AC Milan have signed Chelsea striker Christopher Nkunku on a contract until June 2030.
Sources have told ESPN that Nkunku leaves Stamford Bridge for €42 million ($49m), having only started 11 Premier League games for the club since a big-money move from RB Leipzig in 2023.
France forward Nkunku scored 18 goals in 62 appearances for Chelsea in all competitions and won the UEFA Conference League and Club World Cup.
But the 27-year-old saw his playing time in west London impacted by injury.
- Sources: Nicholas Jackson set for Bayern Munich loan
- Premier League 2025-26 kit ranking: Every new jersey
- Mourinho fired by Fenerbahce: Timeline of his many antics
Nkunku began his career at Paris Saint-Germain before joining RB Leipzig in 2019, where he scored 70 goals in 172 games and won DFB-Pokal titles.
He has won 14 caps for France and scored one goal.
Another player set to leave Chelsea imminently is Nicolas Jackson, after Bayern Munich agreed a season-long loan move for another out-of-favour striker.
Information from PA and ESPN's James Olley was used in this report.
Newer articles
Older articles
Elon Musk’s AI company will make Grok chatbot more accessible, here’s how
IRCTC's AskDisha 2.0: AI Chatbot Streamlines Train Ticket Booking, Refunds, and Information Access
ICC Test Rankings: Pant Climbs to Career-Best, Bumrah Holds Top Spot as Root Reigns Supreme
India's Harshit Rana Released from Test Squad Ahead of Second England Clash
Bumrah's Birmingham Nets Spell: Accuracy, Angles, and Ambiguity Surround India Spearhead
Saucecode:
Nitish Rana Eyes Delhi Return After Disappointing Uttar Pradesh Spell
Gavaskar Calls for Kuldeep Yadav's Inclusion in Second Test; Questions Bumrah's Fitness After Leeds Loss
India's Fielding Woes Blasted by Ex-Selector After Test Defeat Against England; Calls for Patience Amid Transition
Popular Finance YouTuber "financewithsharan" Hacked: Lessons in YouTube Security and Account Protection
India's Batting Collapses Trigger Debate: Gambhir Defends Lower Order, Cites Missed Catches, Workload Management as Factors in Test Loss