Daily Dispatch

All goes from bad to worse for Blues embattled mentor

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CHELSEA’S troubled season hit a new low on Monday as the Premier League champions crashed to a 4-1 defeat at Watford that heaped fresh pressure on beleaguere­d boss Antonio Conte.

Less than a year after being hailed as the mastermind of Chelsea’s title triumph, Conte appears destined to become the latest high-profile boss to pay the price for failing to satisfy ruthless Blues owner Roman Abramovich.

With fourth-placed Chelsea trailing 19 points behind leaders Manchester City, Abramovich is reported to be considerin­g replacemen­ts for Conte, with former Barcelona coach Luis Enrique strongly linked with the job.

Here’s reasons for Chelsea’s fall:: The champagne corks had barely finished popping at the end of Chelsea’s title celebratio­ns in May before Conte bizarrely lost his cool and set off down a path that now looks certain to end with his exit. Misjudging his power base, Conte felt winning the league should allow him much more say in who came and went from his squad – and first in his sights was notorious malcontent Diego Costa.

Infuriated by Costa’s mood swings and an attempt to engineer a move to China, Conte decided to sell the Spain striker even though his goals had been instrument­al in the title success.

But he hadn’t reckoned on Costa going public with a text message from Conte telling him he is not in his plans for next season, a move that prompted the Chelsea boss to exile his forward from the squad.

The situation quickly disintegra­ted as Costa refused to train with the reserves, leaving Chelsea struggling to find a buyer. Abramovich was said to be furious and, although Costa eventually got his wish to join Atletico Madrid, the Italian has been on a collision course with the club’s hierarchy ever since.

The breakdown in relations manifested itself in Conte dragging out negotiatio­ns over a new contract and when he eventually signed the improved terms, tellingly it didn’t include an extension.

Already grumbling about his lack of influence over transfers and complainin­g that Chelsea weren’t spending as much as their rivals, Conte was livid when Abramovich sanctioned Nemanja Matic’s switch to Manchester United.

It didn’t help that technical director Michael Emenalo left the club, leaving Marina Granovskai­a, a close Abramovich aide, in charge of transfer deals, much to Conte’s chagrin.

Engaging in a petty feud with Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho only added to the perception that Conte was unravellin­g as Chelsea failed to keep pace with City in the title race.

“That’s the type of wretched result and performanc­e that gets managers the sack,” Henry Winter, chief football writer of The Times, said of the rout at Watford.

Yet Conte has never seemed settled in England, with his family only joining him this year. “I’m not worried. I can be the Chelsea coach or not. What’s the problem? My soul is clear,” he said after the Watford game.

From the very first day of the season, Chelsea, reflecting their manager’s discontent, have seemed totally out of sync on the pitch.

A shock 3-2 home defeat against Burnley on the opening weekend foreshadow­ed the problems to come, with Conte claiming it could take four years to build a team capable of consistent­ly winning silverware.

That downbeat assessment hardly inspired Conte’s players, who were already reported to be chafing at his demanding training sessions and intense personalit­y. A 3-0 loss at Roma in the Champions League in October exposed more faultlines in a team suddenly bereft of confidence, with the problems exacerbate­d by David Luiz clashing with the Italian after the defender criticised his tactics.

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