
Raheem
Sterling says this season at Chelsea has been "one of the lowest points" of
his career and the club's next manager must have "the final say on
everything".
Sterling signed for the Blues in a deal worth £47.5m from Manchester City
last summer but the move has not yet been a success with Chelsea sat in the
bottom half of the Premier League and on a six-game losing streak in all
competitions.
The 28-year-old has scored only four goals and produced just two assists in
24 league appearances amid a torrid season that has seen him struggle for
form and fitness.
"Personally, this is one of the lowest points in my career," Sterling
exclusively told Sky Sports. "This might sound a bit weird, but it is also a
great learning curve.
"It's been pretty smooth sailing winning, winning and winning but sometimes
in life stuff gets thrown at you and it is a challenge that I'm looking
forward to, hitting it head on and not trying to hide from it.
"It will only make me stronger and also the group stronger. These
challenges, not in just football but life as well, it's crucial to how we
deal with things and how we kick on after."
Frank Lampard is the fourth manager of Chelsea's season as new ownership
searches for a second boss of their reign. Sterling reckons the next person
in the dugout must have full control.
"I'm not one to tell the club what to do but from what I can gauge from
where I was previously, organisation is the most important thing. Having a
manager that has the final say on everything and it being his way with
everyone having to follow that," he said.
"Successful teams always have a manager that comes in, brings his blueprint
and everyone follows. If there are people that don't follow, then they are
not part of the team and that is how brutal it needs to be at a high level.
"It's a fine line between winning, coming second and being in the position
we are now. It's about everyone being on the same page from my experience."
A hindering factor in Chelsea's season has been their bloated squad which
has made training sessions difficult and even forced the dressing room to be
expanded.
The issue will likely mean an exodus of players this summer and Sterling is
adamant it must be sorted.
"There's new ownership, the new manager that came at the start of the
season, new players and some players that were meant to leave that didn't at
the time, it's been an overload of players," said Sterling.
"It's hard for any manager to deal with. He hasn't got the right amount and
we have to try and do training sessions that involve everyone because people
need to be fit as well.
"It's difficult but every manager that's been here has dealt with it as
professionally as they can, and they have never been disrespectful to any
player here.
"It's been a challenge and something that we do definitely need to get
sorted because if a manager is here, he wants players who are invested in
what the club wants to achieve and what he wants to achieve.
"It's quite difficult to do that with mixed emotions in the squad. It's
definitely something as a club we need to get organised."