Chelsea prepares huge offer for Osimhen ahead of Manchester United, as Napoli set £115 million transfer price tag

Football.London, yesterday, reported that Chelsea are prepared to offer Napoli star, Victor Osimhen, a huge salary to secure his signing in the summer transfer window ahead of Premier League rivals, Manchester United.
Chelsea prepares huge offer for Osimhen ahead of Manchester United, as Napoli set £115 million transfer price tag

Football.London, yesterday, reported that Chelsea are prepared to offer Napoli star, Victor Osimhen, a huge salary to secure his signing in the summer transfer window ahead of Premier League rivals, Manchester United.

The Super Eagles striker has scored 21 goals and provided a further four assists in 26 appearances across all competitions so far this season, firing Napoli to the top of the Serie A table.

United have been heavily linked with a move for Osimhen after agreeing to terminate Cristiano Ronaldo’s contract ahead of the World Cup in Qatar, as they look to replace the five-time Ballon d’Or winner this summer.

The Blues are in need of a clinical number nine this summer with Romelu Lukaku unlikely to stay at Stamford Bridge when he returns from his loan at Inter Milan, whilst Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Kai Havertz have both struggled for form in front of goal this season.

According to football.london, Christopher Nkunku has agreed a pre-contract to sign for Chelsea at the end of the season, which will boost Graham Potter’s options in attack. Todd Boehly is expected to move on a number of first team players, including the likes of Christian Pulisic and Hakim Ziyech, which may pave the way for Osimhen to join the squad – but it will take a huge bid to lure him away from Naples.

Chelsea have already spent over £600 million on new signings in just two transfer windows since the Boehly and Clearlake Capital consortium completed a £4 billion takeover at Stamford Bridge. Mykhailo Mudryk, Raheem Sterling, Noni Madueke and Joao Felix have all come into the team to bolster the attack, but the Blues have only scored 24 goals in 25 Premier League fixtures so far this season.

The need for a clinical striker is clear and Osimhen would certainly fit the bill for the Blues. The Nigerian is one of the best finishers in Europe this term and has all the attributes needed to thrive in the Premier League given his height, pace and physicality.

According to Calciomercato, Boehly is willing to double Osimhen’s current €4.5million (£3.9million) salary in order to beat United to his signature this summer. Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis has slapped a price tag of €130million (£115million) on his star striker in the hopes of keeping hold of Osimhen for another season before he enters the final year of his contract.

The report adds that Erik ten Hag has made signing Osimhen his number one priority this summer with United desperately in need of a new striker. Marcus Rashford has stepped up following Ronaldo’s exit from Old Trafford, but if Ten Hag and Boehly want Osimhen at their club, they will need to pay a British record transfer fee it seems.

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Roseline Ogunro’s report, Radio Nigeria Announcer on Duty the day General Murtala Mohammed was killed

I was the early morning duty continuity announcer on Friday 13 February 1976, exactly 45 years ago. My shift commenced at 5:30 am and would have finished at 11:30 am. Things were going on smoothly until about 7:20 am when a rather scruffy man with red eyes as though under the influence of alcohol or other substances, in army uniform and armed with a gun, walked into the continuity studio with another army officer and one of my colleagues, a producer in the Hausa Service of Voice of Nigeria. The scruffy officer was later to announce that he was Dimka. He said as they came in, ‘any resistance from these people, shoot’. He then demanded to use my microphone. I got up and he took over my seat and my microphone. He then announced that there had been a coup and that the Head of State, General Murtala Mohammed had been killed. He proceeded to make the infamous ‘dawn to dusk curfew’. He read from a scrap of paper. After the announcement he asked if I had military (martial music) to which I said no. The colleague who accompanied the officers left immediately and returned quite quickly with a compilation of martial music records possibly from the music library. He seemed to have pre-compiled them. I was commanded to play them after Dimka’s announcement. I was not overly scared at this point. I thought to myself, ’just do as you are told’ especially as the man was armed with a gun.