
Chelsea
goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga says he is not focused on the world-record
transfer fee that saw him become the most expensive goalkeeper in the
summer.
Two weeks after the record had been broken by Alisson's move to Liverpool,
the Blues triggered Kepa's £71.6m release clause to bring him to Stamford
Bridge from Atheltic Bilbao.
He replaced the outgoing Thibaut Courtois, but the 24-year-old says while he
is aware of the fee, he does not let it affect his performances on the
field.
"Obviously the price was very high - £71m is a lot of money," he told Sky
Sports News.
"I'm aware of this but given the transfer market situation and how things
are going, it is normal so I don't need to focus on the value of the
transfer.
"I do need to focus on playing my football and what's happening on the pitch
rather than off it... I want to be myself and not think about it.
"I'm here now playing for Chelsea. I chose to leave my home at Athletic
Bilbao and it was an important step in my career.
"I wouldn't call it pressure [replacing Courtois], I would just say it is
how the transfer market goes. He went and I came in and I'm not one to focus
on the comings and going.
"I'm focused on myself and there is a great opportunity for me to come here.
I wanted to take advantage of this and enjoy my football and look forward
and not back.
"I'm happy here both on a personal and a team level and I'm happy here in
London. Looking towards the future excites me with the possibilities we have
to improve and I'm excited about what the future might bring."
Despite being the main man at Chelsea, Kepa faces a fight for the No 1 spot
with Spain as Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea is the current first
choice.
He added: "I'm aware that De Gea is a good goalkeeper. He's had a great
career and he's been great over a number of years.
"People were speaking at the World Cup about this situation but I need to
support whoever is playing and De Gea played in the World Cup, he was
playing before then as well.
"Everyone wants to play and it's about the making the manager's decision
hard. As for me, I'm calm in the situation that I'm in and I know with
effort, I can get there."
Next up in the Premier League is a trip to south London to face Crystal
Palace - who beat Manchester City last Saturday - live on Sky Sports, and
Kepa is aware of their threat.
"They are a hard team, especially at home, and they have got quick players,"
he said. "It's not been an easy run of games either, it's been physically
draining and there have been lots of points at stake over the Christmas
period. As a result, it's important to be in good form."