Tag: Roman Abramovich

  • Abramovich orders Chelsea to complete Havertz signing

    Abramovich orders Chelsea to complete Havertz signing

    Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich has made Bayer Leverkusen ace Kai Havertz their top summer transfer target.

    BILD says chief transfer negotiator Marina Granovskaia has been ordered to seal a deal for the 21-year-old by Abramovich.

    Chelsea have made Havertz their absolute top priority.

    The Blues are expected to make contact with Leverkusen this week to thrash out a deal with reports personal terms have already been reached with the player.

    Havertz is keen to make a switch to Stamford Bridge even if Frank Lampard’s side don’t make it into the Champions League.

    And Petr Cech is expected to meet the midfielder for talks as well to put the final touches on the deal.

    The report claims a deal could be struck for €70m (£63m) plus another €30m (£27m) in bonuses.

  • How I almost killed Abramovich – Chelsea Legend

    Chelsea legend, Pat Nevin, has revealed he nearly killed the club’s owner, Roman Abramovich, while on holiday in Scotland.

    Nevin was driving around the Isle of Arran, when he nearly hit a cyclist while turning a corner.

    He was shocked to see that the man he nearly knocked off the bike was Abramovich.

    “About three years ago I was on holiday in Arran and I was driving up the north side of Arran,” Nevin said on BBC Radio Scotland.

    “Every time you go on holiday there, you drive round the whole island.

    “I came round a corner at the top just before Lochranza and I nearly hit a guy on a bike.

    “I just got out the way at the last moment, I could have killed the guy. It was Roman Abramovich.

    “What a story that would have been if I had killed Roman Abramovich. I just missed him.

    “His yacht was off the coast and he was cycling round.

    “He doesn’t know to this day that it was me.”

  • Abramovich visa delay puts Chelsea stadium expansion on hold

    Chelsea’s Russian billionaire owner Roman Abramovich has put the club’s stadium plans on hold after delays to the renewal of his UK visa.

    The estimated cost for a new 60,000 seat Stamford Bridge has increased to £1bn after delays, which included a dispute with a local family.

    Abramovich is unwilling to invest in a major project in a country where he is not allowed work.

    The 51-year-old’s UK investor visa expired some weeks ago.

    But it is understood that Abramovich’s decision will have no impact on the running of the football team.

    The delay in issuing him a new visa comes amid increased diplomatic tensions between London and Moscow after the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in Salisbury.

    The British government has refused to comment on his individual case.

    Chelsea issued a statement saying the club had delayed work on Stamford Bridge because of “the current unfavourable investment climate”.

    It added: “No further pre-construction design and planning work will occur. The club does not have a time frame set for reconsideration of its decision.”

    Plans were under consideration to move Chelsea matches to Wembley stadium for the four years it would take to redevelop Stamford Bridge.

    Although the future of Wembley is in doubt after Fulham owner Shahid Khan offered £600m to buy the stadium from the Football Association, it is not thought to be a factor in Chelsea’s decision.

    BBC

  • Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich to become Israeli citizen, gets UK visiting Visa

    Chelsea football club owner, Roman Abramovich can enter Britain on a visitor visa after gaining Israeli citizenship, Theresa May’s spokesperson has said.

    The Russian billionaire “can come as a visitor for six months but will need a visa to live, work or study in the UK,” the spokesperson added.

    The clarification came after Mr Abramovich was granted citizenship in Israel after failing to renew his visa to Britain.

    Russia’s 11 richest man’s UK visa application had been “taking longer than usual” to process amid increasing tensions between London and Moscow, sources told Reuters.

    It has been reported that Mr Abramovich would have to explain the source of his wealth to receive a new British visa.

    Commenting on his new Israeli citizenship, the Kremlin said Mr Abramovich had every right to take it under Israel’s ‘law of return’ for Jews.

    “The Kremlin doesn’t think anything about this,” government spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

    “An entrepreneur has received Israeli citizenship. So what? It is his right.”

    Mr Abramovich, who is Jewish, flew to Tel Aviv on Monday and obtained documents confirming his status as an Israeli citizen, the Israeli news site Ynet reported.

    The country’s interior ministry confirmed Mr Abramovich had gained citizenship there, The Times of Israel reports, adding that he is now the country’s richest man.

    An official at Nativ, a government department that deals with Jewish communities in the former Soviet Union, said Mr Abramovich had applied for an immigration visa at Israel’s embassy in Moscow.

    They added: “His documents were examined under the ‘law of return’ and he was indeed entitled to immigrant status in Israel, and as a result he was issued an immigration visa.”

    Israel’s law of return gives every Jew, or child or grandchild of a Jew, the right to Israeli citizenship.

    Relations between Moscow and London have been strained since the poisoning of former Russian double-agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury in March.

    Britain has blamed the attack on Russia but the Kremlin denies any involvement.

    The UK said this month it would review long-term visas of wealthy Russians after the poisoning.

    Mr Abramovich has been a regular visitor to Israel and Ynet said he had bought a property that was formerly a hotel.

    The building is based in an old Tel Aviv neighbourhood close to the Mediterranean shore.