The Sentinel

EURO TROPHY WILL NOT SHAPE CHELSEA TIME, INSISTS HAYES

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EMMA Hayes does not believe her trophy-laden Chelsea reign should be defined by whether she can end the club’s wait for a maiden Women’s Champions League crown.

Blues boss Hayes is set to end a successful 12-year tenure in the summer to become head coach of the United States women’s team.

The 47-year-old has won six Women’s Super League titles and lifted the FA Cup five times during her time in charge but continenta­l glory has proved elusive. Chelsea are on course to reach the semi-finals in Europe in Hayes’ swansong season, having built a

3-0 aggregate lead going into Wednesday evening’s quarter-final second leg at home to Ajax.

“Of course, if I was able to win the Champions League in my time here I’m sure it would be another unbelievab­le achievemen­t,” she said.

“But for my era to be defined by one competitio­n is probably not what matters most to me.

“What matters most beyond the winning over the years - is that I will leave the shirt in a better place. “That’s probably the thing I’m most invested in - to make sure that when I leave, the team is in a fabulous place and certainly in a better place than when I took over and where I can come back as a fan and enjoy them hopefully in many more Champions League (campaigns).” Chelsea came close to Champions League glory in 2021 before suffering an emphatic 4-0 defeat to Barcelona in the final. The Blues are poised for a potential semi-final rematch with reigning champions Barca this term.

Yet, despite last week building a commanding first-leg lead in Amsterdam, Hayes insists it would be a “mistake” to overlook an Ajax team with little to lose. “The fear of losing or the fear of not being in that semi-final is, for us, as big a drive as it is the desire to win it, in fact it’s more,” said Hayes.

“There is no-one in our dressing room that will take the game lightly or think for one minute just because we’re winning 3-0 that the game is over.

“It all starts in your head, in your mind. And, when a team has nothing to lose, they play with freedom and in a different way to express themselves.”

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