Sevilla face pivotal pre-season as July training begins amid transfer urgency and financial strain
Sevilla begin pre-season on July 6, 2026, under financial pressure; signings, contract talks and a goalkeeper priority will shape a decisive transfer window.
Sevilla will return to training on Monday, July 6, 2026, with medical checks scheduled for the weekend of July 4 and 5 for most of the squad. The club arrives at pre-season with new signings on the books and an urgent need to reshape its roster while addressing a stretched balance sheet.
Luis García Plaza arrives to lead preparations after a summer of uncertainty over his status amid ownership talks, and the sporting department has already started to align recruitment with his preferences. The early focus will be on integrating new arrivals and resolving contract and sales negotiations that have defined the club’s off-season so far.
Pre-season schedule confirmed and medicals set for early July
The senior squad will undergo routine medical examinations on July 4 and 5 before the full group assembles for the first training session on July 6, 2026. Two-week international absentees — Swiss internationals Rubén Vargas and Djibril Sow — plus Akor Adams and Gabriel Suazo, who linked up with their national teams after LaLiga ended, are expected to join the group later.
Coaching staff and the sports department plan to use the opening days for fitness benchmarking and to begin tactical drills tailored to Luis García Plaza’s system. The initial sessions will also serve as a platform to evaluate players returning from loan and to finalize decisions on fringe members ahead of the market’s busier spells.
Luis García Plaza’s role clarified after ownership talks
Luis García Plaza has been in sustained contact with sporting director José Ignacio Navarro during the close season as ownership negotiations unfolded. The coach left for a break uncertain about his future while a prospective purchase led by a group headed by Sergio Ramos was explored, a process that briefly threatened his continuation.
With those discussions concluded enough to permit planning, García Plaza now has the opportunity to shape the team from the start of pre-season, and his preferences have influenced the club’s early recruitment. Jon Guridi, the midfielder who joined in June, is understood to be a direct request from the coach and represents the type of profile the staff want to build around.
Transfer policy shaped by repeated losses and urgent sales need
Sevilla enter the summer having recorded losses for the sixth consecutive year, making the transfer window a financial imperative as much as a sporting one. The club’s strategy combines free transfers or low-cost signings with selective sales to reduce the operating deficit and create room for longer-term planning.
Names such as Rubén Vargas and Akor Adams have been highlighted as likely candidates to attract significant interest given their market profiles, but club sources indicate that closing deals quickly for either player will be challenging. Negotiations are expected to continue across multiple fronts as Sevilla balance sporting competitiveness with pressing fiscal constraints.
Goalkeeper priority centers on Odysseas Vlachodimos and competition for signatures
Securing a reliable first-choice goalkeeper is a top priority for Sevilla this summer, with Odysseas Vlachodimos the leading target after a productive loan spell at the club last season. The player has expressed a desire to remain at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán, and the club is prepared to make a financial effort to retain him.
Vlachodimos’ strong performances have also attracted interest from other clubs, notably in England, where offers could test Sevilla’s capacity to meet market demands. In addition to sealing the primary goalkeeping role, the club plans to sign a second keeper to provide depth and competition, meaning both recruitment and potential sales will play a role in finalizing the department.
Contract talks and squad renewals under way with key veterans and academy prospects
Sporting director José Ignacio Navarro has opened negotiations to extend Alexis Sánchez’s contract for an additional season, with both parties signalling a willingness to reach an agreement. Navarro publicly described the club’s intention to give Sánchez “the maximum that Sevilla can offer” within current constraints, underlining the club’s desire to retain experience in the dressing room.
At the same time, Sevilla have elected not to renew long-serving midfielder Nemanja Gudelj after seven seasons, a decision that has freed budget and minutes for younger players. The club is still negotiating the future of academy graduate Andrés Castrín, where talks remain ongoing and no agreement has yet been reached. Sevilla will evaluate homegrown options carefully as they seek cost-effective solutions.
New signings, recruitment continuity and the role of previous sporting leadership
Three new faces have already been added to the squad: Jon Guridi, whom the coach specifically requested, alongside Sangante and Juan Iglesias, transactions completed while Antonio Cordón managed the sporting operations. These arrivals reflect a mix of tactical preference and the need to add depth without excessive transfer fees.
The continuity in recruitment since the change in the sporting department suggests Sevilla aim to blend the new leadership’s priorities with deals negotiated earlier in the window. The club will continue to monitor both the market and performances in pre-season to determine whether further signings are necessary.
Supporters’ expectations and the club’s broader summer plan
Sevilla’s fanbase has been candid about its frustration after a season that left the club precariously close to relegation and repeatedly reliant on late rallies. Supporters expect decisive action this summer to avoid another campaign of nervous survival and to restore competitive stability.
The club’s roadmap is clear on paper: cut costs where possible, generate income through sales, and add reinforcements that fit the manager’s system without burdening the wage bill. How effectively Sevilla balance these competing priorities in the weeks ahead will determine whether they begin the new season with genuine momentum.
Sevilla’s upcoming weeks will be a test of operational agility as much as footballing judgment, with training, negotiations and match preparation all happening in parallel. The club must finish multiple business strands to provide Luis García Plaza with the tools he needs while protecting long-term sustainability.
The first whistle of pre-season arrives on July 6, 2026, but for Sevilla the real starts and stops of the summer will be decided in the boardroom as much as on the training ground.










