THOMAS TUCHEL tore into his Chelsea stars after a dire performance against Charlotte FC. The Blues took the lead at the Bank of America...
THOMAS TUCHEL tore into his Chelsea stars after a dire performance against Charlotte FC. The Blues took the lead at the Bank of America Stadium in the early hours of Thursday morning thanks to Christian Pulisic’s 30th minute strike.
However, Tuchel’s men failed to push on despite bringing on Mason Mount, Ben Chilwell, Conor Gallagher, Kai Havertz and debut-man Raheem Sterling in the second half.
And after conceding an injury time penalty followin Trevor Chalobah’s handball, Chelsea then lost 5-3 i a penalty shoot-out thanks to Gallagher’s woeful attempt from the spot. Boss Tuchel said:
“In general, I would say we played a good first half but unfortunately, only 80 metres of the pitch. The last 20 metres of the pitc were not good enough.
“We found a lot of spaces to accelerate and penetrate the box but we struggled with our decision-making and precision in the last 20 metres.
“This was simply not good enough for the effort and quality we showed in the first 80 metres of the pitch and the amount of space we had, and the number of attacks we created.
“Second half, it took us half an hour to show some quality and then it was maybe for ten minutes, so i was not good at all. “Not offensively, not structure-wise, not in effort, hunger to be the dominant team. It was not good enough.”
Sterling donned a Chelsea shirt in a game for the first time since completing his £47.5m – rising to £50m – move from Manchester City last week.
The 27-year-old showed glimpses of his pace and trickery in a front three with Havertz and Mount. Asked if that trio is potentially the strongest they have, Tuchel admitted:
“I didn’t see it today. So, it doesn’t matter what I have in my mind. “The only thing that matters is what I see on the pitch. I saw four accelerations in the second half and they all came from Raheem.
“This is what he delivers and there is no need for major doubts or huge criticism, but it is never important what the manager has in his head before pre-season.
“It’s the reality that counts. Every day in training an matches like this count and from there we go.”

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