
Mauricio
Pochettino questioned his players' mentality and accused them of making life
"easy" for Newcastle as Chelsea slumped to a 4-1 defeat at St James' Park.
Newcastle's injury crisis meant they named three goalkeepers on a hugely
inexperienced bench for Saturday's visit of Chelsea, but they brushed the
Blues aside.
Pochettino's side came into the game on the back of impressive results
against Tottenham and Manchester City but lost Reece James to a red card and
saw Thiago Silva hand Newcastle a goal amid an ill-disciplined display.
Asked about Silva's uncharacteristic error, Pochettino pinned the blame on
his team as a whole, saying: "It's a bad mistake but I am talking more about
energy.
"We did not prepare ourselves to compete in the best way. This is my
concern. We thought we were ready to compete but we didn't compete in the
way the competition demanded.
"Even if Newcastle weren't great, it was an easy win. It was so easy with
the way we conceded, and we were so soft in every challenge.
"We didn't show that we were playing for something important. That's what
makes me angry and disappointed. Even if we are a young team and need to
learn, these types of games make me very angry."
Pochettino suggested his young side had taken their eye off the ball after
their impressive recent results, adding: "It's about showing more
personality and character. We are young but cannot miss this type of
opportunity.
"After Tottenham and Manchester City, people praise Chelsea, but then, 'OK,
I stop one step before. I didn't do the effort in the right moment - it's
OK, my team-mate is going to fix it'. That is the problem.
"We need to show more strength in our mental game. We need to blame
ourselves. We need to be more focused.
"We conceded easy goals. It was our worst game of the season."
Merson: Chelsea didn't match Newcastle's
effort
Newcastle may have been missing a host of senior players but they
"overwhelmed" Chelsea, according to Paul Merson.
Speaking on Soccer Saturday, he said: "I said before the game that if
Chelsea could stay in the game for 30 minutes, they had every chance of
winning. But second half, Newcastle worked their socks off.
"They've got good players but they work their socks off. That is what they
do. They overpowered Chelsea and ran them ragged at the end.
"They've [Chelsea] got to work hard. They've got to get back to the drawing
board. It's two steps forward, three steps back.
"I don't think it's that they're not fit. I think their confidence is low
and they got overwhelmed today and overpowered.
"They saw that a lot of Newcastle's stars weren't playing and they didn't
match their work rate."
Chelsea finished the game with an expected goals total of just 0.58 - which
was dwarfed by Newcastle's 2.28 - and Nicolas Jackson failed to register a
shot.
Merson was left unimpressed with the No 9's impact, saying: "I'm not blaming
Jackson but Chelsea need a striker.
"If they don't get a striker, they are going to struggle. So many times they
broke today and the threat wasn't there.
"He's a young kid but if they had another centre-forward there, he would
have been brought out of the team for a little rest and to learn the game.
"If they don't get a centre-forward, they are going to be nowhere near
getting into the top four. And I'm not talking about this season - I'm
talking about next season as well."
Analysis: Chelsea's leaders go missing
Sky Sports' Joe Shread:
Pochettino must be becoming increasingly frustrated at the fragility of his
Chelsea side. After going toe-to-toe with champions City in their last
outing, the Blues were a mess at Newcastle.
Surrendering their hard-earned momentum is becoming a worrying theme for
this youthful Chelsea team. After successive Premier League wins at the
start of October, they threw away a two-goal lead at home to Arsenal, before
following that up with defeat at home to Brentford.
And back in September, Pochettino's team backed up his first win as Blues
boss with a three-game run that featured one point and zero goals.
Inconsistency is to be expected after Chelsea's dramatic pivot towards
youth, but that decision only highlights the need for their more experienced
players to lead by example.
That did not happen at St James' Park. James was the main offender thanks to
his dismissal, while Silva's mistake killed the game.
Even Raheem Sterling must take some responsibility, with the winger giving
away a needless free-kick and then compounding his error by collecting a
booking for dissent in the build up to Jamaal Lascelles' winning goal.
Conceding three goals and a red card in 23 second-half minutes, Chelsea’s
leaders abandoned their post at St James' Park. Once again, it's back to the
drawing board for Pochettino and his side.