• You may have to login or register before you can post and view our exclusive members only forums.
    To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Chelsea

Status
Not open for further replies.

Aidan O' Neill

Well-Known
Member
What has happened? Is it a delayed blip? Has Mourinho worn them out by playing the same 12 or 13 all last year? 4 points from 5 games and they were fortunate to beat west brom. All before champions league has even started. They look so toothless, devoid of ideas and low in confidence. It's fucking great. Is Mourinho in trouble yet?
 
Hasnt nearly all his jobs been about 2-3 years?
Yup

I'm telling you. He's burning bridges at Chelsea, will be gone by Christmas and take over United next year after a sabbatical 6 months
 
3 million players out on loan, ability to buy anyone he wants ( Stones excepted ), and the chosen one is being shown up as someone else who talks the talk but at the end of the day, he's just another mouth piece.
 
Chelsea fan in work says Abramovich's wife waded in on how Eva Carneiro was treated. It might be all kicking off internally. He also pointed out that there is a possible rift between Mourinho and their technical director, Michael Emenalo. Probably to do with players on loan and who they bought.

Surely @Herr Onceared 's mate Dave can wade in and settle this for us. Dave is the Chelsea fan yeah? Or is he the Southampton fan?
 
Chelsea fan in work says Abramovich's wife waded in on how Eva Carneiro was treated. It might be all kicking off internally. He also pointed out that there is a possible rift between Mourinho and their technical director, Michael Emenalo. Probably to do with players on loan and who they bought.

Surely @Herr Onceared 's mate Dave can wade in and settle this for us. Dave is the Chelsea fan yeah? Or is he the Southampton fan?


Dave is fucking mental. He thought Moses was the best player in the world or something.
 
Chelsea players face watching video nasty as Jose Mourinho searches for answers


What’s wrong at Chelsea?
Let’s start with their problems on the pitch, taking into account that their game at Everton on Saturday was the first after a double-header of international games that, historically, is always a problem for bigger teams.
Sir Alex Ferguson talked regularly of international breaks harming his team for the first domestic game back.
Indeed, I spoke to a member of the Swansea City staff on Sunday evening, who told me that the international break was the only real reason why they couldn’t break down ten-man Watford during their 1-0 defeat at Vicarage Road on Saturday. “We were sluggish and slow,” he said. “Actually, we looked jetlagged.”
But for all that, Chelsea’s 3-1 defeat at Goodison Park wasn’t a freak, even if it was by far and away the Blues’ worst performance of the season.
The first five games of their defence of the Premier League title has yielded only one win together with a draw and three defeats.
While there is a long way to go in the season, it’s worth noting that no team with the same record or worse after the opening five games has ever finished higher than third.
Another factor. I was worried for Chelsea when manager Jose Mourinho picked a fight with his medical staff.
It may not sound like a big deal, it may not sound like something that would affect players, but you’d be amazed at the bond that forms between players and medical staff. In fact, all the staff.
There is a deep respect and friendship between players and the medics that you won’t find between medical staff and coaching staff.
The medical team look after the players. They humour them, massage them, stretch them. They are the first point of contact for most players in the morning when they arrive at the training ground.
Players arrive, they get changed, they go to the canteen and then they go to the physio room for their ailments to be seen to and, mostly, for the craic.
And in that room, the players get to know their physio. They get to know his banter, his family, his likes and dislikes. He becomes respected and above all, in some cases, a mate.
I wrote in an article at the time: “When players lose confidence in the manager, it is always in the wake of a collection of odd, sometimes desperate, decisions and irrational behaviour for which there is the minimum of justification and which, by extension, makes the players and staff look pathetic and stupid.”
Mourinho’s public condemnation of his physio, Jon Fearn, and doctor, Eva Carneiro, was a mistake by him and cannot be underestimated.
I said that it would lead to problems between Mourinho and the players and that has since been borne out.
I couldn’t have imagined that it would contribute to a run of form quite as bad as we’re currently seeing but it is certainly a factor, given that the pair are universally popular among the players.
In the changing-room, they were seen as easy and weak targets for a very powerful manager to hang so publicly, particularly in the wake of an incident in which the pair were, quite literally, just doing their jobs.
The above may be contributory factors to the loss of form but the team is still largely the same XI, so how does all that manifest itself on the pitch?
The first thing is that the desire wanes. The players outwardly show that they aren’t happy in the most basic way.
They don’t run quite as far and as fast, they don’t close down with the same intensity and, when the opposition take advantage of that, the confidence saps.
Lack of collective confidence reveals itself in very interesting ways. Players play easy passes rather than trying the harder things that they know they may not succeed in.
For example, centre midfielders play the ball square to full backs who aren’t now running in behind because they’ve lost enthusiasm.
The striker begins to be dominated by the centre halves, so he hides. Hiding on the pitch is a crime against football as far as team-mates are concerned.
Strikers hide by not making themselves available to receive a pass. They do this because it means that if they don’t get the ball, then they can blame others for lack of service.
It also means that the player on the ball will likely be dispossessed or have to pass backwards, making him look like a poor player.
This culture of blame shifting goes on all over the pitch and always leads to arguments in the changing room at half time and after the game.
And the truth is, as any manager in the game will tell you, that it is incredibly hard to pull a team out of that mindset. So much damage is done so quickly when teams head down that path; it’s like the slipperiest slope you’ve ever seen.
Tactically, Chelsea are setting up in much the same way as they ever did, particularly away from home. They sit back and wait for the opposition to overplay or overcommit and then counter-attack at will.
The team usually has its first line of defence ten yards inside its own half. As the ball is moved across the pitch, a midfielder will break ranks to close the ball and ensure that the passing continues to go side to side and not forward into feet.
What I’ve noticed in the last few games is that Chelsea are at least ten yards deeper than they were when this tactic is working at its best for them. The back four are too deep and the midfield become detached.
That means that holes appear and space opens up, the type of space that Steven Naismith exploited so well at Goodison Park.
If you sit too deep, you invite pressure, but if you’re too high, you expose the space in behind for faster strikers to run on to.
Teams take their lines from the back four and the back four need to be playing in the “Goldilocks Zone”. Not too high, not too deep.
Chelsea captain John Terry is getting older and dropping deeper and Kurt Zouma isn’t ready to lead the line on his own and command those in front of him.
Terry’s fragility in old age has highlighted that Gary Cahill desperately needs a leader alongside him. Cahill is a good player but, when Terry isn’t there, his defending takes on an air of last-ditch desperation.
If you want my honest assessment of the problems facing Mourinho, then I’d lay good money on the reason for the team’s terrible form at the feet of a group of world-class players who have had enough of sitting back and soaking up pressure against teams that they feel are inferior.
The truth is that, in the big games where Mourinho is very cautious in the set-up of his team, the approach has worked.
But Chelsea have the players to attack teams such as Everton, Crystal Palace and Swansea. They have the ability to overwhelm anybody.
They have players who want to get on the ball. Players like Cesc Fabregas, who can dictate a match, Willian, who scares the life out of full backs when he runs at them, Nemanja Matic, who is a beast of a player but with great feet, too.
They have Eden Hazard, who is probably the best attacking player in the league. And in front of them, they have a predator, Diego Costa, who thrives on service, not the odd counter-attack.
The players have spat their dummies out because of the way they are being utilised on the pitch by Mourinho. I’ve seen it a million times and the current problems at Chelsea are as clear an example as you will ever see.
It’s obvious in the way that the team shuts down. It’s obvious in the way that they compete and it’s obvious in the results.
There will be a meeting between the staff and the players at the Chelsea training ground today and the team will watch the highlights and lowlights of Saturday’s game – if the computer is working.
At first, they will be cautious, but then the points will gather momentum and, eventually, somebody will be brave enough to say what everyone else is thinking …​
“We’re too deep, gaffer. We should play more on the front foot and attack teams more regularly. We need to keep the ball more and create more chances and be ruthless.”
And then the team will go out on to the training pitch and work on attacking Maccabi Tel Aviv, from the first whistle, in the Champions League at Stamford Bridge on Wednesday.
They have the team to do it. The players know it and, deep down, Mourinho knows it, too

Read more at http://www.thesecretfootballer.com/...o-searches-for-answers-2/#wojI0cM6TR2Z6pyX.99
 
They will turn it around and finish comfortably in the top 4. It's just annoying that in the last few years we have been given such great opportunities to really challenge for something as the big teams have faltered, but we refuse to capitalise on it. We should have been in the top 4 the last few years, but we will likely miss out yet again.
 
Sky Sports Football ‏@SkyFootball 32m

The stats behind Chelsea's worst start to a season since 1988 & worst by any PL champions.

CO7HASjWcAAnek-.jpg
 
Loving this story. Maureen has banned 'banter' from Chelsea. Now I know this story has a massive whiff of bullshit about it, but I'd love it to be true.

Jose Mourinho and his Chelsea players have banned all banter as they attempt to arrest the club’s worst start to a top-flight season for 29 years. • Jose Mourinho's Chelsea press conference - live Senior Chelsea sources insist there have not been any crisis meetings, following the defeat at Everton that meant the Premier League champions have picked up just four points from their first five games. A claim of a bust-up between the captain, John Terry, and the striker Diego Costa, made by the talkSPORT commentator Stan Collymore, has also been denied with a spokesman describing it as “utter nonsense”. Mourinho, it would appear, has lost his sense of humour.

'Don't be on the bloody wind up' Jose is alleged to have warned his players during training this week, adding, 'I'm not in the mood for your shite lads, so cut it out'.

However, while Mourinho has so far decided against ranting and raving at his underperforming players, there has been no attempt to lighten the dark mood at Chelsea’s Cobham training ground. •

Mourinho and his players have mixed hard work with plenty of laughs since his return in 2013, but the jokes have now completely stopped as Chelsea desperately try to find their form. While Mourinho and his squad are attempting to keep calm, there is a realisation that anything but wins over Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Champions League on Wednesday night and against Arsenal on Saturday would leave them in big trouble. Oscar will be hoping to start Wednesday's Champions League tie Mourinho is considering making changes to his team for the visit of Maccabi Tel Aviv, with Oscar expected to return to the starting line‑up in his favoured No 10 role. Other than Oscar, Mourinho could give Willian, Radamel Falcao and Loïc Rémy the chance to impress against Maccabi Tel Aviv and put more pressure on Chelsea’s struggling players.

Mourinho faces a fight for his dynasty at Chelsea One of Mourinho’s most pressing concerns is the fact that four of his ‘big’ players have all failed to produce their best form at the same time. Last season’s player of the year, Eden Hazard, right-back Branislav Ivanovic, Diego Costa and Cesc Fabregas have failed to make the same kind of devastating impact that saw Chelsea top the table for the whole of last season. Mourinho is trusting players with the ability and experience of Hazard, Ivanovic, Costa and Fabregas to find their own form. Ivanovic and team-mate Nemanja Matic have received the backing of Maccabi Tel Aviv manager and fellow Serb Slavisa Jokanovic, who spent two years as a midfielder at Chelsea. Diego Costa has struggled with his form this season “It’s not just a question over these two players, it’s the team,” Jokanovic said. “Ivanovic has played seven years at Chelsea and is one of the most important players in their recent history, playing in many key games and scoring vital goals. Matic is still relatively new there, but was fantastic last season.” Matic admits that the Chelsea players badly need a confidence boost after the Everton defeat and believes the Maccabi game is must-win for him and his team-mates. Fabregas has become a liability, but will Mourinho drop him? “It’s good we have another game against Maccabi,” Matic said. “We have to win, for our own confidence and for the fans. Then we have a derby against Arsenal, so I hope we will be ready for that and we can take three points. “Of course we are not happy. Everybody is sad because of the result. Obviously we feel bad. We are in a difficult moment and having four points after five games is not normal for our team. Chelsea are not used to being on runs like we are at the moment, but this is the reality. We have to work hard to get our game back to the way we played last season. I really don’t know what’s happened, but it’s not good for us and we need to see what we can do better as a team.”
 
“When players lose confidence in the manager, it is always in the wake of a collection of odd, sometimes desperate, decisions and irrational behaviour for which there is the minimum of justification and which, by extension, makes the players and staff look pathetic and stupid.”
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom