, the space behind the opposition back line opens up — a key tactical lever in Maresca’s plan. Wide players such as Pedro Neto, Noni Madueke, Tyrique George, and Jamie Gittens can exploit this space with clever out-to-in runs. Even Marc Cucurella, with his aggressive overlapping bursts, could benefit.
Add Cole Palmer’s creativity to the equation and it becomes clear how Pedro’s movement and ball-playing ability could elevate Chelsea’s entire attacking unit. It’s not about individual stardust — it’s about the system. Pedro makes that system tick.
Chelsea’s recruitment has often felt scattergun. But this time, there’s method. Joao Pedro isn’t just a smart signing — he’s a necessary one.