Chelsea’s US owners suffer debut season flop despite huge outlay

Marooned in the unfamiliar bottom half of the Premier League, Chelsea is at risk of its worst domestic league finish in nearly 30 years and it also fell at the first hurdle in the FA Cup and League Cup.

Published : Apr 19, 2023 07:09 IST , LONDON - 3 MINS READ

Behdad Eghbali, Co-Owner of Chelsea, walks with club chairman Todd Boehly as they make their way across the pitch after Chelsea’s UEFA Champions League quarterfinal second-leg defeat to Real Madrid at Stamford Bridge on April 18, 2023.
Behdad Eghbali, Co-Owner of Chelsea, walks with club chairman Todd Boehly as they make their way across the pitch after Chelsea’s UEFA Champions League quarterfinal second-leg defeat to Real Madrid at Stamford Bridge on April 18, 2023. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
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Behdad Eghbali, Co-Owner of Chelsea, walks with club chairman Todd Boehly as they make their way across the pitch after Chelsea’s UEFA Champions League quarterfinal second-leg defeat to Real Madrid at Stamford Bridge on April 18, 2023. | Photo Credit: Getty Images

Chelsea’s American owners saw their last hope of any glory in their first season crumble on Tuesday when the club they bought in a deal worth 4.25 billion pounds ($5.28 billion) last year was knocked out of the Champions League by Real Madrid.

Marooned in the unfamiliar bottom half of the Premier League, Chelsea is at risk of its worst domestic league finish in nearly 30 years and it also fell at the first hurdle in the FA Cup and League Cup.

Chelsea’s only chance of qualifying for next season’s lucrative Champions League by winning the competition has also now evaporated after Real’s 4-0 aggregate quarterfinal win following a 2-0 victory at Stamford Bridge.

The prospect of a drop in income is raising fears among Chelsea fans that some of the club’s best young players will be sold to meet financial rules.

The spectacular slump in the 2022-23 season - during which Chelsea has had three different coaches - stands in contrast with the string of heady campaigns under the previous owner, Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich.

He was forced to sell the club by Britain’s government last year following the invasion of Ukraine by Russia.

Chelsea was the most successful team in England in the period between 2003, when Abramovich acquired the club, and its sale in 2022, a run that included two Champions League triumphs in 2012 and 2021 and five English league titles.

That track record - and the surge in global support for the west London club along the way - explained Chelsea’s appeal to a consortium led by LA Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and backed by Clearlake Capital, a private equity firm.

BIG SPENDERS, LOW SCORERS

On top of the deal to buy the club last May, Chelsea invested a further 550 million pounds on players, spending in the January transfer window more than all the clubs in the top divisions of Spain, Italy, Germany and France combined.

But somehow it failed to buy someone capable of scoring goals on a regular basis with a gamble on former Arsenal striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang failing at almost the first test.

Chelsea has scored 30 goals in 31 league games so far. By contrast, table-topping Arsenal has scored 74 and second-placed Manchester City has found the net 78 times.

Tuesday’s blank was the fifth in six games in all competitions.

With no spearhead for its attack, Chelsea’s managers this season - Thomas Tuchel, Graham Potter and now caretaker boss Frank Lampard - has all struggled to turn a collection of expensive stars and home-grown talent into a cohesive team.

Chelsea fans have turned their frustrations on the owners of the club and some were photographed remonstrating with Boehly in his executive box after last weekend’s 2-1 home defeat by Brighton & Hove Albion. British media said an upset Boehly talked to players in the dressing room after that result.

Now he and his fellow owners - none of whom had the experience of running a major football club before they bought Chelsea - face the huge decision of who to hire as the club’s next coach.

Candidates include former Bayern Munich manager Julian Nagelsmann and Luis Enrique, who coached Spain at the World Cup in Qatar. Such a high-profile manager would represent a big change in approach after the hiring of Potter from modest Brighton last September.

Regardless of who takes over, a return to Europe’s biggest stage seemed a distant prospect for the disappointed Chelsea fans streaming out of Stamford Bridge on Tuesday night.

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