Turkish billionaire Bayrak enters bid to buy Chelsea
The Chelsea emblem is seen at an entrance to Stamford Bridge, London, England, March 3, 2022. (REUTERS Photo)


As the race to buy Chelsea continues, Turkish billionaire Muhsin Bayrak has become the latest name to make a bid, as confirmed by his company AB Group Holding via PA news agency.

Roman Abramovich put Chelsea up for sale on Wednesday night, in a move that will bring an end to his glittering 19-year ownership of the Stamford Bridge club.

Chelsea is understood to have already received several serious significant offers, with the team handling the sale still expecting more bids to be submitted.

And now construction, energy and technology magnate Bayrak has revealed he is among those to have lodged a bid for the Blues.

"We can definitely confirm our bid for Chelsea," AB Group Holding general manager Seda Bayrak told the PA news agency.

"We have forwarded our offer regarding this."

Merchant bank the Raine Group is handling the bid process for Abramovich, who has led Chelsea to 21 trophies in his nearly 20-year stint with the west London club.

Russia's continued invasion of Ukraine has forced Abramovich's decision to sell the club, with the 55-year-old considering owning Chelsea the "privilege of my lifetime."

The sale process is understood to be at the stage of gathering bids, with reviews only taking place once all offers are submitted.

American billionaire Todd Boehly fronts the most high-profile bid for the Blues so far, with the LA Dodgers part-owner having teamed up with Swiss magnate Hansjorg Wyss.

Turkish businessman Bayrak runs one of his countries most successful enterprises, however, and remains determined to push forward with a purchase of the Blues.

"We will fly the Turkish flag in London soon," said Muhsin Bayrak.

"We are negotiating the terms of the purchase of Chelsea with Roman Abramovich's lawyers.

"We are in the negotiation phase for the signatures."

Thomas Tuchel has pledged his future to Chelsea meanwhile, amid Abramovich's impending sale.

Tuchel has led Chelsea to the Champions League, European Super Cup and Club World Cup titles since joining the Blues in January 2021, and insisted Stamford Bridge remains the "perfect fit" for him.

The German manager has accepted the uncertain future around Chelsea's ownership but was confident the Blues would remain robust, whoever takes over from Abramovich.

Asked if the impending sale would alter his position, Tuchel replied: "No, I have the opposite of a problem staying here.

"I've said many times that I love working in the Premier League, I love being in England, I feel the tradition and the love for sports in general and for football in particular.

"This is an amazing place to be. Chelsea is – from my point of view – for me, the perfect fit. I love to be here, I love everything about the club and hopefully, it continues.

"There is now an uncertainty, but isn't it always as a football manager? So I am used to it on, of course, different levels and this is quite the level I have to be honest. I am positive, and I hope things will end well."

Technical director Petr Cech briefed Chelsea's players and staff on the latest information on Abramovich's sale on Thursday.

While Tuchel admitted Cech could offer no assurances, he insisted everyone in the Blues' squad and staff knows how to keep focused on the football.

"We had a briefing here after the game, the day after the match, from Petr, who gave everybody in the building here, not only the players, a quick brief and explained the situation," said Tuchel.

"There was not too much that we didn't already know. Of course, there is uncertainty, of course, everybody will feel different about this, there's 80 people in the building.

"There were no assurances, no assurances; because how could he, how could anybody? We cannot predict the future.

"Maybe it was just more the bottom line that we can allow ourselves to keep on going and to do what we did over the last days, to focus on sports and we are employees and we are right now still very privileged. That was more or less the message.

"Still I hope for the best outcome, still I think we have something to offer, still I think Chelsea is a strong club and will stay a strong club.

"Our owner decided to sell the club, but he sells a strong, solid and very well-organized club on the highest level." Tuchel was able to complete the clean sweep of global trophies for Abramovich, by defeating Palmeiras 2-1 in Abu Dhabi to claim the Club World Cup crown in February.

The Blues boss admitted the Chelsea squad should feel proud to have helped round off Abramovich's glittering era with the club's 21st trophy in the Russian's tenure.

"We are very happy. We are very happy we could give him this and win it," said Tuchel.

"At least we closed this cycle, for him and for his effort and his passion and commitment to the club. So it was good timing on this matter.

"He was and he is a very, very passionate owner who cares actually about the team, about the club, about the performance, which, personally, is very rare and makes it very special."