Chelsea lost another match, this time 0–1 to Newcastle. After
the Champions League disaster where goalkeeper errors squandered a promising
situation and left them trailing 2–5, the league defeat compounded the misery.
What makes it worse is that Chelsea dominated the game but still came away
empty‑handed. If they fail to qualify for the Champions League,
the financial and reputational damage will be immense.
Of course, the fatigue of traveling for European fixtures and
then playing in the league the next day affects performance. Newcastle scored
from their only counterattack, then sat back and defended, leaving Chelsea
unable to break them down. Losing in this fashion has become a habit for the
Blues. The weakness in central defense is undeniable and hard to fix. Colwill
is not world‑class, but his long injury absence has left the back line
even more fragile. With him, at least a pairing with Adarabioyo and Chalobah
would be serviceable. The honeymoon period for coach Rossignol is over; now
comes the real test. As a young, inexperienced manager, he connects well with
players but tactically is only average.
Across football, there is growing criticism of possession‑heavy styles. Even
Manchester City brought in a Liverpool assistant to shift toward faster
football. Liverpool’s approach is simple: win the ball with
pressing and attack immediately. Chelsea’s endless
sideways and backward passing has been a chronic flaw. Their so‑called possession game
neither tires opponents nor breaks defensive lines, and it rarely produces
shots. Instead, it drains Chelsea’s own energy and
invites counterattacks. Breaking down compact defenses requires direct methods:
long‑range shots, stretching play on the wings, and most
importantly driving into the box—shoot if possible, or
draw fouls and let VAR decide. The tighter the defense, the more Chelsea should
penetrate the area. Against Newcastle, possession was meaningless, with few
effective shots. Luck played a part, and fatigue was evident, but the main issue
is tactical stubbornness that persists even under a new coach.
Recently, fan groups met with the club’s owner and received a
very negative response: the club will not guarantee future success. A
trophyless season is expected. The former owner is fighting for fairness, while
the current one seems clueless. Money has been spent, but results are poor, and
fans are furious. The root cause is simple: if you want to build a football
team, let football people manage it. If you want to build an English football
team, let people who understand English football run it. Next season, Chelsea
must buy experienced, affordable defenders and hire a proven, seasoned coach.
Stop trying to build a youth project. The owner himself is no longer
young—grown‑ups shouldn’t make the mistakes of
the young: being reckless.
.jpeg)
.jpeg)















































