
Chelsea
are set to confirm Enzo Maresca as their new head coach on Monday.
The 44-year-old, who will succeed Mauricio Pochettino at Stamford Bridge,
has agreed a five-year deal and will move from Leicester after leading them
back to the Premier League by winning the Championship.
Maresca was Chelsea's number-one choice after a shortlist featuring
Brentford boss Thomas Frank, Ipswich manager Kieran McKenna and Brighton's
Roberto De Zerbi was drawn up.
The Italian's release clause at the King Power Stadium is understood to have
been between £8m and £10m.
Maresca is taking six members of his backroom staff from Leicester with him,
including former Chelsea goalkeeper Willy Cabellero.
Chelsea co-sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart led the
recruitment process after being entrusted by co-owners Behdad Eghbali and
Todd Boehly.
They travelled to Marbella for face-to-face talks with Maresca after
Leicester gave permission for discussions to commence.
Chelsea were impressed by the depth and breadth of Maresca's knowledge about
their squad in talks with his representatives, as well as his focus on the
way Chelsea want to play and his desire for the job.
Maresca's obsession with possession and positional play made him the leading
candidate to replace Pochettino, who left by mutual consent.
The contract length reflects that Chelsea are focused on bringing long-term
success back to the club and ends any future speculation about renewals.
Senior Chelsea figures believe the new head coach will be the final piece of
the jigsaw to fit into the new modern structure they have built at the club.
The West London club expect to be busy in the transfer market this summer
with players coming and going. Trading is likely to see the signing of a new
No 9 and centre-back, while the futures of high-earners such as Romelu
Lukaku and Kepa Arrizabalaga need to be resolved.
'Chelsea feel Maresca is the one for them'
Sky Sports News chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol:
"Chelsea have had a very thorough process with Kieran McKenna, Thomas Frank
and Roberto De Zerbi all considered, but they feel Maresca is the one for
them.
"The others were all very impressive candidates, but Chelsea feel at this
moment in time that Maresca is the man for them, and he shares their vision
for the future.
"He's only been a manager for one-and-a-half seasons. He was a manager at
Parma in the Italian second division and then he got the Leicester job.
"There have been some issues behind the scenes and not all Leicester fans
have been completely happy with him even though he got them promotion back
to the Premier League.
"There were problems about recruitment and problems around the fact that
Leicester have been charged for allegedly breaking PSR (Profitability and
Sustainability Rules) and they're also under a transfer embargo from the
EFL.
"There have been issues, but Chelsea just want a head coach. They want
somebody who is going to coach the first-team squad and deal with the media.
Everything else, they feel they have in place.
"You have to remember that Mikel Arteta didn't have any prior experience of
having managed in the Premier League before joining Arsenal, but he had
worked under Pep Guardiola which is exactly the same as Maresca.
"I'm not saying he's a better manager than Arteta, but he has more
experience than he did when he took over at Arsenal.
"Don't underestimate the Pep effect. If you've worked under Guardiola,
you've got a head-start when going for these sorts of jobs, however, you
still have to impress, which Maresca has done during these talks.
"I've been told that his knowledge of the Chelsea squad, including the youth
team players is encyclopaedic."
Why Chelsea are willing to take a risk on
Maresca
Despite having managed less than 70 senior matches, just 53 in England and
none in the Premier League, Maresca is set to become Pochettino's successor
at Stamford Bridge, write Sam Blitz and Ron Walker. Even so, he arrives with
high expectations.
The 44-year-old will take on the job in similar circumstances to when
Claudio Ranieri arrived in 2000 - with demands to reach the Champions
League.
Pochettino's surprise departure from Stamford Bridge largely boiled down to
the Blues missing out on the top four. Chelsea's owners watched last month's
Champions League semi-finals wondering why such a stage was not within the
club's reach.
But despite his relative inexperience, Chelsea do not just see Maresca as a
manager capable of getting them into Europe's premier club competition. They
want an attractive style of football, based on possession and dominance.
His attachment and schooling within the Pep Guardiola philosophy plays a
major part in their thinking. A Manchester City-lite style of play is what
Maresca has brought to Leicester during his year at the King Power.
That same patient play which ranks Guardiola's side bottom of the Premier
League for forward-pass proportion year after year was embedded almost
overnight - in the Championship only Southampton's percentage was lower than
Leicester's last season.
"Maresca is so embedded in that Guardiola style of play that he was always
going to attract interest when he was able to make that style successful -
and that's what he's done at Leicester," Jordan Blackwell, Leicester
correspondent at the Leicester Mercury, told Sky Sports.
"It felt like the club had thought outside the box to bring Maresca in, a
man with a lot of tactical knowledge whose acumen has been raved about.
That's not only as Pep's assistant but with Man City U21s and a first-team
coach at West Ham."
What's top of Maresca's Chelsea in-tray?
Head coach almost in the bag, Chelsea's attention now turns to improving
Maresca's squad, writes Joe Shread. Despite signing two goalkeepers last
summer, the Blues want a new No 1 - unsurprising given Djordje Petrovic's
frailties.
The departure of Thiago Silva necessitates the signing of a new centre-back.
Tosin Adarabioyo, who is out of contract at Fulham, has been offered a deal
but is also wanted by Newcastle.
Reece James and Ben Chilwell's never-ending injury issues could lead Chelsea
to target new full-backs, while their search for a proven No 9 continues -
despite a combined £84m outlay on forwards Nicolas Jackson and Christopher
Nkunku last summer.
Jackson showed flashes of promise during his debut season - scoring 14 goals
in 31 starts - but is not the dependable target man Chelsea have been crying
out for, perhaps dating all the way back to the departure of Diego Costa in
2017.
The Boehly-Clearlake ownership has sanctioned more than £1bn of transfer
spending since arriving two years ago. Expect that to continue.