Irish Daily Mirror

If Klopp was in charge of Chelsea they would be cup winners

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BILLION-POUND bottle jobs was a slightly harsh verdict on Chelsea’s Carabao Cup final defeat.

But the way they wilted in extra-time at Wembley raised questions about Mauricio Pochettino’s management of the resources at his disposal.

If Jurgen Klopp had swapped places with Pochettino and been in charge of Chelsea last Sunday, they would have been tying blue ribbons round the trophy.

Klopp’s organisati­on of a severelyde­pleted squad was masterful and, given the circumstan­ces, I rate Liverpool’s win as his greatest achievemen­t because the odds were stacked against him.

But the way Chelsea froze, after looking the likelier winners in the last 15 minutes of normal time, was alarming. And Pochettino (below) may only have papered over the cracks against Leeds in the FA Cup on Wednesday night.

Chelsea were pushed back by a Championsh­ip side and needed a last-gasp winner to reach the quarter-finals. Bottlers?

I wouldn’t point the finger solely at the Blues’ players, whose average age at Wembley was similar to Liverpool’s.

In fact, on average, the

Blues XI who finished the match were 22.6 years old while Liverpool’s XI, containing three teenagers, was

24.1 years old.

The difference is that many of

Chelsea’s team had been bought for huge sums of money on long contracts – which is not their fault.

From the outside what worried me was the communicat­ion, or apparent lack of it, and man-management from the bench in extra-time.

Why did they not have a go? Were they content to settle for penalties?

Liverpool were there for the taking, yet there was no sense of urgency from Chelsea, who had finished the 90 minutes much stronger.

That urgency has to come from the management and players as a collective. Managers have to lead by example.

I’m all for giving managers time, and this is Pochettino’s first season at Stamford Bridge, but he may never get a better opportunit­y to win his first trophy in English football.

If we’re going to cut him some slack, the first question must be about Chelsea’s recruitmen­t. Who bought all those players and expected £1billion worth of assorted talents to knit together straight away – was it the manager, owners or head of recruitmen­t? Or a combinatio­n of all three?

Whoever signed the cheques, surely they expected more than 11th in the Premier League, 17 points off the top four.

Yes, there is still a chance for Chelsea to win their first domestic trophy for six years in the FA Cup, but if they fall short there may be a conversati­on to be had about how far Pochettino is going to take the club.

I simply don’t understand why they were so flat, so defensivem­inded, in extra-time, and I don’t think the players bottled it – they needed more direction to express themselves and go for it from the sidelines.

Pochettino did a great job at Tottenham when a lot of the finances were directed at building the new stadium instead of strengthen­ing the team.

I’m not so sure he pulled up any trees at Paris Saint-germain – and now the jury is out at Chelsea.

P.S. Conor Gallagher went off early in extra-time at Wembley, and Chelsea wilted. Three days later, he came off the bench to score a last-minute winner against Leeds.

There is something about lads who come through academies that seems to give them a greater affinity with their clubs.

If Chelsea are tempted to sell Gallagher, even to balance the books on Profit and Sustainabi­lity Rules, they should think again.

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