4) Fulham
Ins: Ibrahima Cisse (Standard Liege), Marcelo Djalo (CD Lugo), Oliver Norwood (Brighton – loan), Tomas Kalas (Chelsea – loan)
Outs: Scott Malone (Huddersfield), Richard Stearman (Sheff Utd), Jozabed Sanchez (Celta Viga), Lasse Christensen (Brondby), Jesse Joronen (AC Horsens), Larnell Cole, Ryan Tunnicliffe, Scott Parker, Cameron Burgess (S****horpe),
Maybe the most attractive team to watch last season, they scored a lot of goals but also let a lot of goals in. They had full backs that bombed before, creative midfielders and a mix of strikers at the top of the field. They had a lovely style and really pushed on after Xmas and just ran out of steam at the end but many felt they would win the playoffs so their limp performances against Reading were a bit of a surprise. Jokanovic rarely stays as manager long but he seems settled enough at Craven Cottage although interest came from former club Watford and Palace in the summer.
Losing Scott Malone will be a blow as the full backs were so important to the play but young talent Ryan Sessegnon remains in the other full back berth. They have added Djalo to supplant the backline but the midfield remains the big strength of this side. Stefan Johansen scored 11 goals from midfield and with the excellent Tom Cairney and the creative former Blade Kevin McDonald, added to newcomer the imposing Cisse from Standard Liege and there will not be many better midfields at this level. Expect more from Chelsea loanee Lucas Piazon this time around who has extended his loan at the Cottage but they will get goals from the pacey Sone Aluko who will be expected to profit from the aforementioned creativity from behind him.
They probably need another striker with Chris Martin going back to his parent club and a bit more depth but overall the way Jokanovic has them attacking teams means they will continue to be attractive to watch and also outscore many teams due to this approach.
Key Player: Tom Cairney – An excellent box to box midfielder. Can do a bit of everything. Scored 12 goals but was at the heart of many things they did well last season. Fulham have done well to retain him as he is entering his prime and will need to be up there to stave off Premier League interest.
5) Derby (promoted in the Playoffs beating Sheff Wed in the final)
Ins: Curtis Davies (Hull), Tom Huddlestone (Hull), Andre Wisdom (Liverpool)
Outs: Tom Ince (Huddersfield), Will Hughes (Watford), Cyrus Christie (Middlesbrough), Alefe Santos (Yeovil), Abdoul Camara (Guingamp)
Got it badly wrong with the managerial appointments last season although it was more of a surprise Nigel Pearson did not work out than the returning Steve McClaren, that on the face of it seemed a puzzling reappointment. Gary Rowett knows the club and was ridiculously sacked from Birmingham. He has done well at both St Andrews and previously at Burton and you feel this was a safe hire. It was too late for him to turn it around last season.
They seemed to have always been there or thereabout for the last few years but then after losing in the playoff final after dominating QPR, they then missed out on the last day of the top 6 and then fell further away last year. They do not have exactly a young squad and another squad that seems very top heavy and the amount of wages going out must be perilously close to the FFP regulations. However, the squad is packed full of experience and quality still. They have lost Will Hughes and Tom Ince but have Chris Martin returning as well as former hero Tom Huddlestone. Andre Wisdom and Curtis Davies give them physical presence at the back but you expect it will the mainstays such as Carson, Keogh, Johnson, and Martin that will still dictate how far they go. You look at the striking options in Martin, Nugent, Bent, Vydra, Nugent, Weimann, Russell and Blackman and it makes it a real puzzle how they were not higher up last year although the decision to let Martin go to a rival in Fulham was equally baffling.
They seem to have power and pace in key areas and you sense they will do much better this season. Huddlestone will come in and quarter back play and with Keogh, Davies, Shackell and Pearce at the back; they should be relatively tight in this area. With the above strikers, you sense that Rowett will find a pairing that should see them score a lot more goals this season.
Key Player: Chris Martin – A player I have always liked. He is a bit of a plodder but the ball sticks when it comes to him and he does score goals. He is a proper target man who allows others to play off him. I expect him to have a real resurgence this season with the likes of Bent and Nugent profiting from him as Rowett gets the best out of him.
6) Wolves
Ins: Diogo Jota (Atletico Madrid – loan), John Ruddy (Norwich), Ruben Vinagre (Monaco – loan), Will Norris (Cambridge), Barry Douglas (Konyaspor), Roderick Miranda (Rio Ave), Ruben Neves (Porto - loan), Willy Boly (Porto – loan), Ryan Bennett (Norwich), Phil Ofusu-Ayeh (Eintracht Braundschweig)
Outs:
James Henry (Oxford), Jon Flatt (Cheltenham – loan), Mike Williamson (Oxford), Bradley Reid (Tamworth), Dominic Iorfa (Ipswich), George Saville (Millwall), Jed Wallace (Millwall), Jon Dadi Bodvarsson (Reading), Pau Gladon (Heracles – loan), Ethan Ebanks Landell (MK Dons), Silvio
Seemed to massively underachieve last season but have had four managers in 10 months now! Nuno Espirito Santo comes in as the next ‘unknown’ manager in the Championship. It is fair to say these types of appointments have seen mixed success with some disasters and some panning out. It does not seem long since Walter Zenga was in charge but that did not last long and whilst Paul Lambert steadied the ship, you sensed the owners wanted their own man in. Super-Agent Jorge Mendes remains the key man in the operations behind the scenes with the money coming from Chinese owners Fosun with the owner valued at 4.2 billion alone! Despite this wealth it remains to be seen if the big money signings will be able to adapt to the Championship. Quite a few came in last year and only Helder Costa really worked out with Cavaleiro another costing 7 million and not really impressing. However, they have taken things to the next level and some of the new signings are mind blowing in the sense many were linked with top Spanish and Premier League clubs.
The two big additions are Neves and Jota. Neves signs for 17 million. Yes, you read that right. 17 MILLION. A sobering thought for many Blades fans who think our owners can compete at this level. Sure, it does not mean everything spending this kind of money and Wolves hardly did much last year but it seems a long way off from us spending even 5 million on one player! Jota played 27 times for Porto on loan last season and is on a 5-year contract at Atletico Madrid and will play just behind the strikers. Boly comes in at the back with a big reputation but needs to kick start his career whilst Ofusu-Ayeh is another ‘unit’ to play at the back.
They do have some Championship and British experience in the likes of Ben Marshall, John Ruddy (who will probably deputise for Carl Ikembe, who was sadly diagnosed with leukemia), Conor Coady, David Edwards, Danny Batth and Nouha Dicko. I lot depends how quickly Santo can adapt to this level and that he can get the expensive new guys to integrate into a totally different style of football. I get the sense the type of signings means that if they get off to a slow start, they will chuck more cash at it and eventually get it right.
Key Player: Helder Costa – Costa stood out at Molineux last year. He scored goals, ran at defences and excited the fans. He seemed too good for the Championship but the Wolves have held onto him and added some of his countrymen to help them giving a better fist of the Championship. You expect with Santo in at the helm he may get the best out of Costs and his fellow Portuguese players.

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, Samu Saiz (SD Huesca), Mateusz Klich (FC Twente), Caleb Ekuban (Chievo Verona), Felix Wiedwald (Werder Bremen), Vurnon Anita (Newcastle), Matthew Pennington (Everton – loan), Ezjgan Alioski (FC Lugano)