A blog of two halves

Four points from five games, and Frank Lampard is under pressure

Monday’s 1-1 draw with Aston Villa at the Bridge was simply not good enough after defeat to Arsenal on Boxing Day, and the Blues are on the slide.

28 December 2020
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Frank Lampard (pictured) has to shoulder the blame for allowing Chelsea to sit back and believe the hype. PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES

Four points from five games, and Frank Lampard is under pressure.

Monday’s 1-1 draw with Aston Villa at the Bridge was simply not good enough after defeat to Arsenal on Boxing Day, and the Blues are on the slide.

Now the second wave of Covid is washing fixtures away, and with Chelsea’s next two opponents – Man City and Morecambe – battling outbreaks, uncertainty reigns. The Cobham training ground has already had to deal with coronavirus hitting the women's team and youth squad, but now it's also having to cope with a major confidence crisis among the men.

So what has gone wrong for a team that, three weeks ago, was poised to go top? The problem seems to be that the Blues had started to believe all the hype.

Instead of driving forward and maintaining their good run of form, too many players have sat back and relaxed, with Lampard having to shoulder the blame for allowing it to happen.

Even the seemingly dependable keeper Eddie Mendy has lost focus, with the only outfield players to emerge from this difficult Christmas spell with credit being Olivier Giroud and Mason Mount.

Timo Werner has lost his mojo, while Kai Havertz has still not found his. A December dip is something past Chelsea managers have had to deal with, and Lampard knows he has to regain the defensive strength the team had before the wheels came off. If the back line is short of belief, the midfield suffers too.

The next few weeks will be difficult ones for the country, and sport will be dislocated as well. It’s time for players with time on their hands to take a long, hard look at themselves, and for the manager to read the riot act to those who are underperforming.

The views expressed in this blog are those of the author and unless specifically stated are not necessarily those of Hammersmith & Fulham Council.

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Tim Harrison

Tim is our Chelsea FC blogger.

Tim has been writing Chelsea match reports since the late 1980s for newspapers and, more recently, websites.

When he first reported on the Blues, the press box was a metal cage suspended over the lip of the old west stand - and you reached it via a precarious walkway over the heads of the fans.

But he has been a Chelsea fan since his father took an excited seven-year-old to watch Chelsea v Manchester United in the mid 1960s... and covered his ears every time the chanting got too ripe.

In July 2005 he wrote The Rough Guide to Chelsea, published by Penguin, which sold 15,000 copies.

His favourite player of all time is Charlie Cooke, the mazy winger who lit up Chelsea's left wing in the 60s and 70s.

When he isn't watching the Blues, Tim acts, paints, writes and researches local history.

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