Football Today
·17 aprile 2025
Unconvincing Chelsea win leaves fans furious despite claiming Europa Conference League semi-final berth

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Yahoo sportsFootball Today
·17 aprile 2025
Chelsea reached the semi-finals of the Europa Conference League on Thursday night, but you would not have known it from the mood at Stamford Bridge.
Enzo Maresca’s side were beaten 2-1 at home by Legia Warsaw, and the atmosphere in London reflected the unease.
There were boos at full-time and few signs of celebration, even though the aggregate scoreline of 4-2 means Chelsea remain in contention for European silverware.
This was not supposed to be a night of tension. Chelsea had a three-goal cushion from the first leg and named a surprisingly strong line-up.
But instead of making a statement before Sunday’s pivotal Premier League clash at Fulham, they produced a performance riddled with errors and indecision.
Cole Palmer extended his goalless run to 15 games. Nicolas Jackson once again failed to convince. The team lacked conviction and urgency, and the defensive structure wobbled against modest opposition.
Filip Jorgensen, deputising for Robert Sanchez in goal, was nervy throughout. He gave away a first-half penalty and came close to conceding another late on.
Mistakes in possession and lapses in positioning allowed Legia to believe, and they almost punished Chelsea’s complacency.
“I think probably tonight, because of the first result we managed the game in the wrong way,” Maresca admitted post-match. “For sure not happy with the result.”
Maresca insisted the main focus had been rotation and avoiding injuries. “The good news was that we don’t have injury,” he added. “We have six Premier League games that are very important for us.”
But even with that context, this display did little to inspire confidence.
Chelsea’s manager may point to fitness-building and rotation, but the bigger concern is the lack of sharpness and belief. His team looked unsure of themselves, and the crowd responded accordingly.
Reece James said afterwards the players may have disrespected the opposition. Maresca did not disagree. “Probably tonight, not the competition, but probably the other team,” he said.
The most damning assessment came not from pundits or analysts, but from the stands themselves. Chelsea were booed off despite progressing. That says everything.
With Champions League qualification still a possibility through the league, Maresca must now rally a disjointed squad and a sceptical fanbase.
He said Sunday’s league match is ‘one of the finals’ on the run-in. If performances like Thursday’s persist, that race could be over quickly.
Chelsea are still alive in Europe, but they did little to convince they belong there.
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