Chelsea
Maresca Banned From Touchline as Chelsea Prepare to Face Villa
Maresca banned from the touchline as Chelsea face Villa; discipline has shadowed the season persists
Enzo Maresca will not be on the touchline when Chelsea attempt to halt Aston Villa’s 10-match winning run on Saturday. The 45-year-old will watch the game from the stands after being handed a one-match touchline ban.
The sanction follows Maresca’s booking for protesting during Chelsea’s 2–2 draw with Newcastle United last weekend. That was Maresca’s seventh yellow of the season in all competitions and his fifth in the Premier League. As a result of his five domestic bookings, Maresca is serving the one-match ban, leaving assistant manager Willy Caballero to convey instructions from the dugout.
Disciplinary problems have been a recurring theme for Chelsea this season and Maresca’s conduct has drawn attention. Earlier in the campaign he was sent off after receiving two yellow cards against Liverpool, the second shown for his wild celebrations following Chelsea’s late winner. That dismissal resulted in a touchline ban that ruled him out of Chelsea’s 3–0 win over Nottingham Forest in October.
Maresca was also shown bookings in Premier League matches against Manchester United and Burnley, and he received cautions in Champions League fixtures with Bayern Munich and Barcelona. Those incidents have mirrored a wider disciplinary record at Chelsea: the club has accumulated four Premier League red cards this term and 35 yellow cards, a total exceeded only by Bournemouth (42) and Tottenham Hotspur (44). Chelsea are also committing the fourth-most fouls per match in the division.
Asked about his own disciplinary record and that of his players ahead of the Villa game, Maresca responded that he welcomed the comparison between his team and himself. “Listen, the club this morning showed me a comment from some of you that said the team reflect the manager and I’m very proud of that. Because of the way the team is doing,” said the Chelsea boss.
With Maresca in the stands, Caballero will be the primary voice at pitch level as Chelsea try to disrupt Villa’s run.
Chelsea
Rosenior Rejects Puppet Tag and Promises Decision-Making Power at Chelsea
Rosenior insisted he will make the decisions at Chelsea, rejecting the idea he is a puppet. Clearly.
Liam Rosenior used his first Chelsea press conference to draw a clear line under suggestions he will defer to ownership. Having spent the previous 18 months coaching Chelsea’s sister club Strasbourg, where a similar structure is in place, Rosenior was at pains to say he will not be a figurehead.
Maresca’s frustrations with the club’s influential sporting directors and gaggle of co-owners reportedly stemmed from a constant need to defend himself and a sense that his recruitment calls were ignored. The former Leicester City boss saw requests for another centre back last summer and appeals for more senior players around the turn of the year fall on deaf ears.
Rosenior, 41, who had spells at Derby County, Hull City and Strasbourg and is a former Brighton fullback, was explicit: “I don’t think it’s possible to ever be in this job and not be your own man,” Rosenior declared at his first Chelsea press conference, which he prefaced by shaking the hand of every media representative present. “People will see through you straight away.
“I will make the decisions at this club, that’s why I’ve been brought in.
“I understand, I’m not an alien, I know what’s being said in the press but there’s no way you can be successful as a manager if you don’t make the decisions for yourself.”
He refused to adopt the more high-profile profile associated with recent predecessors but projected calm confidence. “I’m not arrogant, I’m good at what I do,” he shrugged.
Rosenior stressed his record: “In every job I’ve worked, whether as an interim, assistant, head coach, relative to the group I’ve worked with, I’ve been successful. I’ve always wanted to be at a club like this but it’s not about just being here, it’s about being successful.
“Nobody can guarantee wins but at the same time I’ve worked very hard for a long time to try and put myself in a position where I can be successful.”
Rosenior watched on as Chelsea lost 2–1 at Fulham, extending a five-match winless run that leaves the club eighth and 18 points behind league leaders Arsenal. He remained measured: “Hopefully, I can add my own ideas, sometimes a different voice helps, but the players haven’t been far away.” He called prioritising competitions “crazy” and highlighted positives around training and player quality.
Chelsea
How Liam Rosenior’s Arrival Reshapes Roles at Chelsea
Rosenior’s Chelsea arrival will reshuffle roles: Delap, Estêvão, Santos and Penders stand to gain in.
Chelsea have appointed Liam Rosenior to replace the frustrated Enzo Maresca. Rosenior arrives with a reputation for high-intensity, energy-first football and a preference for a 3-4-2-1 shape he employed at Strasbourg. Early flexibility will be important as he adapts that system to a large, unsettled squad.
One immediate tactical implication is for Estêvão. Though the 18-year-old has often been used on the right wing since his arrival at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea reportedly view him as an attacking midfielder long term. Under Maresca he was more often an impact substitute than a regular starter. Rosenior’s fluid 3-4-2-1 could increase Estêvão’s minutes in a second attacking midfield role alongside Cole Palmer, though he would likely need to share time with João Pedro and Enzo Fernández.
The No. 9 position may also be open. João Pedro has operated there this term but is not an out-and-out centre forward and could be better suited to an attacking midfield role. Rosenior knows Liam Delap well: he signed Delap at Hull and the striker thrived on loan from Manchester City, scoring eight goals and adding two assists in the Championship at the MKM Stadium. Delap has the physical traits of a traditional striker and did his chances no harm by scoring against Fulham with Rosenior in the stands watching.
Andrey Santos is another player with an existing Rosenior connection. The Brazilian played 34 games for Rosenior in 2024–25, scoring 11 goals and providing four assists. Santos has started just five Premier League games this term and one in Europe, but a congested schedule could give Rosenior reason to use him more often.
Goalkeeping is a further area for review. Robert Sánchez has improved but remains unconvincing, while Filip Jörgensen has not inspired. Mike Penders, on loan at Strasbourg from Chelsea, has been the French side’s starting keeper under Rosenior this season and impressed in his first campaign in a top-five league. Rosenior has seen Penders’ development first hand and may offer him an opportunity next season.
Reece James appears safe in the XI but could be shifted to wing back, a demanding role that risks aggravating his injury history. The Rosenior system does not favour natural wingers, so wide players who prefer hugging the touchline, such as Alejandro Garnacho, or those lacking defensive discipline face a difficult path. Jamie Gittens has struggled to find the polish and technical edge to displace established wide options.
Chelsea
Foreign Stalwarts: Non-English Players Who Became Premier League Mainstays
Non-English players became Premier League mainstays through longevity consistency and contributions.
Since 1992 the Premier League has been defined by English talent and by players from abroad and neighboring nations who provided steadiness season after season. Some of the competition’s most trusted appearance makers are not English, with many racking up matches after arriving from overseas or from Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
Schwarzer arrived as a dependable presence and proved something of a lucky charm in the top flight. The former Bradford City man played his part in Boro and the Cottagers reaching UEFA Cup/Europa League finals, and he even ‘won’ the Premier League twice—with Chelsea and Leicester—despite not making a single league appearance in either title-winning campaign.
Sylvain Distin was a Premier League stalwart for years, retiring in 2016 at the age of 38. His first venture in England was a season-long loan with Newcastle United that led to a permanent move to Manchester City. He went on to captain the future Premier League champions prior to their big-money investment, then enjoyed a two-year spell at Portsmouth that yielded FA Cup success. Everton benefited from Distin’s prime extending into his 30s and he made almost as many appearances for the Toffees as he did for City—174 in six seasons.
Ryan Giggs’s record of 13 Premier League title wins with Manchester United will probably never be bettered. The Welshman was already an established United player when the Premier League kicked off in 1992–93, and he was a key figure for Sir Alex Ferguson as the club rose to the top of the country. Later in his career Giggs converted into a central midfielder and produced some of his best football. Winning the PFA Players’ Player of the Year award in the 2008–09 season at age 35 was followed by another two Premier League titles prior to his retirement in 2014.
Forget Arjen Robben, Damien Duff was the real star winger in José Mourinho’s early Chelsea sides, yet he’s often underrated and not given the credit he deserves. A pacy, consistent performer, Duff rose to prominence at Blackburn Rovers as a natural left winger, terrifying right backs with his running and superb delivery. Goals followed and Chelsea came calling after the Roman Abramovich-led takeover in 2003. Duff was instrumental in Chelsea winning the Premier League two seasons in a row before being phased out. Newcastle United were the next stop in his 18-year top-flight career, followed by Fulham and then a move Down Under.
