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Fernando

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Everything posted by Fernando

  1. It's like I been saying. This was telegraph long ago, Trump is clearly the favorite to win this election. But I have a feeling he will not finish the whole term.... Something will happen.
  2. I remember reading that it was Chelsea that paid for him to fly to England..
  3. Spoke a lot of sense. If it was because Poch wanted his way and be the boss, then ofsky is the right way. No way a manager will get that type of control unless your Pep. First season with Todd and Tuchel we saw what bad players we get when we go by the coach. I rather the club as a collective continue to buy, as for me they done good with buys after the first season disaster with Tuchel.
  4. Wait until November when that guy is fallen out of a favor. Clueless bunch. Don't expect us to be like City in maintaining anything. Or even for that matter like Arsenal, because they are more senseless with the coach and build on him. We just have nothing and will have nothing.
  5. I wonder if they want to get someone like Arteta or Alonso. No one really thought they would do what they are doing now. So it seems like the club think they can get that type of manager.....
  6. Well I won't bother any more with worrying for a coach. Because they don't sack the one who made the decision in hiring in the first place. It's like people here who rate this manager and when they don't produce they sack him. So they if your record of picking a manager failed why we should listen to you? Similar here the one who picked poch should be sack as well get a better medical depe.
  7. So they had one already line up it seems. Then it boils down to amorin or de zerbi.
  8. Next season we will start good regardless who is the coach mark my words. Because we always do good into the next season when we finish the season on a strong. The next manager will reap the rewards of the first season of poch.
  9. Crazy club, but then again this will only make sense if Poch wanted to leave. I will hold my judgment and wait to see who they get.
  10. Again hater talking. At Chelsea with the same amount of money and we are not there. United has spends a lot of money and nowhere near there.
  11. Or pep is the best manager since saf. Because we and and united spend a lot of money like them and still are nowhere near. So more like haters are going to be haters. Can't admit to greatness when in front because of hatred....
  12. True, he might be another one that could be injured frequently. Well then I guess selling Sterling and get no one else and lets use the younger players we got in that role.
  13. My only pick at this time is Alonso. If he can't come then continue with Poch. Maybe some stability with Poch might entice Alonso in the future.
  14. Agree, we can't rely on Mudryk as well. If we can somehow get an agreement with Palace of Sterling plus some money like 10 mill or 20 for Olisse i will take that.
  15. Madueke ain't top. Was a good buy improve a bit and we should sell when a offer comes in.
  16. I will still sell Conor. He had one good season and I'm stilling not impressed that he takes our team wc level. I rather we get chances to other younger players we have. I had high hopes for Santos Maybe he can take his place new season? And then sell Connor and use that money to buy a better defense.
  17. Good it's just what I have been saying for weeks, we are finishing on a high and that will spill the onto next season. It always does no matter who is the coach. Now it will be dumb from the board to sack him because new manager will come in and want to try everyone thus wasting valuable time and resources. Let's continue with Poch and fix the areas that need improvement. Next season is where we can judge better Poch, first season was always going to be inconsistent.
  18. From boo-boy to cult hero: how Marc Cucurella has sparked Chelsea revival Spanish left-back seemed to sum up club’s travails but he has found form to aid late, unlikely surge towards a European place It is safe to say few people at Chelsea predicted this season would end with Marc Cucurella performing a turn as an inverted full-back. As one figure inside Stamford Bridge put it recently, who could have imagined that a Cucurella revival would be one of the key reasons behind Mauricio Pochettino’s team making a late surge for European football? Let’s roll this back. In August 2022, with the new order at Chelsea still asserting itself, Cucurella was invited to Mykonos to meet the interim sporting director. Todd Boehly, it turned out, was a man who knew how to conduct a charm offensive. The American had seen Manchester City fail to meet Brighton’s asking price for the left-back. A window of opportunity emerged. Chelsea’s scouts were long-time admirers of Cucurella. Boehly, keen to do the deal, agreed to pay. Brighton, who bought Cucurella for £15.4m in 2021, were somehow convinced to sell him for £55m plus £7m in add-ons, a deal that left many wondering whether Chelsea’s owners were perhaps getting a little bit too giddy in the transfer market. “He’s a good player,” a Spanish source said at the time. “He’s just not a £60m player.” And sure enough, before long before Cucurella was finding it difficult to live up to his fee. He struggled with injury and illness, his performances were sketchy and he soon became a scapegoat for frustrated supporters, who booed the Spain international when he came off the bench during Chelsea’s first-leg defeat by Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League last season. Here we had it: one of the most pertinent examples of Chelsea’s wild, destructive overspending. Cucurella was a joke, a flop, maybe even a hate figure. Fans winced if they saw him in the starting XI. They saw a defender who couldn’t defend. They saw little evidence of the full-back who had given Brighton so much in possession. They were disappointed when Manchester United decided not to sign Cucurella on loan last summer. Pochettino, though, has refused to give up on the 25-year-old. The vibe has changed since Cucurella suffered in a back three when Graham Potter’s Chelsea were hammered 4-1 by Brighton last season. He is in a much better place before returning to the Amex Stadium to face his old club on Wednesday evening. View image in fullscreen Marc Cucurella was a figure of fun to some Chelsea fans but his recent performances have silenced his doubters. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/Reuters There is clearly a defiant streak to Cucurella. He delivered a tenacious performance as a right-back when Chelsea played Brighton in the Carabao Cup this season. Predictions about Cucurella being ripped apart by Kaoru Mitoma were wide of the mark. Cucurella, who also had a good game against Bukayo Saka in October, snapped into challenges and kept the dangerous Japan winger quiet. Admittedly there have been times when Pochettino has been reluctant to trust him. He used Levi Colwill, the young centre-back, on the left during the first half of the season and nobody seemed particularly bothered when Cucurella was ruled out for three months after ankle surgery in December. His return to action in March hardly seemed cause for celebration. But something changed. Last month, with Chelsea 2-0 down at half-time to Aston Villa, the situation seemed terminal for Pochettino. His team had just lost their FA Cup semi-final to City and been thrashed 5-0 at Arsenal. Another humiliation was on the cards when Cucurella scored an early own goal against Villa. Then, thanks to a little tactical tweak from Pochettino, the comeback began. Cucurella’s role was pivotal. Finding the right formula in midfield has been a challenge for Chelsea all season. There was rarely any balance when their £222m duo, Moisés Caicedo and Enzo Fernández, played together. Caicedo was too often left exposed by Fernández, whose physical shortcomings were exacerbated by playing through the pain of a hernia problem for six months. It was better once Fernández had surgery and the energetic Conor Gallagher moved back to play alongside Caicedo, who has gone from strength to strength in recent weeks. Yet the real trick was shifting Cucurella inside, giving Chelsea an overload in midfield. Villa couldn’t handle it. They didn’t know how to combat Cucurella, whose positioning allowed Chelsea to dominate and draw 2-2. It has since been asked why Pochettino took so long to reposition Cucurella. After crushing wins over Tottenham and West Ham, though, he pointed out that he has had to build slowly. “You cannot sit if you don’t have a chair,” Chelsea’s head coach said. “It’s like an engineer who is going to build a building, who says: ‘I want to see so quickly the nice furniture and the flat.’ First of all, we need to build the structure.” It is a fair point. Cucurella, who came through Barcelona’s academy, is technically gifted enough to make the system work. Yet it is a work in progress. Last Saturday, Nottingham Forest neutralised Cucurella by creating a blockage in the middle. Even so, the fact that opponents are having to counter Pochettino’s gameplans is a good sign. But for Cucurella, this is more than a mere tactical story. It is also a tale of resilience. Fans were singing his name – in a good way – during the 5-0 win over West Ham. Against the odds Cucurella, a slightly eccentric figure on the pitch, has become a cult figure. He has done it the hard way.
  19. Yup it's what we thought. The guy will come back and be a baller again. As well the improvement in the team is down to Pochetino as he said. This is why I'm convinced that next season we will be much better.
  20. Don't really understand. Cared to explain a bit more of that? Is that good? bad?
  21. Because our defense sucks. Again with a better defense this team will look really good all of a sudden.
  22. We should try to get Marquinhos. He is the experience that we need.
  23. We spend the same as well united. So it's not just money. They are the best simple.
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