Rosenior sack surely imminent but Chelsea chiefs should follow him out of the door for £588.5m reasons | OneFootball

Rosenior sack surely imminent but Chelsea chiefs should follow him out of the door for £588.5m reasons | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: Football365

Football365

·21 de abril de 2026

Rosenior sack surely imminent but Chelsea chiefs should follow him out of the door for £588.5m reasons

Imagen del artículo:Rosenior sack surely imminent but Chelsea chiefs should follow him out of the door for £588.5m reasons

If Liam Rosenior was not doomed for the sack before Tuesday’s trip to Brighton (which he should have been), he surely is now.

The loss to Brighton is Chelsea‘s seventh in their last eight games, and this performance was comfortably the worst of this shambolic run.


OneFootball Videos


It took 23 minutes for Chelsea to have their first touch inside Brighton’s box and 41 minutes to have their first shot in a first half of one-way traffic, with co-commentator Chris Sutton doing his ex-club a kindness by only describing their showing as “woeful” and “hopeless”.

Before the game, Rosenior was dealt the blow of losing Cole Palmer with a minor hamstring issue, with the England international joining fellow forwards Joao Pedro, Estevao and Jamie Gittens on the sidelines due to injury.

So, with Alejandro Garnacho being more useless than usual against Manchester United and Chelsea’s defensive fragility, Rosenior experimented with back five against Brighton and operated Enzo Fernandez (who was back as captain after his recent misdemeanours) in an advanced role just behind Liam Delap.

But it was clear from minute one that this system was not working, with Brighton enjoying acres of space to penetrate Chelsea at will, and they took the lead after only three minutes.

After Kaoru Mitoma stung the palms of Robert Sanchez with an attempted repeat of his volley goal vs Spurs, Brighton opened the scoring from the subsequent corner, with Ferdi Kadioglu capitalising on typically weak defending from the visitors to score with a deflected shot.

And Chelsea’s response to going behind was embarrassing, with Rosenior’s desperately poor side carelessly giving away possession and being overpowered by Brighton’s intensity on endless occasions.

In complete contrast to Chelsea, Brighton headed into this game in a brilliant vein of form, and they have now leapfrogged tonight’s opponents to sit sixth in the Premier League.

Brighton’s confidence was clear as they zipped the ball around sublimely and completely ate Chelsea alive, with Rosenior’s side fortunate that their opponents were guilty of overplaying in an opening half that could have easily finished with them four goals to the good.

At half-time, Rosenior introduced Garnacho for Wesley Fofana to switch back to a four-man defence, with this formation change coming over 45 minutes too late.

Garnacho was enthusiastic but wasteful as Chelsea were more comfortable in possession after Rosenior’s overdue change, but they were still no match for their superior opponents and it was only going to be a matter of time before they were put to the sword.

And Brighton’s second came after 56 minutes, with Georginio Rutter leading a breakaway before giving Jack Hinshelwood the easiest of tasks of finishing past Sanchez from inside the penalty area. Danny Welbeck then netted his 13th goal of the season with a fine finish off the bench to make it 3-0.

Chelsea should count themselves lucky that they faced a pretty merciful Brighton side and that Sanchez made some decent saves, because on another night against a more clinical opponent, they would have been on the end of an even more embarrassing scoreline – exactly what their performance deserved.

This was another low for Rosenior en route to him being put out of his misery at the end of this season (if not earlier). Chelsea currently look more likely to finish in the bottom half than in a European spot and Leeds United will fancy beating them in their FA Cup semi-final as well.

It has come as no surprise to anyone that Rosenior, like Igor Tudor at Spurs, has been proven to be out of his depth at Chelsea and has been overwhelmed by the enormity of the job with so little experience.

He is not good enough for the job at this stage and will be gone soon, but co-sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart (plus other key decision-makers) need to be held accountable for appointing Rosenior and for their 23 other mistakes while running Chelsea.

Chelsea’s self-inflicted financial turmoil will only worsen if/when they miss out on Europe, with Rosenior only a small part of a broken football club that desperately needs a top-to-bottom revamp.

And perhaps nothing can illustrate how badly Chelsea have gone wrong than the fact that the dire starting XI picked to face Brighton cost a total of £588.5m. Sack Rosenior and the rest of them, we say…

Ver detalles de la publicación