BOURNEMOUTH (FFT 2025-26 SEASON PREVIEW)
CHERRIES BLOSSOM
Bournemouth were 3rd in last season’s expected points table, calculated on xG for and against in games (as per Understat)
LAST SEASON
- PREMIER LEAGUE 9th
- FA CUP Quarter-final
- LEAGUE CUP Second Round
TOP SCORER (ALL COMPS)
- Justin Kluivert, Antoine Semenyo (13)
ADRIAN KAJUMBA @AdrianJKajumba
THE PLAN
Last season’s 56 points was a club-record haul for a second successive campaign, with 9th a joint-best top-flight finish, so the task in 2025-26 task is simple: more of the same. Bournemouth’s high-pressing machine is the envy of many (no team won the ball in the opposition’s third more often last season) and such collective endeavour can help cover for key individual exits that began with Dean Huijsen and Milos Kerkez. Those sales – Huijsen to Real Madrid after a single season; Kerkez to Liverpool after two – are signs of how shrewdly the Cherries operate in the transfer market. Most crucially of all, they’ve kept the mastermind of their progress...
THE COACH
Retaining Andoni Iraola is the No.1 mission for Bournemouth. The 43-year-old Basque’s high-intensity philosophy is as popular as his approach: rather than subscribe to the ‘little old Bournemouth’ tag of staying in their lane, he drives attempts to close the gap to the élite.
KEY PLAYER
It may be all-change at the back, but £40m record signing Evanilson remains up front. The bustling Brazilian’s 12-goal debut season was impressive given it included an eight-week injury absence; and when Justin Kluivert scored three penalties in one game, he’d won all three.
LESSON FROM LAST YEAR
There’s life after big-name exits. Bournemouth lost striker Dominic Solanke last summer, but found replacements and solutions. Along came Evanilson, for starters. Justin Kluivert and Antoine Semenyo also hit double figures for goals. The latter had more shots (125) than any other Premier League player, though it has earned him plenty of admirers. Most important is to learn from the end-of-term dip that turned 5th place in February, and a first crack at Europe, into 9th. For two-thirds of the season, Bournemouth were the story, with a first league win over Manchester City and a second 3-0 victory at Old Trafford – but as tired legs bit, they ended with three wins in 13.
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THE MOOD
Their knack of unearthing more hidden gems than your average diamond mine – very handy when annually plundered by the bigger boys – means Dorset’s finest will be optimistic. France Under-21 star Adrien Truffert was Ligue 1’s outstanding left-back for Rennes last term, and in the building even before Kerkez left for Liverpool.
ONE TO WATCH
Electric teenage forward Eli Junior Kroupi. Signed from sister club Lorient in February with nine goals in 17 league games, he stayed in France for the rest of the season and banged in another 13 from 13 as Lorient won the Ligue 2 title.
MOST LIKELY TO…
Stage a ridiculous comeback. The Cherries have won from two goals down or more in each of the past three seasons. Last August’s 3-2 win at Everton, having trailed 2-0 with four minutes to go, was the best yet. Lost cause? What’s that?
LEAST LIKELY TO…
See anyone sneaking out. Thanks in part to the above phenomenon, they scored nine stoppage-time goals in 2024-25 – more than any other Premier League club.
FFT VERDICT 10TH
Arguably unlucky not to qualify for Europe, the Cherries may find this year trickier due to sales and rivals.
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VIEW FROM THE STANDS
SAM DAVIS @afcbpodcast
Last season was
a good marker for European aims.
I won’t be happy unless
there’s progress on a new ground. Our Performance Centre is superb, but ‘bums on seats’ is key.
Our most underrated player is
Dango Ouattara. Once unpredictable and chaotic, our Burkinabe winger can deputise up top, is scarily quick and is now a consistent threat.
Look out for
Julio Soler. Milos Kerkez’s understudy seldom featured last term – his physicality and level is still to be fully tested.
The opposition player I’d love here is
Tyler Dibling of Southampton, not least because it’s kind to give a helping hand to recently relegated rivals.
The opposition player who grinds my gears is
the once-loved Tyrone Mings. Alex Scott’s jaw is wary of his flying elbows. The active player I’d love to have back is Nathan Ake. In a heartbeat.
The pantomime villain will be
Scott Parker at Burnley. His style here was ‘purposeful’ and his top-flight tenure brief.
The thing my club really gets right is
community work with the elderly, schools and people with learning difficulties.
I’m least looking forward to playing
Leeds. We’ve never won at Elland Road – to their credit, their boisterous fans agitate us.
Fans think our gaffer is
flawless. Iraola gets the best from every player and loves exciting play, albeit at a defensive cost. And we beat Manchester City.
We’ll finish
12th. There’s a lot of work for Iraola to replicate last season.
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TITLE ODDS
250/1
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FIXTURES
AUGUST
15 Liverpool (A)
23 Wolves (H)
30 Tottenham (A)
SEPTEMBER
13 Brighton (H)
20 Newcastle (H)
27 Leeds (A)
OCTOBER
4 Fulham (H)
18 Crystal Palace (A)
25 Nott’m Forest (H)
NOVEMBER
1 Man City (A)
8 Aston Villa (A)
22 West Ham (H)
29 Sunderland (A)
DECEMBER
3 Everton (H)
6 Chelsea (H)
13 Man United (A)
20 Burnley (H)
27 Brentford (A)
30 Chelsea (A)
JANUARY
3 Arsenal (H)
7 Tottenham (H)
17 Brighton (A)
24 Liverpool (H)
31 Wolves (A)
FEBRUARY
7 Aston Villa (H)
11 Everton (A)
21 West Ham (A)
28 Sunderland (H)
MARCH
4 Brentford (H)
14 Burnley (A)
21 Man United (H)
APRIL
11 Arsenal (A)
18 Newcastle (A)
25 Leeds (H)
MAY
2 Crystal Palace (H)
9 Fulham (A)
17 Man City (H)
24 Nott’m Forest (A)
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