Los Angeles Times

Chelsea is doing well under new regime

Conte, in first year as coach of the Blues, and assistant Cudicini have the club clicking.

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com

Carlo Cudicini cheered from afar last season as fellow Italian Claudio Ranieri guided longshot Leicester City to the English Premier League title in his first season as coach.

This season another Italian, Antonio Conte, goes after a championsh­ip in his first EPL season with Chelsea. And Cudicini will be much closer to the action this time since he’ll be helping Conte implement his defensive, counteratt­acking tactics as Conte’s assistant.

On Wednesday, the Blues showed that transition is coming along nicely, beating English rival Liverpool, 1-0, for their second exhibition victory in three tries.

Playing on a pleasant, picturesqu­e evening before a Rose Bowl crowd of 53,117, split equally between fans in Liverpool red and Chelsea blue, Conte’s team got the only goal it needed on a firsthalf header from Gary Cahill. It was an unusually feisty friendly featuring six cautions and a red card, the latter going to Chelsea’s Cesc Fabregas, who was ejected for a dangerous studs-up challenge in the 70th minute.

But that’s all part of the learning process, Cudicini said.

“The new manager has his own ideas, his own philosophy. And it will take time for the players to understand that,” said Cudicini, a standout goalkeeper who played 10 years at Chelsea before finishing his career with the Galaxy in 2013.

“So all the things that you do normally in preseason, having changed the manager we need this time even more.”

Both teams’ visit to Southern California was more than just a training exercise though. Iconic clubs such as Liverpool and Chelsea get multimilli­ondollar guarantees to play summer friendlies in the U.S., where they can also get closer to fans and potential sponsors.

“It’s part of the season of a team,” said Frederic Longupee, deputy general manager of French champion Paris Saint-Germain, which concludes a threegame U.S. tour Saturday at the StubHub Center against Ranieri and Leicester City. “You cannot become one of the most famous sports franchises in the world staying in your country. You have to travel.”

So PSG planted its flag here by staging youth soccer camps at seven locations throughout California, just as it did on the East Coast last summer when it played there. Liverpool participat­ed in a youth soccer camp in San Francisco and hosted 800 supporters at a fan event in Hollywood and Chelsea suited up three patients from Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, signing them to one-day contracts to train with the team.

Conte, meanwhile, focused on the soccer. He joined Chelsea earlier this month after guiding the Italian national team to the quarterfin­als of the European Championsh­ips. A tactical genius with a fiery sideline manner, Conte has never worked outside Italy, where he won eight Serie A titles as a player and coach with Juventus.

He has some rebuilding to do with Chelsea. Last season, a year removed from a league championsh­ip, the Blues went through two coaches while slipping to 10th in the table, the most disastrous title defense of the EPL era.

However Ranieri, who gave Cudicini the starting goalkeeper job at Chelsea when he coached there more than a decade ago, succeeded against long odds with a defensive, counteratt­acking style at Leicester City and Cudicini is convinced Conte will succeed as well.

“It’s tough to change philosophy for players that [have] played for the last four or five years the same way,” he said. “But this is the step to try to build a fantastic team.”

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? CHELSEA’S WILLIAN, left, dribbles past Liverpool’s Kevin Stewart in the first half at Rose Bowl.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press CHELSEA’S WILLIAN, left, dribbles past Liverpool’s Kevin Stewart in the first half at Rose Bowl.

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