Vesper 31,034 Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago Chelsea fans have a right to be frustrated, changes are needed! The players aren’t the cause of the issues we have, and I want to support them to finish the season as well as we can https://siphillipstalkschelsea.substack.com/p/Chelsea-fans-have-a-right-to-be-frustrated Words aren’t adequate to express how I feel about Chelsea right now. Anger, frustration, sadness, disappointment, all of the above. Seeing a team without character or belief, whose heads go down as soon as they go behind or concede a goal. Its even more disappointing as this team has shown character before, coming from behind to win many times. But a combination of mental/physical fatigue, from 114 games in 90 odd weeks with only a two week break and short preseason, plus internationals, added to weak squad depth and a total loss of confidence and belief, have conspired to land us in this situation. Everyone is angry. We all want a competitive Chelsea team who play for the shirt, show pride and character and win football matches. Whether or not you agree with the protests or think they’ll work, they are ultimately happening because people care about their club and want the best for it. But I’m seriously considering scaling back on social media for a few weeks - of course, if there’s big news or big results, I’ll likely show up and comment - but at the very least cutting down. Because to me, its gone beyond anger with many people. On social media especially, it’s becoming toxic. I think every fan agrees that things need to change at the club. The Sporting Directors, Head Coach, recruitment, it all needs changing. I was so angry after Sunday and I’m still frustrated. But its going too far with some people. I’ve seen people on Twitter twisting facts to suit negative agendas, making up quotes (even ESPN picked up on a fake quote and published it), editing videos to make them sound like co-owner Behdad Eghbali said something he didn’t, flat out abusing people who have a different take on the issues at the club, others approaching everything with a negative slant, no context, no objectivity, less focus on accuracy. If people think doing that kind of thing is going to get their views listened to or effect change, they’re living in a fantasy land. Aggression, inaccuracy, fake quotes, abuse, insults, aren’t going to change a thing. All they will do is divide fans amongst ourselves, and get our views ignored even more when we need to be heard. I’m certainly feeling less safe to share my views for fear of being abused, insulted and labelled falsely. I’ve been labeled a “Clearlake enabler” (which if you’ve read my recent posts here you’ll know is a complete joke), and even a “fake fan”. Given I’ve been going to Chelsea games since 1988 and seen us get relegated and fight relegation regularly, and my family have been supporting Chelsea since the 1950s, that’s an absolute joke, not to mention hugely disrespectful. And it does no good at all. I’ve made the mistake in the past of letting my anger around Chelsea get ahead of me, and I ended up nearly losing a friendship over it. Thankfully we resolved things, but I regret the whole episode. So I’m not going to make that mistake again. I’m as angry about things at Chelsea as anyone, but I’d rather not participate in social media dialogue when things are this toxic. Fans should be able to share different views without vile abuse or being called a fake fan. My own view is, in short summary (and maybe I’ll unpack this more in coming articles), this: Despite appearances, in my view the project has not failed. Its been sabotaged. Other projects similar to ours have succeeded - because they hired best in class sporting directors and head coaches, and allowed them to do their jobs. In my view, we’ve not hired absolute best in class people to run the football side, and we’re now seeing the consequences. There’s been poor recruitment and squad building, and some poor appointments throughout the football hierarchy at the club. There is a core at Chelsea now though. Despite performing abysmally recently, this squad has, in the last 11 months, beaten and outplayed some of the best teams in Europe, won two trophies and shown huge potential. But the wider recruitment and squad building haven’t been good enough. Our depth is not good enough, we don’t have enough leaders and fighters, and not enough established talent. In short, the Sporting Directors haven’t done a good enough job, and head coach Liam Rosenior, is sadly not the level required at Chelsea. I’d also add though, that after 114 games in 90 weeks plus internationals, and only a two week break and short pre-season, players are mentally and physically fatigued, and low on confidence. That’s certainly one big reason performance levels have dipped, but it doesn’t excuse just how bad we’ve been recently, and the lack of character shown by the team. Bottom line, in my view there needs to be a change in the football structure, more specifically, the head coach and Sporting Directors, and a vast improvement in recruitment. It’s simply non-negotiable at this point. We need to sign more PL proven, plug in and play top quality players, with emotional maturity, physicality and leadership/fighting qualities. Two top PL proven CBs, a top PL proven midfielder and attacker, in addition to Mike Penders, Geovany Quenda and Emanuel Emegha coming in, alongside a proven, established manager (they can still be young, they just need to be proven), and the squad and club will be a lot stronger and more competitive. I know people have a go at the wage structure and I absolutely get it. My view is that although it can probably be tweaked and have a little more flexibility, we don’t have the money to pay multiple players 300k per week base salaries, not if we want to be sustainable. If we do and the signings don’t work, we’ve seen with multiple players recently that its tough to move those players on. We need to sell about 8-9 players at least, and upgrade on them in the summer. Do I have faith we will upgrade successfully? Frankly, no, not right now. I think Chelsea fans have every right to be skeptical of recruitment, and about promises made by the club, after the last two summers. They have to deliver this summer, simple as that. I think everyone just needs the season to be over as soon as possible. Try and get three wins and a couple of draws from the last 6 games and that should at least guarantee us Europa league football, and who knows, if Liverpool are inconsistent, maybe there’s a vain hope we can finish 5th. I’m not even certain we’ll beat Leeds in the FA Cup right now, and even if we do, I’d expect us to lose badly in an FA Cup final to Manchester City, the favourites. Get the season over as quickly as we can and then get on with making the big changes that are needed. In the meantime, I want to stay away from the abuse and toxicity I see on Twitter, it does me or no one any good. It doesn’t help Chelsea. It doesn’t change anything. No matter how angry we are, taking it to abusive, hateful levels is counter productive. I include myself in that too. All we can do as fans is ensure our voices are heard, make smart, educated arguments about what we want to change (I’m almost certain Clearlake aren’t selling Chelsea anytime soon, so to me that’s a pointless agenda), and cheer on the players. The players aren’t the cause of the issues we have, and I want to support them to finish the season as well as we can. Then we can let the dust settle, see where we are and hope against hope the club keeps their promises and learn their lessons. The Score Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesper 31,034 Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago FAN VIEW: A Bridge too far "A decline that may prove difficult to arrest and ultimately lead to being a Bridge too far!" https://siphillipstalkschelsea.substack.com/p/fan-view-a-bridge-too-far Fan View article by Archie Standing Spring is supposed to herald renewal and change. The days stretch longer, the darkness of winter recedes, and with it comes a sense of cautious optimism. Yet as the warming air drifted across the pitch at Stamford Bridge, framed by the familiar pre-match spectacle of fireworks and choreographed music, there was an unmistakable feeling of déjà vu. For all the symbolism of the season, the question lingered: might this finally be the moment the tide begins to turn? For all the spectacle, what followed felt painfully familiar. Watching us this season has become an exercise in predictability, not of triumph, but of frustration. Once again, Chelsea managed to find a way to lose. Once again, the post-match conversation circled the same well-worn themes. And once again, the club appears to be teetering on the brink, caught in a cycle it cannot seem to break. In years gone by, even amid inconsistency, there was always the quiet reassurance of “next season” the belief that incremental progress was inevitable, that lessons learned would translate into improvement. That optimism now feels increasingly fragile. As Chelsea peer over the edge, the issues are no longer isolated, they are compounding. This, it feels, is a defining summer for the current ownership. The margin for error has all but disappeared. One misstep could trigger consequences too significant to ignore. A poor summer could lead to cataclysmic consequences. There are five critical areas that demand resolution: 1. The Manager: stick or twist? The question is unavoidable. Do Chelsea persist with a manager who, thus far, has offered limited evidence to justify long-term faith? Or do they risk further instability in pursuit of a clearer direction? 2. Squad Structure: imbalance at every level Successful teams are built on balance: a reliable starting XI, a core group of players capable of stepping in without diminishing quality, and a handful of emerging talents developing without undue pressure. Chelsea’s current composition is skewed. There is an overabundance of potential and depth, but a shortage of proven, top-tier starters. The consequence is a squad rich in promise yet lacking in certainty. This summer must address that imbalance decisively. Key positions: goalkeeper, centre-back, central midfield and left wing require immediate, high-quality reinforcement. Not prospects, but players capable of elevating the team from day one. 3. Stadium Plans: clarity required The future of Stamford Bridge cannot remain ambiguous. Whether redevelopment or relocation, supporters deserve transparency. A clear outline of options would at least provide a sense of direction, even if a final decision is not yet reached. 4. Front-of-shirt sponsorship: a lingering farce The absence of a front-of-shirt sponsor has moved beyond a financial concern into something of an embarrassment. For a club of Chelsea’s stature, this is a situation that must be resolved swiftly and decisively. 5. Ownership and fan relations: a widening divide Perhaps most critically, the relationship between ownership and supporters has eroded to its lowest point in recent memory. Trust cannot be demanded; it must be earned. That begins with honest communication and a visible commitment to the fanbase’s concerns. There still remains a path back toward stability and progress. Address these issues with clarity and conviction, and there is reason for cautious optimism. Fail to do so, and the current spiral risks accelerating into something far more damaging, a decline that may prove difficult to arrest and ultimately lead to being a Bridge too far! Written by SPTC community member and Chelsea fan, Archie Standing. Drop him a follow on X. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fernando 6,722 Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago (edited) Waiting for the fan protest pre United game. Put some of that stuff around here, please. Thanks Edited 4 hours ago by Fernando Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mário César 1,474 Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago https://www.tiktok.com/@agarnacho77 ahahah Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mário César 1,474 Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago they needed to wait 4 years to understand that is necessary experience players? jesus christ, what a joke Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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