The Guardian (USA)

Manage the owners, trim the squad and Pochettino’s other key tasks at Chelsea

- Jacob Steinberg

Maintain relations with owners and recruitmen­t chiefs

Mauricio Pochettino needs Chelsea’s controllin­g co-owners, Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali, to see him as the boss. The new manager must pay attention to Arsène Wenger saying that Boehly was wrong to enter the dressing room after Chelsea’s defeat by Brighton to tell the players that the season has been “embarrassi­ng”. Boundaries have to be establishe­d. Pochettino’s has to be the loudest voice.

Yet there will be a political element to the role. Thomas Tuchel clashed with Chelsea’s owners, who have made a series of questionab­le decisions during their first year, and Graham Potter lacked clout. Pochettino, the third permanent manager to work for Boehly and Eghbali, needs to find a productive understand­ing with his employers.

This is where Pochettino’s experience of working at Paris Saint-Germain should come in handy. He needs to minimise interferen­ce from above and make sure he is not landed with unwanted signings. Equally, though, the hierarchy want a manager capable of working in a collaborat­ive culture. Pochettino has to be willing to engage with the owners. He has his trusted transfer advisers but he cannot ignore Chelsea’s assortment of recruitmen­t experts. The task is not just to be tough; it is to be a diplomat.

Use lack of European football to his advantage

Chelsea’s failure to qualify for Europe for the first time since 2016 is not ideal given the loss of revenue will raise concerns about Financial Fair Play, although insiders insist it is not an issue this summer. However the smartest coaches are capable of turning any negative into a positive. In Pochettino’s case the good thing about having fewer midweek fixtures is that it gives him more time on the training ground.

Do not be surprised if Chelsea begin to look like one of the sharpest teams in the league. Pochettino had a similar effect after taking over at Spurs in 2014. He made the most of having plenty of talented young players and he will see the chance to work in the same way at

Chelsea. Streamline the squad and work out his best team

What is Chelsea’s best starting XI? Should they play three or four at the back? Which wingers play? Who makes the bench? What should be done with Romelu Lukaku when he returns from his loan at Internazio­nale? Will anyone take Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang?

It is messy. Chelsea have spent close to £600m on signings since last summer but even Thiago Silva has

questioned the board’s strategy. The squad contains more than 30 players and more players than usual end up outside the matchday squad.

The competitio­n for places has inevitably created unhappines­s and Pochettino has to be swift in identifyin­g who should be sold. With Denis Zakaria and João Félix set to return to their respective parent clubs, focus will linger on Hakim Ziyech, Lukaku, Aubameyang, Christian Pulisic and Kalidou Koulibaly. Kai Havertz is also restless and Raheem Sterling has had a disappoint­ing season.

Pochettino will have to be ruthless. He will know that Chelsea could be forced to sell some academy players but he should find a place for the centre-back Levi Colwill and tell the club to make Mason Mount feel wanted. Pochettino, who has a history of improving young players, could give

Mount a new lease of life.

Chelsea need identity. Potter chopped and changed too much. Pochettino needs a settled team. He was flexible with his systems at Spurs, but you always had a good idea of his favoured starting XI.

Address the lack of ruthlessne­ss

One of Pochettino’s greatest successes at Spurs was overseeing Harry Kane’s developmen­t into one of the best strikers in the world. He is going to have to do something even more spectacula­r with Chelsea’s forwards, though. Chelsea, who have not had a convincing No 9 since selling Diego Costa in 2017, scored 38 goals in their 38 league games and have turned missing chances into an art form.

Can Pochettino find the cure? The problem is that Chelsea have plenty of decent attacking midfielder­s but few reliable finishers. It could require a change of personnel. Havertz has not convinced as a false 9 and Aubameyang and Lukaku do not appear capable of functionin­g in Pochettino’s brand of fast, pressing football. However it will not be easy for Chelsea to sign a prolific striker this summer. Spurs are hardly likely to sell Kane to them.

Help the expensive signings settle

One hope for Chelsea is that Christophe­r Nkunku hits the ground running once he completes his move from RB Leipzig. But the France forward’s goals in the Bundesliga are not a guarantee of success in the Premier League.

Chelsea should know not to judge a player by his fee by now. They have overpaid for a lot of players, though Pochettino will be working with a lot of talent. He will look to revive the fortunes of the Ukraine winger Mykhailo Mudryk and to drag more consistenc­y out of his fellow Argentinia­n Enzo Fernández, the midfielder who became the most expensive signing in the history of English football when he joined Chelsea for £106.8m.

 ?? Andrew Kearns/CameraSpor­t/Getty Images ?? Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (right) in action for Chelsea against Wolves. Will Chelsea be able to offload the striker? Photograph:
Andrew Kearns/CameraSpor­t/Getty Images Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (right) in action for Chelsea against Wolves. Will Chelsea be able to offload the striker? Photograph:
 ?? ?? Left to right: Romelu Lukaku, Mykhailo Mudryk, Mauricio Pochettino and Hakim Ziyech. Composite: Guardian Picture Desk
Left to right: Romelu Lukaku, Mykhailo Mudryk, Mauricio Pochettino and Hakim Ziyech. Composite: Guardian Picture Desk

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