
Maurizio
Sarri's rant at his Chelsea players risks turning some of them against him,
Tim Sherwood told
The Debate.
Sarri turned to his native Italian following Chelsea's 2-0 defeat at Arsenal
on Saturday to accuse his side of being difficult to motivate and low on
mental aggression.
The former Napoli boss has come in for criticism for his tactical choices
and the drop off in Chelsea's results since losing their unbeaten league
start to Tottenham, with four defeats coming from their last 12 games.
Speaking on The Debate, Sherwood believes the 60-year-old did himself no
favours with his post-match comments.
"You need your players onside," Sherwood said. "There's a possibility he
might have lost some of them from that.
"Hopefully for their sake he hasn't, but I did it myself at Stamford Bridge
when I was Tottenham manager and I wish I'd not done it. The results weren't
too bad afterwards, but it was purely to get some frustration out for
yourself but it's not about that.
"It's about the team, getting the best out of the individual players, and
there's a big game coming up against Tottenham on Thursday and he needs to
make sure they're all pulling in the same direction, because I'm not sure it
will have helped."
Sarri resisted the temptation to call out any of his Chelsea players by
name, instead criticising the group as a whole, but former England and
Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott said the dressing room would not
respond to public collective criticism.
"You're tarnishing everyone," Lescott said. "It's almost better to name
individuals. I never did that but they all feel like they're all part of the
same team which they are. I don't think it helps him, I think it's an error
of judgement he wishes he didn't make.
"The game has changed now, you cannot manage how you want to manage any
longer. He might have done it in the past and got away with it, but you have
to do it a different way now. They're all millionaires, don't really have
that real hunger to go there and go that extra mile, it's a little bit of an
error in my opinion to do that."