Qatar Tribune

Chelsea appoints Mauricio Pochettino as new manager

- PA MEDIA/DPA

MAURICIO Pochettino has been appointed Chelsea manager on a two-year deal.

The former Tottenham coach, who has been out of work since leaving Paris SaintGerma­in last year, will take over from interim boss Frank Lampard - who oversaw his final game in charge against Newcastle in the Premier League on Sunday.

It brings to an end an almost two-month process to find a permanent successor to Graham Potter, who was sacked on April 2.

The PA news agency understand­s Pochettino had been the club’s first choice from early in the search, which was led by co-sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart.

He was the only candidate the club got into serious talks with, despite conversati­ons that took place with former Bayern Munich boss Julian Nagelsmann, ex-Spain coach Luis Enrique and Burnley’s Vincent Kompany.

It is understood that, contrary to reports that Pochettino had sought reassuranc­es about the running of the club behind the scenes, he has been satisfied

from early in the process that he could work within Chelsea’s sporting structure.

Stewart and Winstanley said in a statement: “Mauricio’s experience, standards of excellence, leadership qualities and character will serve Chelsea Football Club well as we move forward.

“He is a winning coach, who has worked at the highest levels, in multiple leagues and languages. His ethos, tactical approach and commitment to developmen­t all made him the exceptiona­l candidate.” The new manager, whose contract includes an option for a third season, will work closely with the co-sporting directors as the club look to rebuild after their worst season in 30 years.

Since Potter was removed and Lampard handed the reigns, Chelsea have lost eight of their 11 games, winning only once.

They were knocked out of the Champions League by Real Madrid at the quarter-final stage, and a 12th-place finish their lowest since 1996 - means they will not play in Europe next season.

Lampard said on Sunday that working with a bloated squad of 34 first-team players was the most challengin­g thing he faced at Stamford Bridge.

 ?? (AFP) ?? File photo of Paris Saint-Germain’s Argentinia­n head coach Mauricio Pochettino.
(AFP) File photo of Paris Saint-Germain’s Argentinia­n head coach Mauricio Pochettino.

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