LIAM ROSENIOR SLAMS "RIDICULOUS" MOISES CAICEDO MISTAKE IN LEEDS 2-2 DRAW
Liam Rosenior criticized Moises Caicedo's "bad decision" as Chelsea threw away a 2-0 lead against Leeds. Read the full reaction.
Liam Rosenior didn’t hold back after Chelsea’s frustrating 2-2 draw with Leeds United, and he had some pointed words for Moises Caicedo.
For a while, things looked good for Chelsea. They were cruising; Joao Pedro scored in the first half, and Cole Palmer added a penalty after the break. At 2-0, it felt like they’d continue their perfect run under Rosenior.
But then it unravelled. Caicedo tripped Jayden Bogle in the box, handing Leeds a penalty. Lukas Nmecha converted, and just minutes later, Noah Okafor took advantage of a messy Chelsea mix-up to equalise. Two goals in six minutes, and just like that, Chelsea’s lead vanished.
A win would’ve pushed Chelsea ahead of Manchester United into the top four, but now they’re stuck in fifth, deflated and frustrated.
Rosenior called the whole thing “ridiculous”. Chelsea dominated most of the game, and Palmer even missed a sitter late on that could’ve sealed it. In the press conference, Rosenior didn’t sugarcoat things.
“We lost our heads in two big moments,” he said. “Moi’s a great player; he’s been excellent since I arrived, but that was a bad decision. We gave away a penalty. Suddenly, they’re launching long balls, picking up scraps, and then the handball just threw us off. We need to be more professional and handle these key moments better.”
He couldn’t believe Leeds managed to score twice in five minutes, especially with Chelsea controlling the rest of the match. “Honestly, I can’t remember Leeds having much else.”
On Palmer’s glaring miss, Rosenior just shook his head. “Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, he scores that. It’s just that one time he doesn’t, and it costs us. But really, we shouldn’t be in that situation. At 2-0, the game should be done and dusted. I need to show the players what went wrong so it doesn’t happen again.”
Joao Pedro, who got Chelsea’s first goal, was just as frustrated. “We started well, went 1-0, then 2-0, and then let them back in. It’s been like this all season. We need to be more consistent and focused and finish games off. We’ve dropped points at home before. If we want Champions League football, we can’t afford this.”
Leeds, meanwhile, probably can’t believe their luck. They’re 15th now, six points clear of the drop.
Next up, Chelsea head to Hull City for the FA Cup, while Leeds travel to Birmingham City. Both teams have plenty to think about.
WHY CHELSEA BACK LIAM ROSENIOR DESPITE THEIR FOUR-GAME LOSING STREAK
Chelsea board backs Liam Rosenior through a four-game losing streak, prioritising stability over UCL qualification.
Liam Rosenior’s job at Chelsea looks safe for now, even if they miss out on the Champions League next season.
There’s been a lot of noise outside the club because of four straight defeats, and people are starting to ask questions about Rosenior’s future. But inside Chelsea, the higher-ups aren’t considering another quick managerial change. From what I hear, only a total meltdown would make them rethink their plans this summer, and nobody at the club expects that to happen.
Rosenior took over from Enzo Maresca in January, moving from Strasbourg to Chelsea, one sister club to another. He signed a five-and-a-half-year deal, with an extra year as an option. His big goal is to keep Chelsea in the Champions League. Right now, they’re in sixth place, just a point behind Liverpool, who hold the last likely spot for qualification.
Sure, if Chelsea falls short, some of the blame will land on Rosenior. But people at the club say it won’t be all on him after all; he came in halfway through the season.
Planning for transfers this summer is already underway, and Rosenior is right in the middle of those discussions, working with sporting directors Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart. Some say Rosenior actually gets more say in recruitment talks than Maresca did before him. The club’s backing remains strong, even with outside pressure mounting.
Defence is a real problem right now. Chelsea haven’t kept a clean sheet in their last nine league games. In recent losses to Everton, Newcastle, and twice to Paris Saint-Germain, they’ve been beaten 12-2 on aggregate.
What’s strange is the stats say Chelsea have created more chances in expected goals than those four opponents put together. Rosenior blames the poor run on costly individual errors in key moments.
Central defence will be a priority in the summer. They tried in January to sign Jeremy Jacquet from Rennes, but he’s heading to Liverpool instead. Injuries haven’t helped: Levi Colwill is back in training after his ACL injury but still hasn’t played this season, and both Reece James and Trevoh Chalobah are out. Wesley Fofana is healthy but out of form during this rough patch.
The schedule after the international break doesn’t get any easier; they’ll host Port Vale in the FA Cup quarter-finals, then face Manchester City and Manchester United in the league, all at Stamford Bridge.
There’s some tension in the dressing room too. Vice-captain Enzo Fernandez hinted at problems after getting knocked out of the Champions League, criticising how Maresca left and saying his own future at the club is unclear.
Still, Rosenior says the team is with him. After the 3-0 loss to Everton, he told reporters, "I don’t think there’s a lack of effort or belief in this squad. Honestly, Enzo kept fighting right up until the final whistle. I know when you’re losing games, people start pointing fingers or talking about attitude, but that’s not what’s going on here."
STATISTICAL DECLINE: TRACKING ROSENIOR’S THREE WINS IN TWELVE GAMES SINCE REPLACING ENZO MARESCA
Chelsea face a Champions League crisis after a 3-0 loss at Everton marked their fourth consecutive defeat under Liam Rosenior.
Chelsea has become a club that seems to understand the cost of everything but struggles to grasp true value. This disconnect is evident as the team drifts toward missing out on Champions League qualification, led by a head coach who appears unprepared for the challenge.
Their recent 3-0 loss at Everton leaves them just a point behind fifth-placed Liverpool in the race for the final Champions League spot. Given the Premier League’s strong position in UEFA’s coefficient rankings, an extra place is almost guaranteed, but this defeat wasn't an isolated incident. It marks Chelsea’s fourth defeat in a row across all competitions, with three consecutive matches without scoring. Among these struggles was a brutal 8-2 defeat to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League round of 16.
Liam Rosenior stepped in as head coach after leaving Strasbourg in January, replacing Enzo Maresca. Yet under Rosenior, Chelsea have won only three of their last twelve matches. This poor streak has largely gone unnoticed amid various other distractions around the club.
Off the pitch, Chelsea faced a Premier League-record fine of £10.75 million and a suspended transfer ban related to past illicit payments under Roman Abramovich’s ownership. Meanwhile, Rosenior’s own awkward and sometimes puzzling remarks have done little to calm nerves.
For example, handing Alejandro Garnacho a tactical note with only five minutes left to overcome a six-goal deficit against PSG struck many as desperate. Similarly, defending players’ decision to crowd around the ball and referee Paul Tierney before their 1-0 home loss to Newcastle, a show of “respect for the ball", seemed tone-deaf.
Amid these distractions, it's easy to overlook how the team is actually performing. Currently, Chelsea resembles an unbalanced, inexperienced side, managed by someone thrust into a role he isn’t yet equipped to handle. Rosenior has a six-year contract, but that hasn’t shielded him from criticism from a dissatisfied fanbase. Still, blaming him alone would be unfair.
He represents more of a symptom than the root cause of the club’s deeper issues. His presence reflects the philosophy of new ownership, Clearlake Capital and Todd Boehly’s BlueCo, who seem to mix heavy spending in certain areas with tight controls in others.
Chelsea’s squad is packed with forwards, often brought in at inflated prices, while critical positions like goalkeeper and head coach receive less investment. Take last summer’s recruitment spree: Jamie Gittens arrived from Borussia Dortmund for around £48.5 million; two months later, Manchester United’s Alejandro Garnacho joined for £40 million; and earlier, Estêvão, just 18 years old, came from Palmeiras for an initial £29 million. These are promising young wingers, sure, and wingers are needed. But while chasing these forward prospects, the club bypassed a reliable, experienced goalkeeper like AC Milan’s Mike Maignan, considering his £21 million fee too steep.
In consequence, Chelsea started the season with Robert Sánchez and Filip Jørgensen competing between the sticks, yet neither has proven dependable. Both have made costly errors recently. Rosenior dropped Sánchez in favour of Jørgensen against PSG, but the Danish keeper’s mistakes contributed to goals. Then Sánchez was back for the Everton game and also faltered.
So, despite pouring nearly £2 billion into players since Clearlake and BlueCo took over in May 2022, Chelsea still lacks a solid goalkeeper. But they do have plenty of wingers.
Rosenior inherits this flawed setup and is trying to manage with the cards he’s dealt. He still has talented players like Cole Palmer, Moisés Caicedo, and João Pedro at his disposal, but his appointment highlights Chelsea’s ongoing failure to appreciate experience and proven quality.
Within football circles, Rosenior is seen as bright and intelligent. Wayne Rooney praised him during their time together at Derby County. However, he was sacked by Hull City in May 2024 after narrowly missing out on a playoff spot, coming off a season near the bottom of the table.
Despite his potential, the jump from Strasbourg to Chelsea proved too large. Stamford Bridge’s management thrust him into a role he isn’t prepared for.
At Chelsea, coaches often become just one piece in a complex structure with upper management and multiple sporting directors calling the shots. This model only works if the coach is given real freedom to lead.
A club of Chelsea’s stature demands more from its head coach than tactical skill alone. They need someone who can command the room and handle intense scrutiny from fans and media alike. Every word, every action matters. Rosenior, like his predecessor Maresca, has repeatedly misspoke – an understandable flaw given his inexperience, but damaging nonetheless.
Managing teams like Hull or Strasbourg doesn’t prepare you for Chelsea, where the pressure is immense. Abramovich’s era valued high-profile managers with big personalities and records: Mourinho, Ancelotti, Conte, and Tuchel. The current approach seems quite different. The focus is on flashy young forwards with potential, while cutting corners on goalkeepers and coaches.
Rosenior is the embodiment of this two-tier strategy, and both he and the team are paying the price.