
Thomas
Tuchel says he may be forced to utilise players from the U23s and the
academy for Chelsea's Carabao Cup clash at Brentford, adding he is "sad"
that his team are currently unable to compete at the "highest level".
Chelsea have been hit hard by the recent spike in Covid cases across the
Premier League and had seven first-team players ruled out for their 0-0 draw
at Wolves on Sunday.
One of those players - Jorginho - is able to return for Wednesday's
quarter-final against Brentford after it was confirmed he had recorded a
false positive, but the other six remain absent.
With Chelsea facing a run of four matches in 12 days and battling to keep
pace with Manchester City in the Premier League title race, Tuchel says he
may have no choice but to call on the club's inexperienced young players at
Brentford.
"They trained with us yesterday and today," said the head coach. "We made
them come for two training sessions because it's necessary.
"We have to protect our players and that's why we brought in the academy and
we think about playing with them.
"It can happen tomorrow that we prioritise the health - not the game against
Aston Villa (on Boxing Day, live on Sky Sports) - and do not take any risks
with some of our players.
"This is totally against our nature but maybe we are forced to do it. It
makes me sad because this is not what sport is about and this is not what we
are about.
"We are so competitive - that's why we work here and that's why the players
signed for Chelsea. We are fighting for every competition.
"I absolutely don't like judging the importance of games because you can
never tell. There is nothing more important than winning, performing
together and fighting together."
Tuchel was forced to recall N'Golo Kante and Mateo Kovacic to his depleted
squad for the game at Wolves, despite the duo having just a handful of
training sessions between them following lengthy absences, and the German
says Chelsea are now paying the price for their rushed return to action.
Tuchel added Andreas Christensen and Trevoh Chalobah - who was injured in a
collision with team-mate Thiago Silva at Molineux - are also doubtful for
the game at Brentford, while Lewis Baker has become the latest player to
test positive for Covid.
"What we did with N'Golo Kante, 90 minutes, was close to being
irresponsible," explained Tuchel. "Will he be involved in the squad against
Brentford? No.
"Would it be possible if it was the last game of the season? Yes, but we
cannot do this and I will not do it. We will now give him time to recover
and prepare him for the Aston Villa match.
"To have a team with 13 or 14 players for one match, this is a problem but
not a big problem. But from the match we have Trevoh Chalobah injured, we
have N'Golo Kante and Mateo Kovacic involved, which was taking a huge risk,
and now we are paying for this.
"They cannot just simply start five matches in two weeks - it's impossible.
We cannot let players suffer because other players are not there."
Despite Tuchel's frustration at Chelsea's current predicament - he said he
"couldn't understand" why they were made to fulfil the Wolves fixture - the
48-year-old admits he is still relishing the challenge of navigating English
football's notoriously busy festive fixture schedule.
The former Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain boss joined Chelsea in
January and is used to enjoying a winter break at this time of year, but
said: "This is actually quite exciting.
"I watched it when I was not involved and now I am in the middle of it. I
like it and it is nothing new to play three matches in a week - to play
three matches in a week without nine or 10 players, that is challenging.
"We love to be involved in all these competitions. We struggle a little bit
but we find solutions - that's why we're here. This will maybe be the
situation for many weeks because it will not stop."
Tuchel: Circuit-breaker may not have
solved issues
Despite calling for Chelsea's most recent Premier League game to be
postponed because of the number of positive Covid cases in his squad, Tuchel
says he is "not disappointed" at the decision to continue with the
competition's planned fixture schedule.
On Monday, Premier League clubs decided not to postpone a full round of
fixtures amid Covid-19 outbreaks at several clubs.
Six of last weekend's 10 Premier League matches were called off, but the
league had maintained fixtures would continue "where safely possible".
Chelsea are currently set to play Aston Villa away on Sunday and face
Brighton three days later. The Blues then host Liverpool in a match that
could have huge ramifications in the title race on January 2.
But Tuchel insisted he "would not say" he was disappointed at the decision
not to implement a circuit-breaker, adding: "I don't have a solution for the
whole league. I don't know whether it would just have delayed the problem.
"There are some clubs who suffer a lot - we suffer very much - and that's
why maybe it would have been better for us to have a short break. But maybe
then we would have played against another team who suffers in the next
moment.
"I don't have a clear opinion of what's best to do for everybody because we
are not alone in the Premier League. We are just disappointed that we don't
have the players to fulfil our goals and to play at the highest level."
Frank: Covid-19 postponements 'helped
massively'
Brentford head coach Thomas Frank believes the two Premier League matches
his side saw postponed provided the Covid-19 circuit breaker that he
proposed last week.
Frank led calls for last weekend's entire round of fixtures to be called off
amid a number of outbreaks at various clubs, with six games eventually
called off after positive coronavirus tests.
He confirmed his squad now has no positive Covid-19 cases having had as many
as seven last week.
"It was a good thing to postpone the round; six games were postponed and
clearly Thomas Tuchel was quite unhappy with their game going on so it could
have been seven," the Dane said.
"But if we focus on ourselves, it helped us massively to break the circuit
of transmission of the virus."