Irish Independent

Moment of truth beckons for Roman empire

Barca defeat may spur Abramovich into action

- Miguel Delaney

THE wonder, as ever with Chelsea, is what Roman Abramovich is thinking – but not quite in the usual way. This was much more specific.

It was not about the manager, or the players, but rather about where and who they were playing.

Abramovich’s grand dream for Chelsea has been to emulate Barcelona, but they have rarely looked so far off in his time. And that’s as a club as much as a team.

Sure, Antonio Conte and his players could justifiabl­y talk of being proud of their performanc­e in the Nou Camp on Wednesday night as they bowed out of the Champions League at the last-16 stage and there was a lot of merit to the tie’s ultimate explanatio­n that it just came down to one of the game’s greatest ever players performing to that kind of level.

DISCONCERT­ING

But there was still something a little disconcert­ing to it. It was the way Chelsea had to so contort themselves, had to so push themselves, to just compete with Barca.

There is now a fair argument that Conte’s time with this team may have run its course, but it’s difficult to deny that he has wrung the maximum possible out of this team.

The Italian often talks of how a coach is like a tailor with a suit, and he has now made so many alteration­s to keep it looking good that it’s all just a bit worn out.

This is one of those more disconcert­ing issues. Chelsea’s recent restraint is

really starting to reveal itself.

While Barcelona spent January breaking their transfer record for Philippe Coutinho and still having enough to easily win the tie without him, the English champions signed three squad players.

Only one of them played, and there was even some surprise at that as Olivier Giroud isn’t really supposed to represent much more than an alternativ­e option.

It’s a long time since Chelsea have made what would be considered a classic Abramovich big signing, but there would be no novelty or vanity

to it this time. It would instead come down to necessity.

That is the net effect of that recent Chelsea approach. The squad feels like it needs significan­t work, and some properly elite quality to elevate it.

Eden Hazard was really the last of those classic Abramovich signings, and the only one left at the club, and in some of the side’s lowest moments this season, he has looked like the only one capable of such a level.

It’s equally difficult not to wonder what Abramovich thinks of what Manchester City, given they have done a much more rigorous job of replicatin­g Barcelona, and in a much shorter space of time. With a lot more money, it might also be added.

Chelsea’s restraint shouldn’t be completely derided, especially given all of the debate – and worry – about the effects of money on the game.

There may yet be a twist here some time soon, since many of the most influentia­l figures in football are openly talking about how Barca are spending far too much of their budget on player wages in trying to stay ahead of Premier League broadcasti­ng money. There could be a reckoning there.

Against that, some of Chelsea’s re-

straint has been down to living within their means, and some of it has also been down to replicatin­g Barcelona in deeper ways.

Abramovich would dearly like a squad filled with academy graduates getting regular football, and their youth teams are well able to compete with City’s. The two are considered the peak of underage football in England.

That was also supposed to complement a policy now applied by Real Madrid, of trying to buy up the best 21- to 24-year-old’s to have the next best squad in the world.

That is admirable, and prudent, but won’t always prove successful. There are no guarantees, and that is why there needs to be greater squad management elsewhere.

This is similarly where a new technical director appointmen­t will come in – especially in the recruitmen­t of the right talent – but also Abramovich’s mindset.

Those who have worked with the club on high-level deals say this restraint isn’t really down to him, but the advice of some of those around him on the football side.

One source who knows Abramovich as well as anyone in the game says that could still all change at a moment’s whim.

“Roman being Roman, he could just wake up one morning in the summer and decide he wants to spend big again. Chelsea do have the funds. It all comes down to his mood, how he’s feeling about football at any particular time.”

This only adds to the wonder at what he’s thinking right now. Chelsea, meanwhile, don’t look all that great right now. They don’t look close to Barcelona. That alone, however, could well greatly influence Abramovich’s thinking. (© Independen­t News Service)

 ??  ?? Roman Abramovich will have to spend big if he wants Chelsea to compete at the top
Roman Abramovich will have to spend big if he wants Chelsea to compete at the top
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