
Defeat
to Manchester United saw large sections of the Chelsea support turn on
Maurizio Sarri. Adam Bate was at Stamford Bridge to see it and wonders if
there is any way back for the Italian now...
Chelsea change their coach quite often but it is rarer to see the supporters
turn on them. They have usually been sacked before then. So the sight and
sound of Stamford Bridge treating Maurizio Sarri with derision made for an
awkward evening as his Chelsea team were dumped out of the FA Cup courtesy
of a 2-0 defeat to Manchester United.
The key moments in the match came before the interval as Paul Pogba set up
one goal for Ander Herrera before scoring the second himself, but the key
moment as far as Sarri's future is concerned came after the break. His
decision to yet again replace Mateo Kovacic with Ross Barkley seemed to sum
it up for supporters. This is a man out of ideas.
There were jeers when Kovacic's number 17 lit up on fourth official Andre
Marriner's board but they soon morphed into boos. Seconds later there were
loud chants from the Matthew Harding Stand that, to put it delicately,
suggested that these fans have rather had enough of Sarri and his football.
"You're getting sacked in the morning" was their next offering.
When the details of those chants were bluntly put to Sarri in his press
conference, he admitted this was a new experience for him. "For everything,
there is a first time," he said. That prompted uncomfortable laughter all
round but the serious problem for the Italian is that the solution appears
beyond him. "We played confusing football," he added.
Sarri's stubborn commitment to his philosophy is admirable in some respects
but that isn't the first word that springs to mind when he is making a
like-for-like switch at right-back late in the game while Callum Hudson-Odoi
sits it out on the bench. The definition of insanity and all that. It is
increasingly difficult to see how exactly Sarri hopes to turn this around.
His immediate plan is "to work with the players to improve in a few days and
find more determination and aggression" but a few days is all he has.
Pre-season has been and gone. There is no time to regroup. It's Malmo on
Thursday and Manchester City on Sunday - a cup final against the side that
hit them for six just days ago feels more like a threat than an opportunity.
Pressed for details on what needs to change for Chelsea to play his brand of
football, Sarri did offer some insight. "We need less individual actions,"
he explained. "When you have spaces, of course you can do individual
actions. But when the situation is like it is in the second half, you need
to move the ball faster and make more movements without the ball."
That's pretty fundamental and there are still few signs of it. The reference
to individual actions might be interpreted as a veiled dig at Eden Hazard's
attempts to open up the United defence on his own, but Chelsea's star man
seldom seemed to have any other options at his disposal. Hazard's magic is
one of the few things this team has going for it.
Asked whether the players are still with him, Sarri said: "I think so. Of
course, I am not sure, but I think so." Just as worryingly, he could name
only David Luiz when asked to list the leaders in the dressing room. It
hardly helps his cause that some of the bigger weaknesses at Chelsea right
now appear to be those players who have arrived on his watch.
As a result, with confidence being eroded by the week and belief in the
manager's methods appearing to wane, this does not look or feel like a team
that just needs more time. Chelsea seem to be further away than ever from
producing the football that Sarri was expected to deliver. The fear now must
be that there is no way back for him at Stamford Bridge.
Sarri's struggling signings
Jorginho
Jorginho was supposed to be the conduit through which Sarri's football would
flow but Ole Gunnar Solskjaer became just the latest coach to block the
midfielder. Juan Mata was the man tasked with the job. As early as the
seventh minute there were groans when Jorginho lost out in a challenge with
the Spaniard. "He ran his socks off," said Solskjaer afterwards.
The truth is that Jorginho has become too easy to stop. He still had his
moments with one lofted pass to Gonzalo Higuain almost putting the striker
through but there are not enough of them. More typical was the incident
later in the half when he was bullied out of it by Nemanja Matic. He is now
in danger of becoming the symbol for all of Sarri's struggles.
Mateo Kovacic
So too, of course, are those infamous substitutions. Kovacic has been
withdrawn 20 times now this season and while the defeat to United might have
been anticipated even that was not as predictable as the moment that came in
the 71st minute when Sarri opted to bring on Barkley to replace the Croatia
international in midfield.
Kovacic was his neat and tidy self but that hardly feels anywhere near
enough in a midfield that still seems to be missing something. Now 34 games
into his season-long loan spell from Real Madrid, he is yet to score a goal.
Kovacic was only ever supposed to be a quick fix but it is hard to work out
quite what he is fixing in this Chelsea team at the moment.
Kepa Arrizabalaga
As for Kepa Arrizabalaga, he might be the world's most expensive goalkeeper
but that only seems to add to the pressure right now. His loose control
almost allowed Marcus Rashford to intercept his clearance after 25 minutes
and while he could do little with the opening goal, his failure to keep out
Paul Pogba's header was disappointing.
It is not that the former Athletic Bilbao goalkeeper has endured a miserable
time of it at Chelsea, it's that he appears to be a downgrade on Thibaut
Courtois and has not even had the magic moments that will convince fans that
better performances are to come. Kepa is likely to be a long-term investment
but Sarri's problems are in the here and now.
Gonzalo Higuain
Of course, that is where the loan signing of Higuain was supposed to help.
Most Chelsea fans had sympathy with Sarri's centre-forward situation given
that Alvaro Morata's confidence had long since drained away, but Higuain has
not been the difference maker either. The Argentine scored twice against
Huddersfield but they are his only goals so far.
There were hints of the quality that has made Higuain such a consistent
scorer over the years, his subtle movement engineering space in the right
channel early on and a header flying just wide soon after. But the problem
is that this squad's faith in Sarri's football had already started to fade
even before Higuain arrived. Chelsea are beginning to look broken.