Chelsea are actively searching for a left-back replacement after Marc Cucurella’s £51.8m departure to Real Madrid on a six-year deal, with Sporting CP’s Maxi Araújo identified as one of their primary targets – a signing that would cost in the region of £35–43m based on current reported valuations.
Portuguese outlet Record reports that Chelsea have already scouted the Uruguay international on multiple occasions and made direct enquiries with his representatives. That is not vague transfer noise – that is structured early-stage work, and it places this firmly beyond casual monitoring.
What Araújo Brings – And What Sporting Will Demand
Araújo joined Sporting CP in 2024 and has developed quickly into one of the more attack-minded left-sided defenders in European football. In his first season at the club, he made 44 appearances, contributing 7 goals and 4 assists across all competitions – figures that reflect an offensive profile rather than a conventional defensive full-back. His versatility as a left-back, wing-back, or advanced wide midfielder gives a manager tactical options on the same flank.
Sporting hold significant leverage. Araújo is under contract until 2029 with a reported release clause in the region of €80m (approximately £69m). They have no financial pressure to sell, and that puts the asking price squarely in Sporting’s hands. The Chelsea Chronicle has reported that the Portuguese club could accept considerably less than the formal clause – figures around €40–50m (roughly £34–43m) are cited as a realistic transaction range – but nothing moves until a club submits a bid Sporting deem serious.
Competition Is Real and Already Established
Chelsea are not alone. Tottenham have shown interest, and reports from Portugal and Spain indicate that Manchester United, Juventus, and Atlético Madrid have all held exploratory discussions or sent scouts. Some sources in Spain suggest Atlético are currently leading the race, though nothing has reached the stage of a formal offer from any club.
The competitive field matters because Sporting have no reason to rush. With a long contract, a high release clause, and multiple suitors, they can afford to wait for maximum value. Chelsea’s interest appears genuine and structured, but they will need to accelerate if they want to stay ahead of a queue that has been forming since at least the second half of last season – Chelsea scouts were present at Sporting’s Champions League quarter-final against Arsenal.
Chelsea’s broader recruitment activity this summer – including their pursuit of Zadok Yohanna – suggests a club operating across multiple positions simultaneously, which is relevant context for how much bandwidth and budget is available for this specific position.


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