Sarri to show his hand on errant keeper
All eyes will be on the Chelsea team sheet at Stamford Bridge on Wednesday to see whether the fall-out from Maurizio Sarri’s astonishing row with Kepa Arrizabalaga drags on into the crucial London derby against Tottenham Hotspur.
Chelsea boss Sarri was furious when Blues goalkeeper Kepa refused to be replaced after needing treatment in the closing stages of Sunday’s League Cup final against Manchester City.
Chelsea eventually lost 4-3 on penalties after a goalless draw, but that blow paled in comparison to the problems caused by Kepa’s rebellious behaviour and Sarri’s raging response on the Wembley touchline.
Sarri was already fighting to avoid the sack amid reports the Italian has lost the backing of his players due to his stubborn tactics, dull training methods and habit of publicly criticising them.
Arrizabalaga was fined a week’s wages and apologised for his actions, while Sarri blamed a “misunderstanding” and said he had had a “good conversation” with the ‘keeper.
But the sight of Kepa staging a mutiny in the middle of Chelsea’s biggest game of the season laid bare the problems Sarri has been struggling to reof solve. He tried to regain control the situation by claiming the incident was caused by a delay in getting information from the team doctor about the extent of Kepa’s injury.
That hardly excused Kepa from such disrespectful behaviour and few could have been convinced by the Spaniard’s insistence his actions were misinterpreted because he had no intention of disobeying Sarri.
Meanwhile, watching Sarri rip open his training top and storm down the tunnel during the Kepa row hardly inspired confidence he has the composure required to navigate such a treacherous predicament. He looks set to remain in charge for the Tottenham match at least.
Now the question is whether Sarri will allow the ‘keeper to retain his place in the team.
“What he has to do now is to make sure Kepa knows that he was in the wrong,” former Chelsea star Pat Nevin said. “That absolutely does weaken his position and make it look as if the player had more power than him.”
Letting Kepa get away with such insubordination would be a huge gamble, even though Blues defender David Luiz insists Chelsea’s stars still respect Sarri.
“I’m sure if Kepa knew the coach wished to change him he would have come off because he is a great professional. He is a great boy and would respect that,” said Luiz. “The coach has the power over the group. He has our respect.”
Sarri’s team have lost four of their last seven games, a painful period that has seen them drop to sixth in the Premier League, crash out of the FA Cup and lose the League Cup final.
It is even more frustrating for Sarri as Chelsea’s dismal run started just after they showed signs of a revival by beating Tottenham in the League Cup semifinal. That rare success is a distant memory now and Sarri must hope the Wembley fiasco can somehow trigger a siege mentality in his team.