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Chelsea's current crisis is not solely due to head coach Liam Rosenior, as the team's struggles stem from deeper issues. Just nine months ago, they celebrated a world championship victory, highlighting a stark contrast in performance.
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Chelsea's head coach Liam Rosenior leaves the field after defeat to Manchester United (AP)
What a difference nine months makes. Rewind back to July 2025 and Chelsea were being crowned champions of the world, having beaten Champions League winners PSG with a dominant display that offered plenty of promise for the future.
While the merits of that trophy can be debated, the manner of the win was encouraging for the fans, players and the club hierarchy, justifying the entry into the Club World Cup, while showing that the Blues can go toe-to-toe with the best sides in the world.
Questions remained, but Enzo Maresca and his players had done their part at the end of a season that had seen triumph in the Conference League and a top-four finish. It wasnât spectacular, but it was something to build on.
Fast forward eight months and the world champions faced their European counterparts once more, this time in a two-legged tie in the Champions League. Chelsea competed well for the best part of 74 minutes, but a late collapse took the tie away from them before they were blown away in the home leg to fall to an 8-2 aggregate loss.
Just over a month later and the Bluesâ hopes of qualifying for next seasonâs Champions League now look slim, with the 1-0 loss to Manchester United meaning they sit 10 points behind the Red Devils. They could also go seven points behind fifth-placed if Arne Slotâs side win the Merseyside derby.
Chelsea's crisis is attributed to deeper issues within the team rather than just the performance of head coach Liam Rosenior.
In the 2025 season, Chelsea won the Conference League, finished in the top four, and were crowned champions of the world after defeating PSG.
Chelsea won the Club World Cup in July 2025, defeating Champions League winners PSG.
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Chelsea's loss to Man Utd leaves them four points behind fifth-placed Liverpool, who have a game in hand to come in the Merseyside derby (Reuters)
Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior said that the result against Man Utd leaves his side with âa mountain to climbâ, and though he insisted that âitâs not insurmountableâ, it now feels like the Blues are once again teetering on the edge of a crisis.
And while Rosenior will face plenty of criticism for a string of poor performances that have yielded four losses in a row without scoring in the league for the first time since 1998, it is too easy to direct anger at a manager who is becoming a scapegoat for problems far beyond his control.
Rosenior remains the face of Chelsea for the media and fans, and it is unavoidable that heâll face anger and criticism from sections of the fanbase, though in reality, few of the problems at the club are his doing, and nor can he remedy them yet.
Rosenior said the result against United gives his side âa mountain to climbâ to qualify for the Champions League (Reuters)
The forced sale to the new BlueCo ownership promised plenty, and though headlines of excessive transfer spending were enough to quell initial fears and provide fans some excitement, that hit of dopamine has long subsided, instead leaving the reality of an inexperienced hierarchy managing an equally inexperienced squad that lacks depth in key areas.
The manner of the departure of Enzo Maresca on New Yearâs Day added fuel to the fire, and though anger was rightly directed at the hierarchy at first, that same anger has now turned on the only public-facing figure at the club in Rosenior.
Co-owner Behdad Eghbali did recently address fan concerns, finally speaking in public and suggesting a change in transfer policy to âto add more ready-made playersâ rather than focusing on signing younger, less experienced players. Even then, his words seem empty, dressed up in PR speak and offering little substance.
âThe view is to keep, sign and retain and compensate and extend some of the world's best players, and ultimately the view was you need, eight, 10, 12, 15 elite players to win and win sustainably, year after year,â he said. Well, how many do you need? Eight, or 15? And does he understand how difficult it is to build a squad with 15 elite players?
Rumours suggest the Blues may already be open to selling Alejandro Garnacho despite only signing him last summer (Getty)
The early suggestions are that the answer to that question is no. While the ownership long seemed more content to tie players to long contracts to preserve and hopefully increase their value, it has left the Blues with a squad that great potential, but few reliable superstars in the starting XI as well as depth on the bench.
That Club World Cup win was followed by a string of questionable signings this summer, and even though the likes of Jamie Gittens clearly possess talent, thereâs a feeling that Stamford Bridge is not currently a place where players can grow into that talent.
The build-up to Man Utd game was marked by the clubâs Supportersâ Trust (CST) releasing an open letter declaring a âlack of confidenceâ in the clubâs owners, while there were protests from fans of both Chelsea and Strasbourg â who also fall under the BlueCo ownership umbrella â with chants of âWe want our Chelsea backâ heard outside Stamford Bridge as a group of over 500 fans turned up.
The same chants could be heard late on in the loss to United, while shouts of âYouâre not wanted hereâ were also directed at coâowner Behdad Eghbali. Todd Boehly got away scot-free, though he remains just as controversial.
The build-up to Saturdayâs game was marked by protest against the BlueCo ownership (AFP/Getty)
It shows that many Chelsea fans are aware of the greater issue at hand. They are presumably not confident that the club hierarchy can (or will) identify and invest in the calibre of player needed to complement the main names, and they might lose the ability to do so this summer if they donât finish in the top five.
Rosenior deflected questions on how failure to qualify might affect who the club can sign, though Cole Palmer rightly said that not being in the competition âchanges everythingâ.
If the manager is given time, it makes this summer all the more crucial, though signings are tied to the clubâs ability to qualify for the Champions League. It means Roseniorâs Chelsea stint could be doomed either way, with a failure to qualify for Europeâs top club competition compounded by an inability to make signings, with a weaker squad then costing him his job down the line.
However, there has been enough encouragement in some performances â notably in the first leg against PSG before their late collapse â to suggest that the new manager is capable of success with his young side if given time. Even Saturdayâs loss provided an impressive dominance in many parts, even if the visitors were able to snatch a smash-and-grab win that Rosenior rightly claimed âshould be pretty much impossibleâ.
While results have been poor in recent weeks, Rosenior still deserves time as he tries to fix a problem of someone elseâs doing. But whether he will get it remains to be seen, as the hierarchy may decide to part ways with the Englishman to save face and divert attention away from their own mistakes.