The Guardian (Nigeria)

End is near for Chelsea boss after defeat by Man United

- By Phil Mcnulty

As Maurizio Sarri watched his side limp out of the FA Cup, he resembled a jaded end-of-the-pier entertaine­r going through the same old act that once brought him acclaim but is now greeted with open hostility and - even more painfully - mockery.

The early weeks of the season, when the ‘Sarri-ball’ philosophy that won him the adulation of peers such as Pep Guardiola brought optimism to Chelsea, seemed an age away as Manchester United breezed into the FA Cup quarter-final without needing to raise a gallop. Sarri cut a solitary, dejected figure as his predictabl­e moves and the inevitable results saw Stamford Bridge turn its fury on him with a force that begs the question not his short time as Chelsea manager is drawing to a close, but when?

On this nightmaris­h evidence, and the fierce reaction of the supporters to their increasing­ly hapless and disconnect­ed manager, the end may be very near. Chelsea managers are wise not to book in for the long haul, even Premier League and Champions League winners, so it goes without saying that Sarri is a man clinging to his job in these reduced and struggling circumstan­ces.

The rot was exposed by the 4-0 loss at Bournemout­h and the 6-0 humiliatio­n at Manchester City - their heaviest defeat for 28 years - but here they were embarrasse­d in their own home. And how the fans let Sarri know it as they loudly registered their disapprova­l.

As chairman Bruce Buck looked on with an expression set in concrete, it felt like the credits were already rolling for the manager who only arrived in July amid much fanfare.

Buck’s bulletin to owner Roman Abramovich as he follows from afar will have been an ominous one. Sarri, barring an almost instant and unexpected upturn, now faces the fate that befell other high-profile managers - such as Luiz Felipe Scolari and Andre Villas-boas - who were gone before their first season was out.

Chelsea’s fans have already decided. Sarri has lost them. And once a fanbase is lost, it usually takes something out of the ordinary to win them back, something Sarri shows no signs of delivering.

As Chelsea failed to respond to first-half goals from Ander Herrera and Paul Pogba that put United in complete command, the atmosphere turned toxic. Sarri has not, and does not, help himself with a stubborn refusal to change tack to such an extent his substituti­ons are now so predictabl­e they are greeted with sarcastic applause and the sound of laughter. When, with grim inevitabil­ity, Mateo Kovacic was yet again replaced by Ross Barkley, there was a burst of ironic cheering followed by the chant of “you don’t know what you’re doing”.

Yet this is what Sarri does, repeatedly, with diminishin­g returns. Inflexible, stubborn and - to the fans at least - infuriatin­g.

He is the master of the likefor-like substituti­on - all very well if the results are good, but managerial madness when Chelsea end up well beaten again.

‘Sarri-ball’ - which is meant to be high-paced attacking football combining pressing and short, quick, passing exchanges - has turned out to be tedious, predictabl­e and easily rumbled by teams of higher quality.

Jorginho, very much Sarri’s man as he arrived from Napoli on the same day as his appointmen­t, is the symbol of its shortcomin­gs. Once teams worked out he could be negated by being crowded out and blocked off, much of the game was up.

Same Sarri story. Same Sarri result.

Jorginho’s struggles are only emphasised further by the fact the uncomplain­ing N’golo Kante, widely regarded as the world’s best midfield anchor, has been shunted to the margins to accommodat­e an inferior player who wins Sarri’s favour. It is a point of serious contention, and a valid one. It makes no sense and yet Sarri persists.

Chelsea’s fans even called for the return of Frank Lampard, who is in his managerial infancy at Derby County, before Sarri was treated with arguably the most dangerous reaction of all - mockery.

As United’s supporters chanted “you’re getting sacked in the morning”, it was taken up by Chelsea’s fans and swept loudly around Stamford Bridge. It was a significan­t moment and a measure of just how badly Sarri is currently regarded by his own sup-

MANCHESTER City’s stars were put through their paces on a chilly yesterday up north as they prepared for their return to European football.

The Premier League leaders trained ahead of travelling to Germany to take on Schalke in the last-16 of the Champions League this night.

Pep Guardiola’s side are heavy favourites against a side who are 14th in the Bundesliga, and will hope to take a hefty advantage into the second-leg next month. This week is shaping up to be season-defining for Guardiola as his side continue to fight for silverware on all four fronts.

After reaching the quarterfin­als of the FA Cup with victory over Newport they play Chelsea in the final of the Carabao Cup on Sunday.

But Ilkay Gundogan fears that without European success City will not be remembered as a top team.

‘If you want to be in the internatio­nal elite, when you want to be there both as a club and as a player, you porters. He has not received this sort of hostile treatment before but this was the dam of frustratio­n bursting and he was the catalyst.

Sarri’s body language was hardly encouragin­g, agitated from the first whistle, increasing­ly frustrated as Chelsea slid further into the abyss and in the end gesturing angrily at his own players as they were reduced to a succession of aimless long balls. need to clinch this trophy,’ the German internatio­nal said.

‘You can’t go past it, at least in my opinion. I think that, if we were to win it someday, the club would enter a new era.

‘(It would be lifted) to the same level as Real, Barca, Bayern or Juventus, clubs that are maybe a step above us. Maybe not in the way they play football, but as a club at least.

‘Our job is to try and give it our all to make it a reality someday. We’ll try and will hopefully manage that somehow.

‘We’ve experience­d a lot in the Champions League in recent years - not all of it positive, of course.

‘We should’ve won it at least once. So as you can imagine, there’s a very big drive within us to do something in the Champions League. The biggest low was probably being knocked out by Liverpool last season.

‘For that reason, the motivation to go far in this competitio­n is huge and I think we have the quality required.’

 ??  ?? There was momentary concern as Ronaldo checked to see if his left leg was okay during their training yesterday
There was momentary concern as Ronaldo checked to see if his left leg was okay during their training yesterday
 ??  ?? Sarri’s dedication to his style of play is emerging as a key issue for a number of Chelsea playersPHO­TO: dailymail.co.uk
Sarri’s dedication to his style of play is emerging as a key issue for a number of Chelsea playersPHO­TO: dailymail.co.uk

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