
Chelsea
overachieved to win the Premier League but the problems are mounting up for
Antonio Conte, says Jamie Redknapp...
It's a strange situation at Chelsea. They had so much success last year and
won the league but you can see there's a lot of friction there now.
It's almost mirroring the 2015/16 season, when Jose Mourinho was in charge.
Back then they were defending champions but from the opening day draw at
home to Swansea you could tell something wasn't right. Mourinho wasn't happy
with their transfer dealings, like Conte now.
The only difference is, so far, Conte has managed to hold it together better
than Jose did, with Chelsea sliding down the table that season.
The truth is, Conte did a great job to win the league last year with this
Chelsea squad. It wasn't quite of Leicester City proportions but he coached
that team to the title. They overachieved.
He realised he had to do it a different way after that defeat by Arsenal
which sparked the formation change, and that's what I admired so much about
it. You almost went to the games to watch him as much as the team at times,
because he was so influential in how they played.
But there's no doubt, when you go to watch Chelsea now, he's much more
passive than he was last year. He's not given up but he's not on it like he
was last season.
There has been talk about him getting the sack and returning to the Italy
job recently, but I hope he sticks with it at Chelsea because he deserves a
bit of respect for what he's done there.
However, if they have many more results like that heavy defeat by
Bournemouth, you wouldn't bet against the board making a change. You can
imagine Guus Hiddink getting his suit out of the wardrobe!
But, really, who would you get? Who is better than Conte who's available?
These top managers are hard to find.
Turmoil seems to suit Chelsea, though. It doesn't seem to bother them. And
the truth is, it works for them. It's a common theme that has bred success
there.
Another recurring pattern we see is that when these Chelsea players go, they
go. Just ask Mourinho.
Worryingly for Conte, Chelsea seem to have lost that siege mentality they so
often have. Mourinho first brought it to the club in his initial spell and
it became a trademark of the team.
But watching them against Arsenal in the Carabao Cup semi-final second leg
last month, Eden Hazard was fouled time after time and not once did I see a
Chelsea player go to the referee to try to protect their man. It seems like
they've become too nice.
It used to be win at all costs at Chelsea and I admired that streak in them.
But right now, there's no aggression, no nastiness in that team. That's what
you need to win titles - although perhaps Manchester City might be the
exception to the rule this year. But go back through Premier League winning
teams and they all had it, even Arsenal's Invincibles.
That leads on to Diego Costa and what a loss he's been for Chelsea this
season. You don't want to keep harping on about what you haven't got but
they do miss him. The trade, selling him and bringing in Alvaro Morata,
hasn't really worked.
Costa was an animal for Chelsea. He typified what they were about: he was
horrible, nasty to play against but also a winner and a very good player.
John Terry is also missed. Whether he played or didn't last season, he was
still influential in getting that dressing room going. Chelsea could do with
those big characters now. Sure, Costa will have been a nightmare to train at
times, but he would have turned some of their defeats and draws this season
into wins.
Another factor, of course, is the spending power of teams like Manchester
City. When Roman Abramovich first took over at Chelsea, they were able to
write down who they wanted to bring in and then bully the market to sign
those players. Now they're the ones being bullied by big-spending sides like
Manchester City. It's harder to compete now and it's harder to land those
blue-chip players.
I said a couple of months ago, my two to miss out on a top-four place are
Arsenal and Chelsea - and I stand by that. It can so easily change but at
the moment you'd say those two are in danger.
So what does Conte do? I think he needs to focus on the football and stop
talking too much about the problems. He's got to work harder on the training
ground and get back to doing what he does best: getting those players ready
to win football matches.
This pressure that's mounting on him, it will ease if they can string some
wins together and, right now, he needs to get out of the firing line.
Chelsea travel to Watford on Monday night and it won't be easy for them at
Vicarage Road, where Javi Gracia will be taking charge of his first home
game. There's the hangover effect of that Bournemouth defeat, too. But this
is where you need the big characters.
They have to stick together as a team and say 'that's not happening again'.
The problem is, recent history suggests this group of Chelsea players need a
new manager in before they pick up again.