
Frank
Lampard believes Chelsea should stick with Jose Mourinho, despite the club's
run of three wins from their opening 11 Premier League games.
Speaking on Monday Night Football, former Chelsea midfielder Lampard urged
the club's hierarchy to think long-term after a sixth Premier League defeat
of the season at the weekend left the Blues 15th in the table.
Mourinho's side suffered a 3-1 loss at home to Liverpool on Saturday, their
third Premier League defeat at Stamford Bridge already this campaign, and
Lampard said parts of Chelsea's game looked "broken" against Jurgen Klopp's
team.
"Jose Mourinho loves a high-intensity game, and I didn't see that," Lampard
said. "I watched Chelsea press [against Liverpool], and it was broken. When
you are a couple of seconds late, the opponents can play out.
"I don't think I'm being over-critical, I know the boys, but some people are
leaders and vocal in the dressing room. We all know Chelsea have had that
spine for quite a few years, but you look around now, and you think do they
[still]?
"Eden Hazard is one of the best players in the world, he proved that last
year, but he's not going to be a vocal man. He's a player to get on the ball
and make things happen going forward. You have to look around the team and
hope that changes very quickly."
Defeat by Liverpool has left Chelsea 10 points off fourth-placed Manchester
United, and reports following the game claimed that certain players had
stopped trying for Mourinho. Lampard is doubtful such rumours are true, and
wants the club to back the manager as they look to get out of their current
troubles.
"Well, it is nonsense if it is happening - and I don't believe it is," he
said. "I don't think players at the top level can down tools. Your first
responsibility as a player is to yourself - if you are downing tools, the
only one who looks stupid is yourself.
"This is not a great moment, this is not a time to flick the ball around the
corner and have great games. This is a time for players to knuckle down and
win games, maybe the hard way. These rumours around big players... the
problem is when you are having a hard time, these stories become bigger. I
don't think those words would have been spoken, but it's not great that
they're coming out.
"When you look at it, it is crazy [the numbers of managers Chelsea have had
in the Roman Abramovich era]. But Chelsea is a unique club. I think there's
such a desire to win and a pressure to win. The owner, the board, they have
taken the decisions to win, and to be fair to them, as Chelsea people we
can't complain.
"We have had a lot of managers, and it might look messy, but we have got a
lot of Premier League titles and a Champions League. What has been said
recently is they want stability, so that's the interesting thing to see now.
"Stability is the ideal. Manchester United were the ideal with Sir Alex
Ferguson and the same with the great Liverpool managers of the past, it's
the ideal. You want to see a manager stay, you want to see young players
coming through, and that's the intriguing thing to see now, to see if
Chelsea stick with him. He's got a four-year contract and he has got the
best record as Chelsea manager. He is proven world class, and I think they
should stick with him."
Sky Sports football expert Gary Neville agreed with his former England
team-mate, and Neville believes Chelsea are approaching a "crossroads
moment" that will test Abramovich's commitment.
"If we are now talking about stability, you talk about young players," said
Neville. "Certainly the spending has cut down in recent years at the club.
You're also talking about a change in philosophy at the football club -
bringing through academy players and Mourinho managing for the longer term.
"This is now the killer moment at Chelsea for me, the crossroads moment. Is
Abramovich walking in and thinking, 'I have to get rid of Mourinho because
he might not finish fourth and he's giving bad interviews?'
"Or is he actually thinking, 'relax, we can bring three or four academy
players in, let's sacrifice this season, and let's stand behind the
manager.'
"We can see if Abramovich is the same as he's always been and sacking
managers after eight months, and whether Mourinho can stay at a club for
longer than two or three years. It's a big coming together that is coming to
a head now."