
Thomas
Tuchel has revealed he only beat his Covid isolation at the "second-to-last
chance" to coach Chelsea to their maiden Club World Cup title in person.
The Blues' German boss admitted he cut a frustrated figure trying to coach
Chelsea's FA Cup fourth-round win over Plymouth and the Club World Cup
semi-final from his office.
As time ticked down, he revealed he made several drives to the airport
without even waiting for his Covid test result, such was his desperation to
join the Chelsea squad in Abu Dhabi.
Tuchel tested negative at the penultimate chance to reach the United Arab
Emirates in time though, and took his place on the touchline as the Blues
edged past Palmeiras 2-1 after extra-time at the Mohammed Bin Zayed Stadium.
"So it was the second-to-last chance to make it, the last one would have
been to arrive today in the morning. So I'm happy that we made it.
"I was several times on my way to the airport and several times on my way
back while I was driving called back because my test was not negative.
"And finally we made it, I arrived yesterday for dinner, at 8.15 in the
evening. I arrived on time to the team, no chance to be part of the last
training, so I took the meetings today.
"It was not nice to watch the semi-final on the office at the screen, but as
a coach you want to be on the sideline. I'm happy now that all the effort
went very well, everyone was so supportive. The effort was excellent and
totally worth it.
"I had a tactical signal to see the whole pitch and the TV signal on the
other big screen to watch the matches remotely. And I was in contact at
half-time with my assistant in the tribune.
"We did the same with the cup game, but it's not like I'm constantly talking
to them, it's more or less every 10 or 15 minutes.
"It's very strange. Coaching is also about feeling, on the touchline, so I
also needed the input from the guys on the sideline. It's not possible to
coach only from the office."
Romelu Lukaku's powerful header had Chelsea expecting to take total control
against their Brazilian foes on Saturday night, only for Thiago Silva's
handball to let Palmeiras back into the contest.
Raphael Veiga buried the spot-kick to kick-start a cagey affair, but Chelsea
stayed calm and eventually fully merited their win.
Kai Havertz converted a late penalty in extra-time, holding his nerve amid a
minor delay where the Blues worked out who would shoulder the burden.
Chelsea now have that rare clean sweep of every major global club trophy
going, with owner Roman Abramovich on hand to toast the Blues winning it
all.
Tuchel revealed he told Russian-Israeli billionaire Abramovich the victory
was in his honour as the duo embraced on the field after the final whistle.
"It is for him, there is no doubt that it is for him," said Tuchel, of
Abramovich.
"We met quickly on the pitch after the final, he said 'congratulations' and
I said 'congratulations, it's for you, it's your club and it's your input
and your passion that made this possible' and I'm happy to be part of it. So
of course the trophy is for him."
Mason Mount suffered a nasty-looking ankle ligament injury and trudged out
of the clash after just half an hour.
Tuchel admitted the England forward could now face a spell on the sidelines.
"Mason was injured, in one of the very first scenes where he made a run to
the far post with (Cesar) Azpilicueta, they both fell and his opponent fell
on his ankle," said Tuchel. "And he hurt his ligaments badly, so we have to
see.
"He came straight to me and said he does not feel good, it felt painful and
he did not know if he could continue. So we had to make the decision."