
Chelsea
are in advanced talks with club legend Frank Lampard to return as caretaker
manager until the end of the season.
If talks go well, Lampard is set to be in charge for Chelsea's next game at
Wolves on Saturday.
Lampard was at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday night to watch their goalless draw
against Liverpool just 48 hours after Graham Potter was sacked.
Lampard, Chelsea's record goalscorer, was dismissed as head coach at
Stamford Bridge in January 2021. He took over at Everton but lost his job in
January after less than a year in the role.
A potential caretaker move for the 44-year-old comes after Chelsea held
talks in London with former Barcelona and Spain boss Luis Enrique over their
managerial vacancy.
The 52-year-old, who is out of work after leaving the Spain job following
the World Cup, won the treble at Barcelona in 2014/15, lifting LaLiga, the
Copa del Rey and the Champions League.
Chelsea are set to assess up to seven candidates as they undergo what they
insist will be an "exhaustive process" to replace Potter.
Julian Nagelsmann, Mauricio Pochettino, Ruben Amorim, Oliver Glasner and
Luciano Spalletti are also among those under discussion internally at
Chelsea. However, Brighton manager Roberto De Zerbi is not believed to be on
the list.
Sky in Germany are reporting that talks between the Nagelsmann's
representatives and Chelsea are ongoing and positive.
The 35-year-old, recently sacked by Bayern Munich, wants to manage in the
Premier League and sees it as his natural next destination but will not rush
into a decision over his future amid strong interest from Chelsea and
Tottenham.
The German wants a short period to reset and his preference is to oversee a
full pre-season when taking on a new job.
'Lampard will give Chelsea massive lift'
Sky Sports News chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol:
"Frank Lampard is a Chelsea legend. If you speak to most Chelsea supporters,
they will say he is the club's greatest player. He lives close to Stamford
Bridge, he's available at the moment and he's been the Chelsea manager
before. Immediately, the club will get a massive lift. He's got an
incredible connection with Chelsea fans and he's done the job before.
"Things went wrong for him in his final month in charge, but people do
forget that he did do a good job as the Chelsea manager in extremely
difficult circumstances. There was a transfer embargo, which meant he wasn't
able to sign players to begin with. He got the club to an FA Cup final and
into the Champions League. In his second season, they were playing well and
were top of the table about a month before he lost his job because of a poor
run of form.
"Even that experience hasn't changed the way Chelsea supporters think about
him. He's a club legend, Chelsea need someone to steady the ship, and the
Chelsea owners still believe they've got the players at the club to win the
Champions League this season. If they were to win it, it would be an
incredible achievement.
"There are no plans that anyone is aware of at the moment for Lampard to be
Chelsea's next permanent manager, but we've seen this happen in the past. It
happened with Roberto Di Matteo when he won the Champions League, so I
wouldn't totally rule it out.
"If Lampard gets the job as caretaker and Chelsea win all their remaining
games including the Champions League, then there would be a decision for the
Chelsea owners to make."
Redknapp: It's a no-brainer - Lampard has
unfinished business at Chelsea
Sky Sports' Jamie Redknapp:
"I watched the game on Tuesday night. I saw him in the crowd and he looked
like a guy who hadn't just gone there for a few drinks. He watched it in a
very studious way and I started to think that might be an opportunity and
the Chelsea owners may look at Frank as an option.
"There's not many other managers right now. There are a few names being
talked about, so this might make sense for the owners just to give
themselves a bit of breathing space and give Frank an opportunity to get
back in the game. He's got unfinished business at Chelsea. He loves the club
and nobody knows it better than him. I think this is a complete no-brainer.
"The players haven't had that many good results or scored many goals, but
there are real signs at the club. They've got a Champions League game to
come against Real Madrid. People have said it's almost impossible for them
to do it, but Roberto Di Matteo did it when he was an interim manager.
Stranger things have happened in football. What an opportunity for Frank and
a good time for the club to take the pressure out of the situation.
"Knowing Frank as I do, he's an out-and-out winner. Nobody has more drive,
more desire. Nobody's done more to reach the top and have a better work
ethic as a player. I've got no doubt he'll do it as a manager because he'll
never give in."
Analysis: Does Lampard have goal-scoring
solution needed to repeat Di Matteo magic?
Sky Sports' Peter Smith:
"If anyone knows about the demands - and ruthlessness - at Chelsea it's
Frank Lampard. The club legend was sacked in January 2021 just over a month
after taking the team to the top of the Premier League table. Like Graham
Potter, his appointment had been intended to break the hire and fire cycle
but there was no mercy, even for someone of Lampard's stature at Stamford
Bridge.
"Interestingly, he also knows the dramatic impact a caretaker manager can
have. After all, it was Lampard captaining Roberto Di Matteo's Champions
League-winning Chelsea team in the 2012 final. But could he have a similarly
decisive impact on this current crop?
"It seems a tall order to repeat that Champions League triumph, with holders
Real Madrid in the quarter-finals and then either Manchester City or Bayern
Munich in the semis. It does not get much tougher than that.
"But any heroics in that competition, like Chelsea's prospects in the
Premier League, will depend on Lampard getting this team scoring goals
again. The draw with Liverpool on Tuesday night was a perfect example of
their toothlessness right now.
"However, those troubles in front of goal stretch back through Lampard's
previous tenure, too. He used 17 different attacking combinations in his
front three in his second season, as he searched for the solution. The
previous year his side had ranked 16th for converting clear-cut chances.
"Perhaps watching on from the stands on Tuesday, Chelsea's record goalscorer
was figuring out the make-up of his attack to play Wolves on Saturday - and
what he could say to the forwards in the meantime to try to foster some kind
of upturn in confidence or belief in front of goal.
"Expect an instant switch back to his preferred 4-3-3 set-up. Also expect
Lampard to try to use this unexpected opportunity to prove to any potential
suitors in the summer that he can play attractive, modern, front-foot
football, having had to scrap and fight for survival at Everton.
"Ultimately a manager and his team depend on their goalscorers, though. In
2012, Di Matteo had Didier Drogba. Lampard does not have that luxury. But
the high expectations at Chelsea demand he comes up with an answer with this
group. It is an intriguing, testing challenge to come back to."
Chelsea's remaining fixtures
Saturday: Wolves (A) - Premier League, kick-off 3pm
April 12: Real Madrid (A), Champions League quarter-final, kick-off 8pm
April 15: Brighton (H) - Premier League, kick-off 3pm
April 18: Real Madrid (H), Champions League quarter-final, kick-off 8pm
April 26: Brentford (H) - Premier League, kick-off 7.45pm
April 29: Arsenal (A) - Premier League, kick-off 5.30pm, live on Sky Sports
May 6: Bournemouth (A) - Premier League, kick-off 3pm
May 13: Nottingham Forest (H) - Premier League, kick-off 3pm
May 20: Manchester City (A) - Premier League, kick-off 3pm
May 28: Newcastle (H) - Premier League, kick-off 4.30pm
TBA: Man Utd (A) - Premier League