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  1. Yesterday
  2. Feels like humiliation is on the cards one way or another, whether it’s at the hands of Leeds tomorrow or by City in the final. So it’s a struggle to even muster an ounce of desire to watch this one.
  3. It is really starting to look like we are so fucked. I was not having a laugh when I posted my 'how we could get relegated next season' post almost 4 weeks back. We are already rocketing toward fulfilling a lot of the things needed to get to that nightmare outcome. BlueCo are completely out of control. They need to sell us asap to owners who actually know football, as these yank BlueCo cunts clearly do not know fuckall about football. It is insane that the entire group of directors have not been sacked ages ago. Winstanley, Stewart and Shields especially. All 3 are absolute poison and fools. Feckless cunts to an obvious degree, Each month (not year anymore) that BlueCo remain as owners AND refuse to completely change the entire model is one month closer to Chelsea being destroyed as a viable top football club. Destroyed to the point it could take a decade plus, even 2 or more decades, to sort us back to a level we were at under Roman.
  4. Chelsea sack Rosenior | The Football Boardroom Another Premier League sacking and that can mean only one thing at The Football Boardroom…time for another emergency pod! Henry and Christian react to the breaking news of Liam Rosenior’s Stamford Bridge exit. Why now? What were the key factors behind the decision? And what next for Chelsea?
  5. I DON'T CARE HOW, JUST WIN THIS GAME OF FOOTBALL 🤯 | LEEDS PREVIEW George Benson Football Chelsea Chelsea vs Leeds in the Emirates FA Cup semi final. Chelsea vs Leeds is a repeat of the 1970 FA Cup final. A famous night for both clubs and the FA Cup. Chelsea vs Leeds is a game I simply cannot demand anything less than a win in. If these players want to keep playing for Chelsea, there is no excuse but to turn up and WIN!
  6. Inside Chelsea's Stadium Future: The Full Update Chelsea's stadium saga is one of football's most complicated stories — and since we covered the full picture back in August, almost everything has changed. Earls Court has gone from a live option to nearly dead after receiving two planning approvals for a £10 billion housing and retail project. A brand new third site has emerged just north of Stamford Bridge that nobody was talking about six months ago. Twickenham has formally entered the conversation as a potential temporary home. The ownership tension between Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali is now very public. And the Chelsea Pitch Owners have confirmed there is currently no formal proposal from the club for anything at all. In this video, we break down every development — what's changed, what's collapsed, and what it all means for Chelsea's future. 00:00 Intro 00:34 Where We Left It in August 01:50 Earls Court: The Door is Closing 03:29 The Third Option Nobody Saw Coming 04:44 Twickenham Enters the Picture 05:47 The Ownership Split 06:46 The Timeline Has Stretched... Significantly 07:25 The CPO's Verdict 08:20 Where It Stands Now 09:24 End
  7. Investors are unhappy with Clearlake
  8. Enzo Fernandez Linked With Man City: How Many Players Will Leave Chelsea? 🤔 | 3 Points Perspective Chelsea FAN TV Enzo Fernandez is being linked with a move to Man City as well as the manager debate - who will become Chelsea's next manager? Also a preview for the FA Cup final on Sunday against Leeds at Wembley.
  9. Chelsea’s players are a bunch of cry babies Stamford Bridge rife with out-of-touch prima donnas oblivious to their standing as the most dislikable crop supporters can remember https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2026/04/25/chelseas-players-are-a-bunch-of-cry-babies/ https://archive.li/bk7Pb By Matt Law There is always an Antonio Conte quote. And it is amusing to consider what Chelsea’s last FA Cup-winning manager would have made of the club’s current crop of cry babies. A few months before Chelsea last lifted the Cup in 2018, Conte was asked whether Eden Hazard, the club’s brightest spark at the time, was happy with being substituted so regularly in games. “Only here [in England] is there this situation,” Conte said. “You are very worried about whether a player is happy or not. This is not important. My first task is to do the best for the team and the club. Not to make every player happy. Otherwise we’d risk finishing 20th in the table. “Every press conference there is always this question about whether I’m worried about making my players happy. No. I’m worried to win.” Hazard might not have fancied Conte much, but he scored the winning goal in the Cup final against Manchester United that season for a Chelsea team that included Cesc Fàbregas, N’Golo Kanté, César Azpilicueta and Gary Cahill. If Conte thought he had some prima donnas to deal with, then he should consider himself lucky he was not dumped with the present-day Chelsea cry babies who supporters are worried could suffer another meltdown in Sunday’s FA Cup semi-final against Leeds United. One can only imagine how Conte might have reacted to Marc Cucurella’s barber apparently leaking team news, as he did before the embarrassing defeat to Brighton, or his players smirking at one another as they huddled around a referee before losing a game at home to Newcastle United. It would not have been pretty. What would Antonio Conte have made of the Chelsea players’ antics on the halfway line before their defeat by Newcastle? Credit: Darren Walsh/Getty Images Sure, there are some exceptions. Reece James, Moisés Caicedo and Trevoh Chalobah – who was a substitute in the 2018 final – have all taken responsibility in different ways. It is also fair to assume that, on past evidence, Levi Colwill would have stepped up had he been fit. But, looking at the majority of the rest, Conte might have really worried that they could have led Chelsea to relegation. Some at the club may believe that is unfair, but if Cucurella and Co have an image problem then that is on them – and the Spaniard’s barber. Clear pattern of underperformance and misbehaviour Liam Rosenior, in what proved to be his final pre-match press conference as head coach, said that he was trying to help change perceptions of his players. Their reaction was to throw him under the bus with one of the worst Chelsea performances in living memory against Brighton. In his role as a television analyst, Cahill, who was part of the Conte school of hard knocks, accused the players of giving up at the Amex Stadium – but it was Rosenior who paid the price for their no-show. Chelsea may well try to push some of their cry babies out behind Rosenior this summer, with Alejandro Garnacho likely to be one of many the club would welcome bids for. But, on this season’s evidence, who in their right mind would try to sign Garnacho, Wesley Fofana or Robert Sánchez, or offer Chelsea the kind of money they would want for performative vice-captain Enzo Fernández? Under two different permanent managers, this collection of Chelsea cry babies – at least one of whom believes he is good enough to play for Real Madrid – have twice won just once in nine games in a single season. They managed the feat before Rosenior was sacked, as well as before he officially took charge. Fofana has more points on his driving licence (50) than Chelsea do in the league (48). Add in the fact that the team’s on-the-pitch disciplinary problems followed them from Enzo Maresca, the former head coach, to Rosenior and there is a clear pattern of underperformance and misbehaviour amongst the players. No wonder they are so happy to hide behind Rosenior, the owners and the sporting directors when the s--- hits the fan. Those responsible for signing them need to take their share of the blame, but the players seem oblivious to the fact that supporters see many of them as being the most dislikable bunch they can remember. A victory against Leeds would only confirm the belief of some that the Chelsea cry babies can only turn it on when they get their own way. A defeat would further prove how out of touch with reality they are when it comes to their own talent. Either way, and just as Conte was not, nobody at Chelsea should be worried about whether the players are happy. They are yet to earn anybody’s concern.
  10. IF Ipswich get promoted, we need to sell plowhorse Delap back to them
  11. "I HATE HIM!" Rory Jennings & Cundy SLAM Chelsea after Liam Rosenior's Tenure I Studs Up Jason Cundy, Rory Jennings and Ryon Scott-Douglas are back and they don’t hold back on Liam Rosenior tenure at Chelsea.
  12. I will never stop saying it until the club is sold BlueCo is destroying the entire Chels team at every level the 5 main directors simply MUST be sacked NOW horrific berks, espeically Winstanley, Stewart, and Shields clueless, arrogant wankers, right proper pricks just like our yank billionaire owners
  13. McFarlane Press Conference | Chelsea vs Leeds Utd | 24/04/26 | Chelsea FC 25/26
  14. make sure the jinx is centred, lolol
  15. If Ornstein on NBC is right, it would be between these managers and Iraola/Fabregas Since he seemed to suggest it’s a manager currently in a job but could be available in the summer
  16. Lot of stories on the players and the manager. No doubt the players are a petulant bunch for a group that hasn’t performed consistently even for a season. But I wonder if these journalists can do a similar critical piece reporting on the owners and what went behind their decision making ? From top to down, this club needs a massive reset.
  17. I like the move no deep dive it just seems like the right thing
  18. I will likely walk if we appoint Howe or even worse, Kieran McKenna Silva is almost at that level of shite. SO depressing! I hate hate hate BlueCo.
  19. Who Should Replace Liam Rosenior? 🤔 Rory Jennings and MAH
  20. Bodø/Glimt’s Sporting Director Håvard Sakariassen (a native Norwegian at a Norwegian club) is massively impressive in that interview. Surely he is snapped up by some far larger club soon (or a big club tries to pull him, whether he leaves or not is not a given, he seems to genuinely love it at Bodø/Glimt).
  21. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francesco_Farioli snip Ajax On 23 May 2024, Farioli was appointed head coach of Dutch club Ajax, signing a three-year contract and becoming the club's first Italian manager.[20] His appointment also marked the first time Ajax had hired a foreign manager since Morten Olsen in the 1997–98 season. Taking charge following a disappointing 2023–24 campaign, Farioli sought to stabilise the squad by implementing a disciplined defensive structure similar to that of his previous tenure at Nice. His emphasis on organisation, tactical flexibility, and youth development contributed to Ajax holding the best defensive record in the league and reaching first place in the 2024–25 Eredivisie by March 2025. A pivotal moment in the season came with a 2–0 away victory over title rivals PSV, which drew praise for Farioli's tailored tactical approach. Analysts highlighted Ajax's pressing schemes and rehearsed player movements aimed at exploiting PSV's defensive shape, as well as his in-game shift to a 5–4–1 formation to protect the lead. Despite holding a nine-point lead with five matches remaining, Ajax suffered a dramatic collapse and were overtaken by PSV, who secured the title on the final day. Farioli, visibly emotional after the final match, stated he had "no regrets" despite the outcome. Reports of internal disagreements over tactics, transfer policy, and budget constraints followed, culminating in Farioli's departure by mutual consent on 19 May 2025.
  22. I posted (had not yet seen your snippet when I did so, and hat tip to you finding it as well) the entire thing here: brutal and brilliant takedown of BlueCo by Mehreen Khan of The Times (she is their economics editor)
  23. ❌️🔵Francesco Farioli, on the other hand, is not considering a move from Porto to Chelsea. The Portuguese newspaper A Bola reports that the coach has no interest in trading the Estádio do Dragão for Stamford Bridge. This stance is described as unequivocal. The project he is building in Portugal remains his priority. Farioli only arrived in July 2025 and has already signed a contract through 2028. His contract includes a release clause of 20 million euros (17.4 million pounds), which, however, is reduced to 15 million euros (13 million pounds) during the transfer window. Even then, any move would ultimately depend on his willingness to leave and that willingness simply isn’t there at this point. Off the field, he is said to have settled in completely. His family life in Porto is harmonious; the Italian, his wife, and their two children feel at home and valued in the city. This stability is another factor reinforcing his current stance.
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