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#835293 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
The Transfer Window Heats Up: Chelsea’s Ongoing Revolution
The transfer window is always a time of excitement and anticipation, and Chelsea FC is certainly keeping the football world on edge. With the clock ticking down, the Blues are far from done making waves in the market. As we continue to see players coming and going, it’s clear that Chelsea is reshaping its squad with fresh additions and bold decisions. But as the transfer drama unfolds, there's more to come—expect more movement, more deals, and a squad that’s gearing up for a new era.
João Félix to Manchester City - £85M
First up, João Félix has secured his permanent move to Manchester City for an impressive £85M. The Portuguese forward, who initially joined Chelsea on loan during the 2023/2024 season for £45M, struggled to consistently find his rhythm at Stamford Bridge. Despite his undeniable technical quality and versatility, Félix never quite managed to establish himself as a regular starter in a Chelsea side in flux. However, the Blues have turned the situation into a profitable one, offloading him for a substantial sum. This deal also includes payments to Porto, Benfica, and Atlético Madrid as part of the solidarity contribution—further testament to the business savvy behind this move. Chelsea’s board now has the opportunity to reinvest these funds, helping to balance the books and add further quality to the squad.
Axel Disasi to Real Madrid - £58M
Next on the list, Axel Disasi, the French defender who joined Chelsea last season, has been sold to Real Madrid for £58M, making this another lucrative piece of business for the club. Bought for £38.5M, Disasi quickly adapted to the Premier League and was a solid presence in Chelsea's defense. Despite showing promise, Chelsea chose to cash in on a high offer from Real Madrid, securing a healthy profit. While the club says goodbye to a reliable defender, the deal opens up space for other defensive targets, signaling that the Blues are always looking to strengthen in key areas.
Liam Delap to Chelsea - £17.5M (+£1M in add-ons)
In a move to enhance their attacking options, Chelsea has welcomed Liam Delap from Ipswich Town for £17.5M, with the fee potentially rising to £18.5M through add-ons. The 21-year-old striker arrives with plenty of promise, having impressed in the lower leagues with his goal-scoring ability and physicality. Chelsea managed to bring him in for a much lower price than his £22.5M release clause, highlighting their ability to negotiate smartly. Delap’s arrival adds valuable depth to Chelsea’s attack and gives them a strong, young forward who could develop into a major asset. His versatility and attacking flair make him an exciting prospect as the Blues look to bolster their forward options for the upcoming season.
Karim Konaté to Chelsea - £40.5M
Another exciting addition to Chelsea's squad is Karim Konaté, the 21-year-old forward from RB Salzburg, who has been secured for £40.5M. Known for his electrifying pace, strong dribbling skills, and aggressive pressing, Konaté is a player who can bring energy and dynamism to Chelsea’s attack. His signing marks a strategic move to add even more depth to the forward line, ensuring Chelsea has multiple options at their disposal. With the club focusing on youth and potential, Konaté is expected to be a key player in Chelsea’s attacking setup for years to come, offering both short-term impact and long-term growth.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The Transfer Drama Unfolds: Chelsea’s Exciting Outgoings
As the transfer window nears its final days, Chelsea FC is not only focused on securing new talent, but also navigating the outgoings of several players who are in high demand. The club is facing an interesting mix of potential moves, with several young stars and surplus players being pursued by top clubs across Europe. Each move is crucial to Chelsea’s plans, both for the financial future and the development of their players. Let’s dive into the exciting transfer saga as Badiashile, Páez, Fayzullayev, and Broja find themselves at the center of attention.
Benoît Badiashile: A Battle for the Left-Footed Centerback
At just 24 years old, Benoît Badiashile has proven himself as one of the most promising left-footed center-backs in Europe. After arriving at Chelsea last season, the Frenchman quickly impressed with his technical abilities and composure on the ball. However, with competition heating up for spots in Chelsea's defense, Badiashile has found himself the subject of interest from two of Europe’s biggest clubs: Liverpool and Inter Milan.
Inter Milan has come forward with a tempting offer, proposing regular playing time in their first-team defense. They are offering £170,000 per week in both playing and non-playing time monthly fees, while covering 90% of Badiashile’s wages (approximately £110,000 per week). Inter’s pitch is strong, particularly with the guaranteed playing minutes, which is vital for Badiashile’s development.
Meanwhile, Liverpool is offering £200,000 per week, slightly higher than Inter Milan's proposal, with the added advantage of an “important player” status—guaranteeing him consistent playing time. Liverpool is offering to cover 90% of his wages (around £110,000 per week) but also assures him of a significant role under Jürgen Klopp. The appeal of playing in the Premier League with one of the top clubs in Europe might be a deciding factor for the young Frenchman.
With two top clubs vying for his signature, Badiashile’s future is set to be one of the most fascinating storylines in the final days of the transfer window.
Kendry Páez: A Young Prodigy with Several Options
Kendry Páez, the talented 17-year-old Ecuadorian midfielder, is already being courted by multiple clubs despite having only recently joined Chelsea for £17M. The attacking midfielder has been turning heads with his skill set and potential, and it’s clear that Chelsea's decision to send him out on loan could be a significant step in his career development.
Burnley, newly established in the Premier League, is offering him a regular starter role, which would ensure consistent playing time in England’s top flight. They are offering £47,500 per month for playing time and £125,000 per month for unused time, alongside covering 40% of his wages (around £3,700 per week). This package ensures he can gain experience in the Premier League, but the long-term potential of playing at Burnley might be tempting for a young player eager to develop.
OGC Nice has a different pitch, offering £5,000 per week in playing time and £61,000 per month in unused fees, with the added allure of potential bonuses. If OGC Nice qualifies for the UEFA Conference League, Chelsea would receive a £500,000 bonus, with an additional £160,000 if Nice wins the Coupe de France. Despite a lower wage structure, the possibility of competing in European competitions adds an interesting dimension to the offer.
As Páez weighs his options between regular Premier League football and a chance to showcase his talents in France, his decision will be pivotal for his growth and Chelsea’s future.
Abbosbek Fayzullayev: A Midfielder with Big Decisions
Abbosbek Fayzullayev, the 21-year-old attacking midfielder, is another Chelsea talent in high demand. His ability to play both centrally and as a left-winger has drawn the attention of several top clubs, eager to secure his services.
Celtic is offering Fayzullayev the chance to be a regular starter in their attack, with a strong financial package that includes a £5,500 unused monthly fee, and coverage of 40% of his weekly wages (around £36,500 per week) if played, and 80% if not. Celtic’s offer includes the opportunity to play in the Champions League, which could be a significant draw for the young talent, as it provides exposure to top-level European football.
Rangers has also expressed interest, offering a regular starter role but with a less lucrative deal, proposing £160,000 per month for playing time and £275,000 per month for unused time. While the financial terms are solid, the competition for places and the lack of guaranteed playing time may make this a more difficult decision for Fayzullayev.
Finally, Hoffenheim from the Bundesliga has joined the race, offering Fayzullayev regular starter status with a deal that includes £115,000 per month for playing time and £275,000 per month for unused time, along with covering 90% of his wages (approximately £82,000 per week). This deal would give Fayzullayev a stable role in the Bundesliga, where he could continue to develop while competing in one of Europe’s top leagues.
As the midfielder mulls over these offers, he faces a crucial decision about where his next step in development will be.
Armando Broja: The Striker in Demand
Armando Broja, the 23-year-old Albanian striker, has become one of the most talked-about players in Chelsea’s transfer window, with several clubs seeking his services. After struggling to find his place in Chelsea's current setup, Broja is now facing offers from across Europe, and the next few weeks will determine his future.
Juventus is offering a regular starter role with a £110,000 per month playing fee, along with an additional £130,000 per month for unused time. They will cover 50% of his weekly wages (around £37,500 per week) if he plays and 60% (approximately £45,000 per week) if not. Juventus also offers a potential £8.5M bonus if they qualify for the UEFA Champions League and installments of £7.75M over the next year. With a chance to play in one of Europe’s most prestigious leagues, Broja could be tempted to make the switch to Serie A.
Crystal Palace is offering a key player role, but the financial package is slightly lower. They propose £57,000 per month for playing time and £85,000 per month for unused time. Crystal Palace has also included an option to buy for £20.5M with an additional £14M in installments. This deal would give Broja a chance to make an impact in the Premier League, where he could become an important player for the Eagles.
Getafe, in La Liga, has offered a regular starter role with a straightforward deal of £55,000 per month for both playing and unused time. Getafe has also added an interesting incentive, offering £1M if they win the Copa del Rey.
Brentford has also expressed interest, with a £110,000 per month playing fee and £115,000 per month for unused time. Brentford’s offer also includes a buy option for £15.25M with additional installments of £13.75M, along with a 30% clause on any future sale. This deal could provide Broja with a platform to shine in the Premier League, where he could be a key figure for the Bees.
What’s Next for These Chelsea Stars?
As the final weeks of the transfer window unfold, Chelsea’s young talents and surplus players face pivotal decisions that will shape their careers. Badiashile could decide between top clubs in Italy and England. Páez must weigh the allure of a Premier League move against the potential for European football in France. Fayzullayev has a difficult choice between the Champions League in Scotland, a stable role in Germany, or a high-profile move to Rangers. Meanwhile, Broja has offers from Italy, Spain, and England, with all clubs offering him valuable playing time and financial incentives.
The decisions made in the coming weeks will be crucial for these players, and Chelsea’s transfer window continues to evolve as they plan for both the present and the future. Stay tuned for more twists and turns as these exciting transfers unfold!
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Chelsea Transfer Window: A Busy Summer
As the transfer window progresses, Chelsea has made key moves both in and out.
Recent arrivals include João Félix’s permanent move to Manchester City for £85M, Axel Disasi sold to Real Madrid for £58M, and the signings of Karim Konaté for £40.5M and Liam Delap for £17.5M.
Loan interest has been strong for several players, with Badiashile pursued by Liverpool and Inter Milan, Páez targeted by Burnley and OGC Nice, Fayzullayev catching the eye of Celtic, Rangers, and Hoffenheim, and Broja in demand from Juventus, Crystal Palace, Getafe, and Brentford.
As these deals continue to unfold, Chelsea’s transfer strategy is steadily shaping up for both the present and future. Stay tuned for more updates!
#834495 From Stagnation to Salvation: Rebuilding RB Salzburg’s Legacy and Emergence
Irfan Roslan
🟥 From Stagnation to Salvation: Rebuilding RB Salzburg’s Legacy and Emergence
🧬 A Club Rooted in Youth and Identity
Salzburg’s legacy is more than trophies; it’s about development, dynamism, and direction. Their model thrives on discovering untapped talent from undervalued regions — especially Africa and South America — and crafting them into stars. Names like Sadio Mané, Erling Haaland, Dominik Szoboszlai, Takumi Minamino, and Patson Daka all passed through this school of transformation.
Now, the next generation is knocking. Wonderkids like Oliver Lukic and E. Baidoo bring vision and maturity, while Konaté, Ratkov, and Gloukh offer attacking thrust. Meanwhile, midfield dynamos Mads Bidstrup, Capaldo, and Tijani keep the engine running. And behind them, a smart blend of leaders like Blaswich, Caufriez, and Terzić add balance and stability.
This is a team on the verge of greatness — not by accident, but by deliberate squad architecture that matches philosophy with performance.
🔁 A Transfer Window With Purpose
Salzburg didn’t splash cash blindly. They spent smartly — €18.5M in and out — targeting structure over star power. They sold wisely too, letting go of Solet, Fernando, Šimić, and Pavlović for the right prices, avoiding emotional decisions.
But the reinforcements signaled intent:
🔥 Bobby Clark (€10M from Liverpool) is a ready-made creative nucleus.
🛡️ Hendry Blank and Domagoj Begonja are strategic successors in defense.
🧠 Maximiliano Caufriez and Janis Blaswich inject leadership, helping stabilize a young locker room.
This wasn’t about just flipping players for profit — it was about elevating the football.
🧱 Building a System, Not Just a Squad
Tactically, Salzburg needed a reset. Under this new rebuild, pressing is intelligent, not reckless. The shape is fluid but compact — often rotating between a 4-2-2-2 and a 4-3-1-2, ensuring control in midfield while maximizing Salzburg’s pace in transitions.
Young midfielders like Lukic are being groomed into press-resistant playmakers, while Gloukh serves as the creative fulcrum. Konaté leads the line, not just with goals, but with relentless pressing triggers. Wing-backs like Guindo and Terzić act as width carriers, offering overlap and width when inverting isn’t enough.
Behind it all is an evolving philosophy: organized chaos, orchestrated for consistency.
🌍 Chasing Europe Once Again
For Salzburg, Europe is no longer just a bonus — it’s the benchmark. The dream is to repeat, or surpass, the 2019/20 heroics. That season, Salzburg proved they belonged among Europe’s elite. This time, they must stay there.
The objective: reach the Champions League knockouts within 2–3 seasons and build a coefficient that earns Austria direct UCL slots. Tactical adaptability, recruitment intelligence, and player retention will be crucial — and we’ll document every part of it.
This isn’t just about restoring the name. It’s about shaping a new identity that doesn’t collapse at the first test.
📖 What This Rebuild Blog Will Explore
Throughout this series, we’ll dive deep into every layer of Salzburg’s rise:
⚙️ Tactical breakdowns of formations and transitions
🌱 Development stories of breakout players
🧭 Scouting strategy and youth pipeline revelations
🧪 Real-time matchday drama and turning points
💼 Sporting director logic: how to balance growth and financial sustainability
Expect a journey of blood, sweat, and spreadsheets — and the story of how Salzburg doesn’t just come back, but returns with more hunger than ever before.
🚀 Buckle Up — Because This Ride Has Just Taken Off!
So here we are — a squad in flux, a philosophy reborn, and a continent watching to see if RB Salzburg can once again shake Europe to its core.
Will Oliver Lukic become the next big midfield maestro, or will he crumble under pressure like a Red Bull can in a hydraulic press challenge?
Can Petar Ratkov and Karim Konaté form a strike duo so dangerous that even Erling Haaland might raise an eyebrow?
Will Pep Lijnders embrace his inner tactical mad scientist — or accidentally summon Frankenstein?
One thing’s for sure:
This isn’t your average save. This is not your “win everything in two seasons and get bored” kind of career. This is chaos, drama, youth explosions, tactical tinkering, injury-induced meltdowns, and the occasional 95th-minute header from a left-back you almost loaned to Liechtenstein.
So, dear readers — grab your virtual seatbelts, stock up your caffeine, and get ready to witness a rebuild that’s equal parts brain and brawn, precision and passion.
🎮 Next up? The first tactical showdown, the locker room power shifts, and whether we survive the first Champions League group stage — or end up Googling "how to defend corners in FM24 without crying."
Until then, this is Salzburg — reborn, reloaded, and ready to raise hell.
The Bulls aren’t just back. They’re angry.
See you in the next chapter. You won’t want to miss it. 🐂🔥
#834484 From Stagnation to Salvation: Rebuilding RB Salzburg’s Legacy and Emergence
Irfan Roslan
🟥 From Stagnation to Salvation: Rebuilding RB Salzburg’s Legacy and Emergence
Evolving the Red Bull blueprint with leadership at the core and young stars pushing the frontier.
⚪ Before the Bulls: A Club in Search of Identity
Before becoming a European breeding ground for global stars, RB Salzburg—then known as SV Austria Salzburg—was a club marked more by turbulence than triumph. Founded in 1933, it spent much of the 20th century bouncing between relevance and regression in the Austrian Bundesliga. A few bright flashes—like their 1993–94 UEFA Cup final run under Otto Barić, eventually losing to Inter Milan—hinted at promise, but the club lacked stability, vision, and structure. Salzburg had history, but no momentum. That would dramatically change in 2005.
🔴 The Red Bull Revolution: From Corporate Takeover to Tactical Uprising
When Red Bull GmbH acquired the club in April 2005, the transformation was total. Gone was the traditional purple. In came bold red, a new crest, and a mission far greater than domestic dominance. The Red Bull project brought with it corporate precision, modern infrastructure, and a daring football ideology focused on high pressing, rapid transitions, and youth-first recruitment.
Critics scorned the rebrand as commercial overreach, but the results were undeniable. Red Bull Salzburg became a juggernaut—winning 13 Austrian Bundesliga titles, including nine consecutively between 2014 and 2022. But this dominance wasn’t merely bought—it was built. Through rigorous scouting, radical training models, and bold tactical experimentation, the club created a philosophy where every player was developed to fit a system, not just a position.
🌍 Building a Global Pipeline: Salzburg’s Talent Factory
What truly set Salzburg apart was its fearless, worldwide talent acquisition model. The club scouted and signed early—particularly in Africa, the Balkans, and Scandinavia—and bet on young players long before Europe's elite took notice. They weren’t just creating teams; they were creating a factory of futures.
From Sadio Mané and Naby Keïta, to Erling Haaland, Patson Daka, Dominik Szoboszlai, and Karim Adeyemi, the conveyor belt of breakout stars never seemed to stop. Each one was developed in-house with modern conditioning, video analysis, and a match style built on chaos, verticality, and ruthlessness. Salzburg became less of a club and more of a launchpad—a laboratory for the modern footballer.
🌟 Breaking the Barrier: European Emergence at Last
Despite their local supremacy, European heartbreak defined the early Red Bull era. Salzburg routinely stumbled in UEFA Champions League qualifiers—from Maccabi Haifa to Malmö FF, disappointment haunted them. But persistence paid off.
In 2019–20, under Jesse Marsch, they finally cracked the code. RB Salzburg qualified for the UEFA Champions League group stage—and did so spectacularly. A fearless side spearheaded by Erling Haaland stormed into headlines, especially after nearly toppling Liverpool at Anfield in a legendary 4–3 thriller. Though they didn’t progress that year, the message was clear: Salzburg didn’t fear anyone.
That message turned to proof in 2021–22, when Salzburg advanced to the Round of 16, beating Sevilla and Wolfsburg in the group stages. The dream ended with a 1–7 defeat to Bayern Munich, but the journey solidified their arrival. Salzburg had transitioned from local kings to continental contenders.
⬇️ The Downturn: A Philosophy in Crisis
Yet success breeds expectation. And expectation can breed complacency. Following the departure of key tactical minds and generational talents, Salzburg sought a new identity under Pep Lijnders. But his philosophy—centered more on structured possession than aggressive pressing—clashed with Salzburg’s DNA.
Suddenly, the high-speed transitions slowed. The pressing lost bite. Young players looked unsure, and results suffered. The once-intimidating Red Bull machine began to sputter. For the first time in nearly a decade, Salzburg lost their firm grip on Austrian football, while also crashing out early in European competitions.
The decline was not just tactical—it was cultural. The model that once brought cohesion, intensity, and hunger had fractured under an identity crisis.
🔁 Rebuilding the Flight Path: A New Era of Emergence
And yet, within every fall lies the seed of reinvention. The aim now is not to mimic the past but to revive its spirit while evolving its execution. The rebuild is driven by smarter recruitment, tactical flexibility, and leadership both on and off the pitch.
Rather than shipping out half the squad each summer, the new Salzburg must balance youth with experienced leaders—players who can guide in Europe, set the press, and create continuity. While African and Balkan scouting remain vital, there’s a need to widen the scope: look to undervalued markets like South Korea, the USA, or even Australia—places where hungry, versatile talent awaits.
Tactically, the Red Bull game must evolve too. The signature 4-2-2-2 may no longer cut it. Instead, formations like a modern 4-3-1-2 or adaptive 4-2-3-1 can combine Salzburg’s legacy of pace and aggression with possession control and tactical clarity.
This rebuild isn’t just about tactics. It’s about rekindling belief—in a system that once terrified giants, in a club that dared to disrupt Europe’s hierarchy, and in a future where Salzburg doesn’t just rise again… it roars back stronger.
🔺 Legacy in the Making: From Stagnation to Salvation
RB Salzburg’s journey is a testament to vision, transformation, and rebirth. From mid-table obscurity to launching football's next global icons, the club became a symbol of what modern football could be: efficient, exciting, and fearless.
Now, it faces its greatest challenge yet—not just to rebuild, but to redefine success in an evolving landscape. This save, this journey, this blog is about reclaiming that edge—about turning the page from stagnation and writing a new chapter of triumph.
This is RB Salzburg reborn. And Europe better be ready.
_______________________________________________________________
Better be ready now! Because we'll be surf forward with more strides as we goes through this wonderful journey of the salvation and emergence of high-octane, high-potential youth players to to recover once-be-known European underdogs-topple-big-guys.
Nothing is impossible!
“RED BULL SALZBURG!!! ARISE!!!”
#833925 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
The moment where everyone's waiting for every season during football break - summer transfer window
Where every single team will analyse their squad players, deciding which would stay as key players, which would need to leave the club to balance the book, which would stay as backup for squad depth, and which one that would consider as dispensable by the football club itself.
Where every single team want to offload heavy-loaded wage players that nearly made no contributions due to injuries, off-form on the pitch etc., where every single team want to attracts their key targets with heavy-loaded cash of wages while presenting their football projects to build the team around that specific key targets to unleash and unlock every one's potential.
Where every single team's managers would decide whether to stick and twist via tactical changes for next seasons that made the transfers in-and-out are unavoidable, or whether want to made major changes to reduce the age of the squad among players, or maybe managers want to prioritize older players with leadership skills as main key strength to execute.
All in this summer transfer window
Roll out!!
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So the first one that we would prioritize first in the summer transfer window is the backline.
Why we would not prioritize for goalkeepers unlike others?
So far I'm not worried yet for goalkeepers since we do have loads of goalkeepers to choose from. As if there's other teams outside there want to bid, as long as it meets our demanded price tag, we'll let them go and take the money to reinvest into our squad.
So what's our addition to the backlines so far?
JONATHAN TAH
For this one, I pick him up for free due to expiring contracts with Leverkusen.
Maybe you would see there's no such attributes that can be impressed here.
How about last season's stats?
Superior in passes completed, clearly justifies himself as ball-playing defender, complements our style of play from the back (66.06 passes completed per 90 with 93% completion rate)
Superior in regaining the ball (14.51 possession won per 90) and less error on-ball possession (2.86 possession lost per 90 minutes)
With 90k p/w for 4 year contract expired on 2028, I do see this is kind of jackpot-like acquisition to complete with Tosin Adarabioyo, or perhaps mentoring him long-term
TAYLOR HARWOOD-BELLIS
Why this guy's the chosen one here?
Besides for homegrown players, the statistics below were quite attractive;
51.79 passes completed per 90 with 91% completion rate
2.14 interceptions per 90 (useful for dismantling counter-attacks)
0.40 key tackles per 90
6.34 defensive actions per 90 (refer here on why defensive actions is useful)
4,2 headers won per 90 (useful for defending set pieces and attacking set pieces)
Before I forgot here, we do pickup Taylor here around 23m only from Southampton
Next…….
JORREL HATO
I do get it, somehow somewhere most of them do think Jorrel Hato is totally overrated due to wonderkid status he carries for a few years now.
Also, for the rumours linked to Chelsea as well (here , here , here , here and here), for me it's quite possible for Hato to join Chelsea at least for now. (Extra note : I do also buy Hato on every 2nd / 3rd season transfer window for the past FM versions)
Jorrel Hato has been picked up from Ajax for 79m, which is quite heavy amount of money spent but for long-term investment, I do think this amount no need to worried about, for now.
To reflect on Boehly's regime practice of giving long-term contract, I do give him exceptional 10-year contract, 100k p/w
What's his stats tho? Let me tell you now……
58.33 passes completed per 90 with 92% completion rate.
14.05 possession won per 90
5.47 defensive actions per 90 (with his nature of playing as leftback by Ajax manager in this save tends to make sense as most of the opponents Ajax are facing will targetting Hato's left-out space in behind)
0.38 fouls per 90 (can be kept in mind for half-space bursting forward to be fouled later on)
Worthwhile for now….I hope so!!
NATHAN ZEZE
“For the future” signings made for buy-now mode.
Has high potential but still have high re-sale value when it matters.
Picked up for 6m (can be increased to 6.25m with add-ons)
He already played 27 times for Nantes with stats as such;
7.50 defensive actions per 90
60.35 completed passes per 90 with 92% completion rate
0.23 key passes per 90
3.73 progressive passes per 90 (more on playsafe through the back when considering Nantes is kind of playsafe for Ligue 1 survival)
But for this season, for further adaptation, we have sent him on loan to Bristol City for one season before adapting him into the squad on the next seasons.
OUSMANE DIOMANDE
More like on rotational basis to complement and strengthen the backline further.
Jackpot deal due to 41m release clause, with high ceiling in potential
8 year contract to 2032 contract expiry with 145k p/w in wages, seems reasonable enough.
Stats also not bad for us;
64.39 completed passes per 90 with 93% completion rate
19,27 possession won per 90 with only 1.97 possession lost per 90 as well (truly elite defensive skills for me)
3.76 xG with 2 goals scored, quite high for a centerback to get the level of xG here.
1.71 key interceptions per 90
ANTONIO SILVA
The most reasonable steal of the season.
40.5m release clause being paid for his elite attributes, high ceiling of potential.
20.44 possession won per 90, with 2.05 possession lost per 90
65.93 completed passes per 90 with 94% completion rate, 5.05 progressive passes per 90 (I assume this would be the laser pass that we seek for next season)
1.88 key interceptions per 90
0.44 fouls per 90
The highlight of the season here, he got 2 goals and 6 assists from centerback position itself, which reflects his completed passing range is truly impressive
____________________________________________________________________
Next, let's focus on the midfield additions here.
Actually here, so far we do made only 2 additions so far, in form of Rokas Pukstas and Youri Regeer only.
ROKAS PUKSTAS
So-so squad addition so far to complement on No 10 and No 6 positions, so expected to have more minutes rotating between those two positions.
Cheap addition, 3.4m only.
Stats?
42.66 completed passes per 90 wit 87% completion rate
6 goals out of 12 xG
3.14 progressive passes per 90 (quite compatible with his young age here)
2.2 headers won per 90
0.13 goal contributions per 90
That's all
YOURI REGEER
I bought this guy just for one reason.
His ultra-utility player as an Ajax player.
But based on what I remember in this save, Regeer mostly played as right back, so it would be much suitable to rotate for playing in cup competitions to give some rest for both Gusto and Reece James further.
But instead I do loan him back to Ajax just in case I'm unable to loan to any of England division clubs
But it's okay, it's reasonable enough for me to get ultra-utility player with 5.5m price tag picked up.
His stats also on modest side;
40.9 completed passes per 90 with 88% completion rate
3 headers won per 90
5.78 progressive passes per 90 (tallied with his 5 assists in 44 appearances for Ajax last season)
1 goal in 3.46 xG recorded.
____________________________________________________________________
Next, the front line attackers
So far we have added only Joao Pedro.
Don't get me wrong here. I'm not buying him due to the recent hype with Joao Pedro since his triumphant debut in Chelsea's latest CWC competitions lately here.
But this is from my instinct only, Joao Pedro can do much better than Jackson, Datro Fofana and Nkunku especially, in terms of utility high-value players for Nkunku, Joao Pedro much fair to be compared with Nkunku here.
Let's compare Joao Pedro and Christopher Nkunku fair and square here.
When you try to compare here, the bold one is the most.
Nkunku is an effective player, showing a balance of attacking and defensive contributions. His high key passes and shots per 90 minutes demonstrate his attacking involvement, while his defensive actions indicate a solid work rate. This makes him a versatile and effective player in both offensive and defensive scenarios.
Joao Pedro's higher goal-scoring ability (Gls/90) and assist rate (Ast/90) are notable, though he takes fewer shots and contributes less in terms of key passes compared to Nkunku. He seems to focus more on offensive output (goals and assists), but he still contributes defensively in a similar manner to Nkunku. His lower player value might be due to his overall lesser impact in the playmaking and chance creation aspects.
Efficiency and Effectiveness Comparison:
Goal Scoring Efficiency: Joao Pedro edges out Nkunku slightly with a higher Gls/90, but Nkunku is more involved in shots overall, which might suggest more opportunities created.
Playmaking: Nkunku is significantly more involved in playmaking, with a higher Key Passes/90 and overall attacking contribution.
Defensive Effectiveness: Both players contribute similarly in terms of defensive actions, making them both well-rounded players.
Value: Nkunku’s higher value reflects his better-rounded contributions, both offensively and defensively.
Conclusion:
Nkunku is more efficient in creating chances and contributes more across the board, making him a more complete player. On the other hand, Joao Pedro is more specialized in goal-scoring and assists, with slightly better stats in those areas, though he has less involvement in the general playmaking aspects. Both players are effective, but Nkunku stands out as the more balanced and versatile performer on the pitch.
____________________________________________________________________
In terms of transfer out, below were the lists of players we decide to transfer it out after deciding that the bid exceeds or met our demanded price tag
Jackson loaned to Tottenham with initial 75m after 15 games played
Sterling to Al-Ahli KSA for 125m bid
Chilwell to Al-Ahli 126m
Disasi to Juventus bid for 56m
Sanchez to Al-Hilal 146m
____________________________________________________________________
This is the only part of the summer transfer window that we able to cover for now.
For incoming future if there's any suitable players we decide to bid, we'll include along in the next post.
See ya!!
*p.s = I have include along the files I use along with the save files for you to try to check along. Have fun!
#833411 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
END OF SEASON : SQUAD ANALYSIS.
As promised on previous posts, we would analyse on how our players performing throughout the whole season.
And we'll be using Mustermann scale, while bides Moneyball approach upon deciding how are the performance levels of our players.
For you guys to know how Mustermann can justify your transfer needs (especially for those on 2nd season in your saves), feel free to surf those videos I provide the links below;
That's all for the Mustermann and Moneyball references that I prefer to refer, so let's go into it!!
________________________________________________________________________________
So first of all, we would see how our goalkeepers fare us fairly throughout the season.
So the goalkeepers that we have used for this season are;
Robert Sanchez
Filip Jorgensen
Gabriel Slonina
Lucas Bergstrom
Narrative Insight for Sanchez:
Sánchez has been consistent in goal, contributing to Chelsea's solid defensive record with 12 clean sheets across 19 appearances. His average rating of 7.26 indicates a reliable presence between the sticks. Despite not being heavily involved in progressive passes, his excellent passing completion (96%) shows his reliability in distribution. He has an outstanding saves-per-game rate and minimal goals conceded, demonstrating his ability to stop shots effectively while maintaining excellent positioning.
Narrative Insight for Jorgensen:
Jörgensen has shown himself to be one of the most reliable keepers in Chelsea's roster this season. His consistent form is reflected in his 20 clean sheets, and with only 14 goals conceded across 33 matches, his defensive contributions have been pivotal. His high pass completion (93%) also highlights his efficiency with the ball, often aiding in ball progression. His average rating matches Sánchez's at 7.26, showing his consistency over a larger number of appearances.
Narrative Insight for Slonina:
Slonina's short stint in the first team has been promising. With 7 clean sheets from 11 appearances, he has proven to be a solid backup to the more experienced keepers. His low goals conceded per match (0.44) and strong passing accuracy (94%) highlight his potential to contribute significantly when given the opportunity. Slonina’s ability to command possession and keep a high save rate showcases his suitability as Chelsea's future long-term option.
Narrative Insight for Bergstrom:
In the limited appearances he made, Bergström has been flawless, keeping two clean sheets and maintaining a perfect passing completion rate (100%). His high average rating of 7.60 reflects his solid performance when called upon, even in a small sample size. Although not heavily involved in ball progression (no progressive passes), his shot-stopping ability has been key to his clean sheets. Bergström’s performance in a backup role shows great promise for the future.
Overall Insights:
Defensive Stability: All four goalkeepers have contributed to Chelsea's defensive strength. Jörgensen, with the most appearances, was instrumental in maintaining a solid backline, while Sánchez's experience provided a dependable presence in the team.
Pass Distribution: Sánchez, Jörgensen, and Slonina were proficient at distributing the ball, with Slonina standing out in passing efficiency. This is crucial for Chelsea’s tactical approach, emphasizing build-up play from the back.
Clean Sheets & Saves: Jörgensen and Sánchez contributed the most to Chelsea’s clean sheets. Slonina’s performance, though limited, was impressive with 7 clean sheets in 11 appearances, reflecting strong potential. Bergström also delivered an unblemished record with a 100% clean sheet rate.
Key Strengths:
Sánchez's high save rate and distribution efficiency.
Jörgensen's consistency and leadership in goal with high clean sheet numbers.
Slonina's rising potential as a reliable backup.
Bergström's flawless outings, showing maturity in limited opportunities.
Next Steps:
Areas of Improvement: The focus should be on maintaining a high level of consistency, especially for Slonina, who has shown promising stats. His passing accuracy and shot-stopping need to remain at high levels to make him a future contender for the number-one spot.
Increased Game Time for Young Goalkeepers: Slonina and Bergström should be integrated more into the starting lineup to build their experience and challenge for the top spot.
________________________________________________________________________________
Next we take a look on our backlines used and the centerbacks we've recruited for free transfers for next season to give some big picture of what he able to contribute to us next season.
Analysis and Narrative Insights:
Malo Gusto:
Gusto has shown his strengths on the defensive side, particularly in Tackles Won (2.80) and Headers Won (2.17).
He also shows great ball progression with 6.98 Progressive Passes per match and an impressive Pass Completion Rate of 92%.
While he only scored 1 goal and contributed 2 assists, his overall Defensive Metrics and high work rate are evident. However, there is room for improvement in offensive contributions such as Shots (0.29) and Expected Assists (0.07).
Marc Cucurella:
Cucurella has contributed heavily to both attack and defense, with 5 goals and 9 assists across 40 appearances.
His Progressive Passes (8.50) and Pass Completion (88%) stand out, highlighting his ball-playing ability from full-back.
He has also been consistent in Defensive Contributions, reflected by his high Tackles Won (3.07) and Headers Won (5.63), though his Yellow Cards (13) indicate some discipline issues.
Cucurella’s Crosses Completed (10.40 per match) shows his ability to provide wide support in attacking situations.
Levi Colwill:
Colwill has been a rock at the back, contributing offensively with 5 goals and 2 assists, alongside excellent Defensive Stats such as Possession Won (12.07) and Headers Won (5.05).
His Progressive Passes (6.15 per match) and high Pass Completion Rate (94%) have helped Chelsea move the ball effectively out from the back.
His solid Average Rating of 7.13 reflects his consistency and ability to maintain defensive solidity. He is one of the most well-rounded defenders for Chelsea.
Benoît Badiashile:
Badiashile offers great Aerial Presence, with Headers Won (6.24 per match) and Tackles Won (2.16 per match) being standout metrics.
He has been effective in progressing the ball from defense, with 7.69 Progressive Passes per match.
His contribution in the air and his Defensive Work make him a key player in Chelsea’s backline.
Trevoh Chalobah:
Chalobah’s Defensive and Offensive contributions are quite balanced, with 4 goals and 3 assists, and 2.19 Tackles Won per match.
He leads the defense in Headers Won (6.57), but his Yellow Cards (8) suggest he might need to improve on discipline.
With a Possession Won average of 15.07 per match, he’s been vital in recovering possession for the team.
Reece James:
James has been a key figure for Chelsea with his Progressive Passes (8.59 per match) and Tackles Won (2.54 per match), reflecting his attacking and defensive contributions.
With 2 goals and 5 assists, James also brings offensive output, though his Crosses Completed (13.43 per match) highlight his significant role in delivering from wide positions.
His Disciplinary Record (9 Yellow Cards) remains an area for improvement.
Aaron Anselmino:
Anselmino’s Defensive Stats are solid, with a high Pass Completion Rate of 95% and Progressive Passes (4.86).
He has contributed 2 goals and 1 assist, making him a useful option in the attack, but his overall offensive contribution can be improved in terms of Shots (0.43) and Expected Assists (0.06).
His Tackles Won (0.86) suggests that he could become more effective in disrupting opposition play.
Jonathan Tah:
Tah has been solid defensively, with Progressive Passes (4.58) and Pass Completion Rate (93%) standing out.
His Defensive numbers are good, but he has limited offensive output with no goals and just 2 assists. However, he provides a lot in terms of Defensive Presence with Headers Won (4.61) and Possession Won (14.51).
He has maintained a solid Average Rating (6.93), but like others, his attacking stats can be improved.
Conclusion:
Defensive Contributions: All defenders show strong Defensive Stats. Players like Chalobah, Badiashile, and James stand out in Tackles Won and Headers Won. Colwill and Badiashile excel in ball recovery and progressing the ball forward.
Offensive Contributions: Cucurella and Colwill lead in offensive contributions, with both providing goals and assists. Badiashile and Chalobah can improve their offensive output, especially in creating chances and contributing to goals.
Key Metrics for Improvement:
Discipline: Players like Cucurella and Chalobah need to improve their discipline, reducing yellow cards.
Attacking Contributions: Tah, Anselmino, and Fofana need to increase their offensive contributions, especially in terms of goals and assists.
Crossing: Improving crossing efficiency (for example, Gusto and Cucurella) could add more width and creativity to Chelsea's attack.
This combination of defensive solidity and offensive support positions Chelsea's center-backs to have a more well-rounded contribution to the team, though improvement in attacking stats and discipline will be key for next season.
________________________________________________________________________________
After we've covered for backline performances, let's take a look as well our midfield clockwork cogs that help transitioning balls freely throughout the season on middle of the park.
Brief Statistical Analysis:
Kieran Dewsbury-Hall (DM, M/AM):
Strong offensive presence with 8 goals and 3 assists.
High shots/90 (2.29), showing his involvement in attacking plays.
Solid passing (84% completion) and defensive contributions (1.64 tackles/90).
Narrative:
Dewsbury-Hall has been a consistent offensive threat with 8 goals, indicating his strong contribution in attack, including a notable shot rate of 2.29 shots per game. His ability to progress the ball (4.88 progressive passes/90) has been crucial in facilitating offensive plays.
His Defensive Work: 1.64 tackles per 90 minutes is solid for a central midfielder, and his Pass Completion at 84% demonstrates effective passing ability.
Pau Prim (DM, M (C)):
Contributed defensively with 1.51 tackles per 90 and progressive passing (6.91 per 90).
Pass Completion: 88% shows his solid passing ability.
Narrative:
Pau Prim has been a key figure in Chelsea’s midfield, contributing defensively and offensively. His passing stats are strong with 88% pass completion, and his progressive passing at 6.91 per 90 minutes adds a creative aspect to his game.
He has also been aggressive defensively, winning 1.51 tackles per 90 minutes.
Christopher Nkunku (M (C), AM (RLC), ST):
Outstanding offensive stats with 16 goals and 8 assists.
Shots/90: 2.88 and xG: 17.95, showing a high goal-scoring threat.
Contributed to build-up with 3.16 progressive passes per 90.
Narrative:
Nkunku’s offensive output has been outstanding with 16 goals and 8 assists. His xG (17.95) highlights his ability to create scoring opportunities. Additionally, his Shots/90 at 2.88 per game and Pass Completion at 87% underline his involvement both in front of goal and in build-up play.
He has contributed significantly to the team's attack while maintaining solid passing and tackling metrics.
Cole Palmer (M (C), AM (RLC)):
Consistent contributor with 3 goals and 6 assists.
Strong progressive passing (3.16 per 90) and decent shots per 90 (2.43).
Narrative:
Palmer has provided key support offensively with 3 goals and 6 assists, demonstrating his contribution to the attacking third. His solid Shot statistics and decent pass completion (82%) show his ability to link up play and create scoring opportunities.
His Progressive Passing (3.16 per 90) also reflects his capability in advancing the ball and initiating offensive plays.
Enzo Fernández (DM, M (AM)):
Key playmaker with 6 assists, pass completion at 91% and progressive passes/90 at 6.80.
Strong defensive presence with 1.49 tackles per 90.
Narrative:
Enzo has been highly effective with 6 assists and a solid passing rate (91%). He has also contributed defensively with 1.49 tackles per 90 minutes.
Progressive Passes (6.80 per 90) indicate his importance in facilitating Chelsea’s ball movement from deep, while his xG and Shot stats show he could potentially add more goals next season.
Moisés Caicedo (DM, M (C)):
Defensively strong with 2.56 tackles per 90.
Limited offensive output with 1 goal and 0 assists in 40 appearances.
Narrative:
Caicedo’s ability to recover possession (2.56 tackles per 90) and his solid pass completion rate (89%) have been critical for Chelsea defensively. However, his offensive contributions are minimal, scoring 1 goal in 40 appearances. He has room for improvement in his attacking output.
Roméo Lavia (DM, M (C)):
Defensive reliability with 2.56 tackles per 90, but limited offensive contributions (0 goals, 0 assists).
Excellent pass completion (93%) and progressive passing (5.86 per 90).
Narrative:
Lavia has been excellent defensively, winning 2.56 tackles per 90 minutes and completing 93% of his passes. However, like Caicedo, his contributions in terms of goals and assists have been limited.
Dário Essugo (DM, M (C)):
Contributed defensively with 1.35 tackles per 90.
Strong pass completion (90%), but limited offensive stats.
Narrative:
Essugo has provided depth to the midfield with excellent pass completion (90%) and progressive passing stats (10.26 per 90). He has room to improve his offensive contribution but has performed solidly in limited appearances.
Estevao Willian (M (C), AM (RC)):
Impressive offensive stats with 1 goal and 2 assists in limited appearances.
Shots/90: 3.52 and progressive passes/90: 4.25 indicate potential for more contributions.
Narrative:
Willian has had a promising start with solid attacking contributions, scoring 1 goal and providing 2 assists in limited appearances. His shots per 90 minutes (3.52) and progressive passing stats (4.25) show potential for the future, especially in advancing the ball and contributing offensively.
Conclusion and Insights:
Top Performers:
Nkunku, Palmer, and Fernández have been the standout performers with their consistent goals and assists. Nkunku, in particular, has been crucial with 16 goals and 8 assists.
Dewsbury-Hall has been a workhorse in midfield, contributing 8 goals and solid passing metrics.
Caicedo and Lavia have demonstrated defensive prowess but need to improve on offensive output next season.
Areas for Improvement:
Defensive Depth: While some players like Lavia and Caicedo provide defensive stability, Chelsea could benefit from more attacking midfield contributions.
Offensive Output: Some players like Essugo and Willian need to improve their offensive contributions, whether through goals, assists, or chances created.
Consistency: Players like Roméo Lavia and Dewsbury-Hall need to maintain their form and consistently produce offensive outputs.
In summary, Chelsea's midfield and attacking players have shown great promise in terms of offensive and defensive balance, but further improvement is needed in terms of goal-scoring and assist creation across the board for the upcoming season.
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After we've covered our midfield clockwork cogs above, let's have further insights on how our front threes can make the goal contributions further
Statistical Summary Table for Chelsea's Frontline (2023/24 Season):
Player
Appearances
Goals
Assists
Shots per Game
xG per Game
Passes Completed
Progressive Passes
Dribbles per Game
Tackles Won per Game
Key Insights
Jadon Sancho
29 (14)
7
5
1.63
0.25
84% (37.59)
4.36
3.89
2.29
Strong goal scorer with consistent dribbles; improvement needed in shots accuracy.
Pedro Neto
37 (12)
9
10
1.31
0.26
84% (34.23)
3.40
4.89
2.38
Solid all-round performance; needs more focus on finishing.
Mikhaylo Mudryk
26 (21)
10
16
1.57
0.36
87% (38.87)
5.27
4.74
2.81
Very effective in key passes; still improving in shooting consistency.
Noni Madueke
35 (20)
14
17
2.34
0.40
83% (34.53)
4.14
3.93
2.72
Excellent assist provider, still needs improvement in shots efficiency.
Nicolas Jackson
33 (25)
16
13
1.50
0.42
83% (18.50)
1.03
2.13
0.79
Strong goal scorer, but needs to improve in passing and overall playmaking.
Analysis & Narrative Insights:
1. Jadon Sancho:
Strengths: Sancho has been a strong playmaker for Chelsea, with 5 assists across 29 appearances. His dribbling is impressive (3.89 per game), and he has consistently contributed to the team’s offense.
Areas for Improvement: Despite the positive metrics, Sancho's shooting accuracy remains a weak point. His goals per game (7 goals) and xG (0.25) suggest that while he gets opportunities, he could be more clinical in finishing.
Suggestions for Improvement: Sancho could benefit from working on finishing under pressure, with a potential addition like Mohamed Salah to complement his creative style and bring in more clinical finishing.
2. Pedro Neto:
Strengths: Neto has shown solid form with 9 goals and 10 assists across 37 appearances. His dribbling skills and progressive passes per game (4.89) help him create key chances.
Areas for Improvement: While Neto contributes well to the attack, his shot conversion could be improved. He has 9 goals from 1.31 shots per game, indicating that he misses chances that he should ideally convert.
Suggestions for Improvement: Neto could refine his finishing, and adding a consistent goal scorer such as Raphinha could enhance the team’s wide play and goal-scoring ability.
3. Mikhaylo Mudryk:
Strengths: Mudryk’s stats show his effectiveness as a winger with 10 goals and 16 assists. His progressive passes per game (5.27) highlight his key role in facilitating the team’s offense, while his dribbling (4.74 per game) keeps him unpredictable.
Areas for Improvement: Mudryk's finishing remains inconsistent with only 10 goals from 1.57 shots per game. With his ability to create opportunities, becoming more clinical would elevate his contributions significantly.
Suggestions for Improvement: Mudryk could work on his goal conversion. A potential addition could be Bukayo Saka, who has a strong combination of creativity and finishing ability.
4. Noni Madueke:
Strengths: Madueke has been a key player for Chelsea with 14 goals and 17 assists. His ability to dribble (3.93 per game) and create progressive passes is commendable, making him a key figure in the attacking third.
Areas for Improvement: Like other attacking players, Madueke’s shooting efficiency (14 goals) could be more consistent. His xG of 0.40 per game suggests he misses some opportunities to increase his goal tally.
Suggestions for Improvement: Madueke needs to be more clinical in front of goal. A potential addition like Raheem Sterling could help improve finishing while providing more pace and directness.
5. Nicolas Jackson:
Strengths: Jackson has had an impressive season with 16 goals and 13 assists. His ability to find the back of the net (xG of 0.42 per game) makes him a consistent offensive threat.
Areas for Improvement: While Jackson is a solid goal scorer, his passing and all-around playmaking (assists per game) need improvement. He should work on becoming more involved in creating chances for his teammates.
Suggestions for Improvement: Jackson could benefit from a playmaking addition, such as Kai Havertz, who has the ability to link up play and create opportunities for others.
Key Takeaways & Suggestions:
Finishing and clinicality remain the most common areas for improvement across the front-line players. Increasing shots on target and converting more of the chances created will help Chelsea become more potent in front of goal.
Playmaking and creativity are already strong, especially with players like Madueke, Mudryk, and Sancho providing assists. However, bringing in players like Salah or Saka could help balance out the squad's creativity and clinical finishing.
A more consistent goal scorer like Sterling or Mahrez would complement Chelsea’s current wingers and forward players by adding further attacking depth.
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I think this should be enough as we have covered on the performances of all our players for this season.
On the next post we shall see how we can find the suitable players based on our needs to complement with the available ones..but not without using Moneyball methods and based on my intuition as well.
See yaa!!!
#832922 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
2ND HALF 2023/2024 SEASON : INVINCIBLES, DOMINANCE AND QUADRUPLE
So far as we go through the second half of the season, after we altering our tactics and instructions based on the suggested improvements and enhancements from previous posts, fortunately we have easily dominate until the end.
Injuries, sudden drop of form and also challenges by our opponents, we fortunately able to face those strides using players' intelligence to navigate better on the pitch here.
For further highlights of the second half of the season, we would cover the key matches that shows the strides that we have faced, especially on the competitions we joined this season.
FEBRUARY 2024
KEY FIXTURES :
Chelsea vs Man United (Away) : 1 - 0 (3rd Feb 2024)
Chelsea vs Liverpool (Home) (EPL) : 3 - 1 (10th February 2024)
Chelsea vs Arsenal (Away) (EPL) : 3 - 1 (17th February 2024)
Chelsea vs Man United (Away) (Carabao Cup Final) : 3 - 0 (24th February 2024)
📊 Chelsea Match Statistics – February 2024
🔵 February 2024 – Tactical & Control Overview
Possession steadily increased across the four matches, peaking at 63% in the Carabao Cup Final vs. Man United.
Pass Accuracy was consistent and elite at 90–91% in all matches, highlighting control and technical proficiency.
xG rose match by match, reflecting more effective attacking setups (from 1.31 to 2.43).
Shots & On Target also increased, especially in the Carabao Final (18 shots, 6 on target), suggesting growing attacking confidence and clinical execution.
🔵 Attacking Evolution
1. Possession & Passing Quality
Possession Control fluctuated between 46% (vs Man United, away) and 57% (vs Arsenal, away), averaging around 52.5%, suggesting Chelsea were not obsessed with dominating possession but focused on efficient ball use.
Passing Accuracy stayed high across the board, averaging above 89%, with standout midfield metrics (up to 92% vs Arsenal). The side prioritised short, secure passing, particularly through midfield trios like Fernández–Lavia–Caicedo.
2. xG & Shot Efficiency
Chelsea’s xG consistently outperformed the opponent:
1.33 vs Man Utd (A),
1.45 vs Liverpool (H),
1.09 vs Arsenal (A),
2.02 vs Man Utd (Final).
This reflects growing shot quality and chance creation efficiency, with an average of 1.47 xG per game, despite relatively low shot volume (mostly under 10 shots per match).
🛡️ Defensive Solidity
1. Defensive Compactness
Chelsea allowed no more than 1 clear-cut chance in any match, including 0 shots on target allowed vs Man United (Carabao Final), indicating excellent defensive shape.
High interception and clearance counts by Badiashile, Colwill, and Caicedo, especially when under pressure.
2. Discipline
Despite defensive solidity, fouls averaged 13.25 per match, suggesting aggressive pressing. Several bookings (e.g., 6 yellow cards vs Man Utd in league) may require caution in high-stakes games.
🌟 Key Individual Contributions
1. ⚽ Goal Scorers
Match
Scorers
vs Man Utd (A)
Tosin Adarabioyo (Header)
vs Liverpool (H)
Enzo, Jackson, Sancho
vs Arsenal (A)
Sancho, Enzo, Cucurella
vs Man Utd (Final)
Nkunku, Enzo, Anselmino
2. 🧠 Creative Hub (Passing & Clear Cut Chances Created)
Enzo Fernández and Reece James led key passes and Clear Cut Chances Created
Enzo: 2–3 key passes per game, 2 Clear Cut Chances Created vs Liverpool.
Reece James: consistent wide distribution and crossing threat, also MoM vs Man Utd (A).
3. 🛡️ Defensive Standouts
Levi Colwill & Badiashile: Reliable in aerial duels (60%+ win rate), key ITC (interceptions) and CL (clearances).
Caicedo and Lavia: Strong in tackles and pressing in midfield zone, recovering second balls and initiating counters.
4. 🎯 Crossing & Wide Play
Wide delivery remained low-percentage but persistent:
Cross completion rates: 6%–38%.
Palmer and Mudryk provided most width, with Mudryk averaging 2–3 successful dribbles per game and high pressing energy.
⚙️ Tactical Evolution
1. Formation & Pressing
Base formation resembled a 4-3-3, with hybrid press:
Compact mid-block vs stronger teams (Man Utd, Arsenal),
High press and fast transitions vs Liverpool.
Back four remained stable, with rotations at fullback and some injury-enforced changes (Reece James, Caicedo).
2. Ball Progression Approach
Blended short build-up through Enzo & Lavia, then vertical switches to flanks via Palmer/Mudryk.
Nkunku dropped between lines to link, while Jackson stretched defenses with off-ball runs.
3. Playing Time Management
Minutes were well distributed:
Nkunku, Sancho, and Madueke were rotated in front 3,
Midfield was rotated with Pau Prim and Mudryk off the bench,
Depth was tested, especially during Cup final after James and Caicedo injuries.
4. Injury Concerns
Reece James and Caicedo suffered injuries vs Man Utd in the Cup Final. This affects defensive cover and midfield intensity going into March fixtures.
Squad depth is being utilized well, but replacements (e.g., Malo Gusto, Pau Prim) must step up.
📌 Summary Table
Category
Observation
Average Possession
~52.5% – flexible balance
Passing Accuracy
High (avg. >89%) – secure ball use
xG Avg
1.47 – quality over quantity
Defensive Shape
Strong – minimal shots on target conceded
Goal Distribution
Spread across 7 different players
Creative Drivers
Enzo, Palmer, James
Tactical Shape
4-3-3 hybrid, adaptable press
Injury Watch
Reece James, Caicedo
MARCH 2024
KEY FIXTURES :
Chelsea vs Lille (Away) (UECL R16 First Leg) : 1 - 0 (6th March 2024)
Chelsea vs Lille (Home) (UECL R16 Second Leg) : 3 - 0 (13th March 2024)
Chelsea vs Newcastle (Away) (FA Cup Quarter Final) : 3 - 2 (ET) (16th March 2024)
Chelsea vs Aston Villa (Away) (EPL) : 3 - 1 (20th March 2024)
📊 Statistical Summary Table
Match
Possession
Pass Accuracy
Shots (On Target)
xG
Goals
Key Players
vs Lille (A)
66%
90% (563/627)
14 (5)
1.61
1
Pedro Neto (⚽)
vs Lille (H)
67%
90% (573/636)
18 (7)
1.90
3
Palmer (⚽⚽), Adarabioyo (⚽)
vs Newcastle (A, FA Cup)
58%
89% (694/777)
18 (6)
2.43
Enzo (⚽⚽), Madueke (⚽)
vs Aston Villa (A, EPL)
52%
89% (485/548)
11 (6)
2.16
Palmer (⚽), Sancho (⚽), Pau Prim (⚽)
🔵 March 2024 – Tactical & Control Overview
Possession was even higher vs. Lille (66–67%) but dipped to 52% against Aston Villa, showing flexibility.
Pass Accuracy remained high at 89–90%, indicating continued control in build-up.
xG peaked at 2.43 vs Newcastle (FA Cup QF), pointing to a tactical setup creating high-quality chances.
Shots & On Target remained productive, with double-digit shots in all games and 6–7 on target in top matches.
🔵 Attacking Evolution
🔸 Possession & Passing Quality:
Maintained dominant possession in all games (52–67%).
High pass accuracy (89–90%), showing a well-controlled midfield, largely due to Fernández, Palmer, and Dewsbury-Hall.
Transition phases remained smooth and progressive.
🔸 Shot Creation & xG:
Averaging 15+ shots per game, Chelsea became more clinical in March.
xG increasing across matches — 2.43 vs Newcastle and 2.16 vs Villa signal Chelsea’s capability to generate high-quality chances consistently.
Clear cut chances created in every game except Lille (A).
🛡️ Defensive Solidity
Strong tackling and intercepting duo: Chalobah and Adarabioyo recorded >90% success rate.
Against Newcastle and Lille, Chelsea limited opposition shots significantly (only 3 for Lille both legs).
Defensive line’s positioning improved — minimal goals conceded and zero clear chances allowed in both UECL legs.
🌟 Key Individual Contributions
⚽ Goal Scorers:
Pedro Neto vs Lille (1st leg)
Palmer (2), Adarabioyo vs Lille (2nd leg)
Madueke, Enzo (2) vs Newcastle
Palmer, Sancho, Pau Prim vs Villa
🎯 Creative Hubs:
Cole Palmer: Direct involvement in multiple goals, several key passes, assists.
Enzo Fernández: Central creative outlet with long switches and progressive passes.
Marc Cucurella & James: Strong full-back support roles, steady in crosses and passing from deep.
🧱 Defensive Standouts:
Trevoh Chalobah & Adarabioyo: Dominated aerial duels, clearances, and blocks.
Marc Cucurella: Valuable in both transitions — tackled consistently and assisted attacking flow.
⚔️ Crossing & Wide Play:
Cross accuracy remains low (5–18%), but wide players like Mudryk, Madueke, and James stretch play efficiently, allowing central midfielders to create.
⚙️ Tactical Evolution
🔹 Formation & Pressing:
Mix of 4-2-3-1 and 3-4-2-1, adjusted based on opponent.
Pressing intensity remained consistent (high intensity sprints >120 each game).
🔹 Ball Progression Approach:
Combined approach: short passing to control, but capable of counter-attack bursts, especially seen in goals vs Newcastle and Villa.
🔹 Playing Time Management:
Rotation managed well:
Rested Nkunku, Jackson, James in some fixtures.
Substitutes (Mudryk, Madueke, Chalobah) frequently contributed in second half.
🔹 Injury Concerns:
Reece James and Caicedo had previous knocks but returned effectively.
No new major injuries recorded during March.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
APRIL 2024
KEY FIXTURES :
Chelsea vs Tottenham Hotspur (Home) (UECL Quarter Final 1st Leg) : 2 - 0 (10th April 2024)
Chelsea vs Tottenham Hotspur (Away) (UECL Quarter Final 2nd Leg) : 2 - 1 (17th April 2024)
Chelsea vs Newcastle (Home) (EPL) : 3 - 0 (27th April 2024)
📊 Statistical Summary Table – April 2024
🧠 Narrative Insights & Statistical Summary
⚔️ Attacking Evolution:
xG Output: Consistently strong with 2.28 (Spurs Home), 1.17 (Spurs Away), and 1.76 (Newcastle) — confirming Chelsea’s clinical finishing and sustained threat.
Shots & Accuracy: High shot volumes (15–17 per match) with good on-target rates (7 each in wins over Spurs Home & Newcastle).
Efficiency: Even with moderate xG at Tottenham (Away), Chelsea converted their chances—demonstrating a sharp edge in transition phases.
🧠 Possession & Passing Quality:
Control vs Spurs (Home): 61% possession and 88% pass accuracy showed dominance in midfield.
Reduced Control vs Spurs (Away): Only 47% possession, yet maintained an 86% pass accuracy—highlighting composure under pressure and vertical penetration.
Vs Newcastle: Outstanding 91% pass accuracy and 58% possession — Chelsea dictated tempo.
🛡️ Defensive Solidity:
Tackles Won: Rose steadily across all matches, peaking at 78% vs Newcastle.
Headers: Still a weakness with percentages hovering around mid-40s, though Newcastle were kept to minimal aerial threat.
Clean Sheets: 2 clean sheets in 3 — solidified by compact backline and excellent pressing triggers.
🧑🎨 Key Individual Contributions
🎯 Goal Scorers:
Cole Palmer: Continues to be the clutch finisher, scoring in both legs vs Tottenham and Newcastle.
Levi Colwill & Caicedo: Surprising but impactful contributions, each netting vital goals against Spurs.
Christopher Nkunku: Bright return, scored and assisted vs Newcastle — impactful in central spaces.
🎩 Creative Hubs:
Enzo Fernández & Pedro Neto: High KEY passes, especially Enzo (5 vs Spurs Home) and Neto (multiple dribbles and crosses).
Nkunku vs Newcastle: Registered 4 key passes and 2 chances created — true playmaker role reestablished.
🛡️ Defensive Standouts:
Trevoh Chalobah & Tosin Adarabioyo: Excelled in interceptions and clearances, showing excellent anticipation.
Marc Cucurella: Despite bookings, aggressive pressing and aerial battles were instrumental.
↔️ Crossing & Wide Play:
Low Accuracy: Cross completion around 10–11% — highlighting room for improvement in flank deliveries.
High Volume vs Newcastle: More attempts but low conversion. Suggests opportunity for more cut-backs or inverted movement.
🧭 Tactical Evolution
📐 Formation & Pressing:
High Press Triggers: Noticeable in matches like Newcastle — recovered high and transitioned quickly.
Compact Midfield: Fernández, Caicedo, and Enzo rotated efficiently — providing cover and link-up.
🧱 Ball Progression Approach:
Hybrid Build-up: Effective blend of direct passes (Palmer’s vertical runs) and short combinations (Nkunku, Enzo).
Counter-attack Exploits: Especially away to Spurs — capitalized on spaces left behind with just 47% possession.
⏱️ Playing Time Management:
Consistent Core: Palmer, Enzo, and Tosin remain vital.
Rotation: Sancho, Nkunku, and Jackson rotated effectively, keeping squad fresh across UEL and EPL.
🚑 Injury Concerns:
Minimal Disruption: Key players are consistently involved, and rotation appears proactive rather than reactive to injuries.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
MAY 2024
KEY FIXTURES :
Chelsea vs Braga (Home) (UECL Semi Final 1st Leg) : 2 - 0 (1st May 2024)
Chelsea vs Braga (Away) (UECL Semi Final 2nd Leg) : 1 - 0 (8th May 2024)
Chelsea vs Leeds United (Neutral) (FA Cup Final) : 1 - 0 (ET) (25th May 2024)
Chelsea vs Bologna (Away) (UECL Final) : 3 - 1 (29th May 2024)
📊 Statistical Summary Table – May 2024
Match
Possession
Pass Accuracy
Shots (On Target)
xG
Goals
Key Players
vs Braga (H, UECL Semi Final 1st Leg)
57%
90% (511/570)
24 (10)
3.20
2
Cucurella (⚽), Palmer (⚽ pen)
vs Braga (A, UECL Semi Final 2nd Leg)
52%
91% (497/549)
10 (5)
0.77
1
Cucurella (⚽)
vs Leeds United (Neutral, FA Cup Final)
55%
91% (739/808)
12 (5)
2.11
1
Jackson (⚽ 118')
vs Bologna (UECL Final, Neutral)
53%
90% (488/541)
9 (5)
1.37
3
Palmer (⚽), Enzo (⚽), Madueke (⚽)
🔄 Attacking Evolution
🔹 Possession & Passing Quality
Maintained >90% passing accuracy across all matches.
Dominated ball progression especially in the Braga home leg and Leeds final, dictating tempo.
Showed versatility in adjusting possession-based build-up (short passes) with effective verticality when needed.
🔹 Final Third Penetration
High shot volume vs Braga 1st leg (24) and Leeds (12).
xG consistently high showing good quality of chances, especially in finals.
Crossing still inefficient (<30% in all), showing over-reliance on inside channels.
🛡️ Defensive Solidity
Conceded 0 goals in 3 out of 4 matches.
Braga and Leeds limited to 0 clear cut chances.
Chelsea averaged >75% tackle success and showed strong compact shape.
⭐ Key Individual Contributions
⚽ Goal Scorers:
Braga 1st Leg: Cucurella, Cole Palmer (pen)
Braga 2nd Leg: Cucurella
Leeds Final: Nicolas Jackson (ET 118’)
Bologna Final: Palmer, Fernández, Madueke
🎯 Creative Hubs:
Caicedo: Most key passes (6) vs Braga (1st leg), controlled midfield transitions.
Enzo Fernández: Assisted Palmer and created 2 Clear Cut Chances Created vs Bologna.
Mudryk & Palmer: Constant threat on wings and half-spaces.
🛡️ Defensive Standouts:
Cucurella & Colwill: Consistently high tackling %, clean aerial work, and forward passing.
Moisés Caicedo: Dominant in interceptions and tackles, especially in cup finals.
Gusto vs Braga (2nd leg): 100% tackle rate, minimal fouls.
🧠 Tactical Evolution
⚙️ Formation & Pressing
Continued 4-3-3 base with fluid transition into 3-4-2-1 while in possession.
High pressing effective vs Braga and Bologna, forcing errors near final third.
🧭 Ball Progression Approach
Combination of short-passing buildup and explosive forward play via Palmer, Madueke, and Mudryk.
Cole Palmer often dropped deeper to link midfield to attack effectively.
⏱️ Playing Time Management
Smart rotation across Braga legs: Nkunku, Jackson, Madueke, and Lavia all rotated in and out.
Palmer played majority of big games, showing fitness and tactical importance.
🏥 Injury Concerns
Nkunku injured vs Braga 1st leg, did not return for rest of May.
Madueke injured vs Bologna, potential concern moving forward.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Comparisons in between February - May 2024 matches so far
🔵 Attacking Metrics (Top Chart):
Goals Scored: Peaked in February with 2.5 average goals per match, showing sharp finishing.
xG (Expected Goals): Highest in February, consistent drop into April and May.
Shots: April was the most active shooting month (avg. 14), showing greater offensive pressure.
Shots on Target: May had the highest accuracy, reflecting more clinical finishing in fewer attempts.
🟠 Tactical & Control Metrics (Bottom Chart):
Possession %: Stable across months (around 53–56%), suggesting consistent midfield control.
Pass Accuracy %: Strong throughout, highest in February/March (~90%).
Tackles Won %: Highest in March, indicating more aggressive pressing.
Crosses Completed %: Significant rise in May (20%), showing increasing wing play contribution.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
⚽️ Chelsea 2023/2024 Season Performance Summary
🔄 Overall Trajectory
First Half (Aug–Dec 2023): Mixed results, inconsistency in finishing, loss of control in midfield against higher pressing sides. Mid-table standing at times.
Second Half (Jan–May 2024): Significant improvement in attacking efficiency, game control, and tactical identity, culminating in three major trophies (Carabao Cup, FA Cup, UECL).
📈 Attacking Evolution Comparison
🔹 Summary: In the second half, Chelsea increased shot volume and quality, resulting in better finishing and chance conversion, especially during February and May.
👥 Key Individual Contributions Shift
Player
First Half (Highlights)
Second Half (Highlights)
Cole Palmer
Emerging role, flashes of creativity
Became key creator & finisher (UECL Final scorer)
Enzo Fernández
Inconsistent influence
Stabilized midfield, improved key passes, scored in finals
Mudryk/Nkunku
Frequent injuries, limited end product
Improved contribution but injury concerns persisted
Caicedo
Adaptation phase, frequent fouls
Became defensive linchpin, interceptions leader
Marc Cucurella
Average form
Transformed to a consistent two-way threat
Jorgensen
Backup GK
Became crucial in knockout matches (clean sheets)
🔍 Tactical & Control Metrics Comparison
Metric
Aug–Dec 2023
Jan–May 2024
Trend
Possession %
50–52%
↑ 54–57%
✅ Better control
Pass Accuracy %
~83–85%
↑ 88–91%
✅ More precise
Tackles Won %
~65–70%
↑ 75–79%
✅ More aggressive & clean
Cross Completion %
~5–8%
↑ 10–20%
✅ More productive in wide play
Clear Cut Chances
Rare
↑ More frequent (Feb–Apr)
✅ Creativity increased
🔹 Summary: Chelsea transitioned from a team with unstable midfield control and transitional vulnerability to one with stable build-up, pressing structure, and attacking fluidity.
🧠 Tactical Evolution Across Halves
Tactical Aspect
First Half
Second Half
Formation Identity
Inconsistent (4-2-3-1, 3-4-3 rotations)
Stable 4-3-3/4-2-3-1 with clear pressing roles
Build-up Play
Direct, vertical
More possession-based and composed
Pressing System
Patchy, easily bypassed
Cohesive mid/high press, better triggers
Defensive Shape
Vulnerable under pressure
Solid blocks, structured transitions
Crossing & Wide Use
Lacked effectiveness
Improved in April–May through fullbacks
🔧 Metrics Improvement Overview
Improved Metric
Comment
🎯 Shot Accuracy & xG
From wasteful finishing to more clinical
📐 Pass Accuracy
Especially in final third
🛡️ Defensive Actions
More blocks, interceptions, clean tackling
🚀 Wide Play & Crosses
Incremental growth in delivery success
⚠️ Metrics to Improve for 2024/25
Consistent Shot Conversion in Tight Games
→ Especially when facing low blocks or in away games.
Injury Management & Squad Rotation
→ Nkunku, Mudryk, and key defenders missed critical periods.
Discipline (Fouls, Cards)
→ High foul counts in big matches (e.g. FA Cup Final vs Leeds).
Sustained Creativity
→ Create more clear-cut chances from central midfielders (not only Palmer).
🏁 Conclusion
Chelsea’s second half of the 2023/24 season marked a resurgence in form, driven by clear tactical structure, improved team chemistry, and standout performances. The team evolved from a mid-table outfit to a dominant force in knockout football, securing three trophies and solidifying an upward trend.
With further enhancements in finishing efficiency, injury depth, and discipline, Chelsea could emerge as Premier League title contenders in the upcoming 2024/25 season.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
That's the end of the second half of 2023/2024 season. Seems that we able to achieve domination throughout the season despite 1st half deficiencies as explained above.
But however it doesn't made it as a barrier to strive further with improvisations and tactical tweaks to dominate thus gaining 3 points in every match.
On the next series, we'll focusing on overall performance of every single of our players to check if there's any improvisations in terms of incoming transfers whether to increase squad depth or to strengthen our team more as we have confirmedly qualify for Champions League next season.
Nevertheless, there's something surprising that I would do for incoming transfers by which Brentford and Brighton has done in recent times. That's only just a hint for now. We'll see on the next series further.
See yaa!!!
#832810 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
2ND HALF 2023/2024 SEASON : CONTINUING OUR JOURNEY OF DOMINANCE FOR SECOND HALF
In this series, we would provide the summary of what is happening on matches faced during January 2024
Match
Shots
On Target
XG
Goals
Possession
Pass Completion
Tackles Won
Headers Won
Fouls
Crosses Completed
High Intensity Sprints
vs Bournemouth (Away)
21
13
3.78
4
65%
90%
86%
54%
11
24%
135
vs Watford (FA Cup)
16
6
2.62
2
64%
89%
72%
60%
17
23%
109
vs Liverpool (Carabao 1st Leg)
9
6
1.62
2
55%
89%
75%
69%
12
11%
140
vs Fulham (Home)
13
6
1.7
3
61%
88%
72%
87%
10
32%
104
vs Liverpool (Carabao 2nd Leg)
9
6
0.81
2
63%
91%
69%
91%
15
21%
140
vs Oxford United (FA Cup)
16
6
2.62
2
64%
89%
72%
89%
12
24%
105
vs Nottingham Forest (Home)
12
7
3.21
2
63%
90%
83%
46%
12
13%
117
Key Insights from the Statistical Analysis:
1. Attacking Evolution:
Possession: Chelsea averaged 58–66% possession, with their highest at 69% vs Newcastle. This shows strong ball control and midfield dominance, particularly in their home fixtures. Their passing accuracy remained consistently high across all matches, ranging from 86% to 92%.
Clinical Finishing: Chelsea's clinical finishing was notable, particularly against Bournemouth (4 goals from 11 shots) and Watford (4 goals from 10 shots). Nkunku and Mudryk were crucial in their attacking performances, contributing both in scoring and creating chances.
Key Players in Attack: Nkunku, Mudryk, and Palmer were key goal scorers, with Nkunku providing a penalty against Man City and goals in Fulham. Mudryk also added goals and assists, showing his flexibility in attack.
2. Defensive Solidity:
Tackles & Interceptions: Chelsea's defensive actions were strong, with 80% tackle success across matches. Caicedo, in particular, made important interceptions in midfield, while Colwill and Badiashile were dominant in aerial duels (e.g., 70% headers won vs West Ham).
Clearances & Defensive Structure: Chelsea’s defensive structure allowed them to limit clear-cut chances for the opposition (with no CCC conceded in most games), especially against teams like Fulham and Liverpool.
Key Defensive Players: Levi Colwill was especially important in matches like Tottenham and Liverpool, helping to clear dangerous balls in high-pressure moments.
3. Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation:
Midfield Control: Enzo Fernández was instrumental in dictating the tempo of the game, consistently registering key passes in almost every match. His connection with Caicedo ensured Chelsea's midfield dominance and ball retention.
Wide Play: Mudryk, Palmer, and James were vital in exploiting the width of the pitch, with Cucurella providing strong support on the left. Despite some inconsistency in crossing accuracy (around 20–30%), the team's overall offensive system was fluid and effective.
Key Playmakers: Mudryk’s dribbling and Palmer’s creativity were essential in unlocking defenses. Cucurella and James used their pace to get to the byline and deliver crosses into dangerous areas.
4. Tactical Evolution:
Formation & Pressing: Chelsea employed a 4-3-3 / 4-2-3-1 formation across all games, with fluidity in attack. Nkunku’s role as a false 9 in several matches helped link the midfield to the attack. The pressing strategy was highly effective in regaining possession quickly, especially in games like Liverpool and Tottenham, where they won the ball high up the pitch.
Ball Progression Approach: Chelsea balanced quick counter-attacks (especially against Brentford and Man City) with more possession-based play when needed. Their quick transitions from defense to attack were key to creating overloads in wide areas, particularly with players like Mudryk and Palmer.
Playing Time Management: Effective squad rotation was visible, especially in non-league matches like the Carabao Cup. Players like Mudryk and Madueke contributed off the bench, keeping the intensity high. However, the injury to Nkunku showed the need for careful management of key attacking players.
Injury Concerns: Nkunku’s injury affected Chelsea's offensive depth but was managed well with Mudryk stepping up. The rotation system, particularly for wide players like Mudryk and James, will be key to maintaining fitness and avoiding burnout.
Conclusion:
Chelsea has continued to evolve tactically, with improved ball progression, a more dynamic offensive setup, and solid defensive performances. Nkunku, Mudryk, and Caicedo have been the standout performers, while Fernández continues to provide the creativity in midfield. Chelsea’s high pressing and possession-based play have allowed them to dominate most matches, though crossing accuracy and defensive transitions remain areas for improvement. Player rotation and injury management will be crucial as they compete across multiple competitions.
#832797 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
2ND HALF 2023/2024 SEASON : JANUARY TRANSFER WINDOW
After making impressive progress throughout the first half of the season, in January transfer window we do receive extra transfer war chest of £52m for my disposal to top-up any players necessary for squad depth.
With due necessities to focus on long-term youth development, I've bought the players below;
Although not so much as we do focus on adding squad depth, but those players were important as anytime soon our players can be pickup by any European teams with highest fees possible, so those players here may do have reasonable future (perhaps) to give some challenge to readily available players in our disposal.
Also, at the same time I do decide to loan out some of our youth players to seek for more game time to garner their development process as well
And one of them that I truly appreciate the most is Abbosbek Fayzullayev, Uzbek player bought from CSKA Moscow for 8.25m pound.
As you can see here, Abbosbek is truly a hidden gem that release much of the burden that Palmer currently carrying for Chelsea in our save.
And I'm currently planning for him to go straight to the senior team on summer window to adapt the Premier League demands before slowly implementing him into our system for next season, thus further twist and turns may be expected on next season to further solidify Chelsea's dominance to replicate Roman Abramovich's era.
The next player worthwhile to be discussed a little bit is Pau Prim, bought from Barcelona Atletic (formerly known as Barcelona B team)
This guy has good technique, impressive vision and good passing, worthwhile to mention his determination and flair that may contribute towards possible last piece of puzzle to be a backup behind Enzo Fernandez.
I'm not so sure yet how it can be implemented here, but I already put him to train under Segundo Volante (Attack) role, which complements the same role as Enzo Fernandez in our system further.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Only a short one here as I did not plan much of the winter transfer window here due to most of our players are already recovered from their injuries, only buying them to top-up this and there so it may act as emergency cover for the time being.
So we'll continue further our dominance on the second half of the season on next series.
See yaa!!
#832752 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
In this post we shall see the key analyses that we can retrieve from first half of our season that we can try to fix, improvise and enhance further
___________________________________________________________________________________________
1. Dynamism
Analysis:
Chelsea's style of play across these matches has evolved in terms of dynamism. They demonstrated quick transitions, particularly in games like Chelsea vs Fulham (3-0) and Chelsea vs Tottenham (2-1). The counter-attacking style was prominent, but so was their ability to switch to a possession-based approach when required. Their pressing intensity was high, especially against Tottenham and Fulham, allowing them to win back possession quickly and exploit spaces behind the opposition.
Fixation:
Chelsea's offensive dynamism largely relies on quick transitions, exploiting the width of the pitch and the pace of players like Mudryk and Palmer. However, in some matches, they became predictable in terms of attacking patterns and sometimes lacked creativity when facing deep defensive blocks.
Improvisation:
To improve, Chelsea should add more variation in build-up play. This includes not only relying on fast transitions but also working on patient possession and tactical switching of play to drag defenders out of position. Chelsea could look to create more triangular passing lanes in midfield to increase their offensive dynamism.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
2. Formation
Analysis:
Chelsea predominantly used a 4-2-3-1 / 4-3-3 formation in these matches, with Nkunku, Mudryk, Madueke, and Palmer rotating in attacking roles. This formation allowed them to maintain control in the midfield, provide width from the full-backs (e.g., James, Cucurella), and create overloads in the wide areas. Against teams like Tottenham and Fulham, the 4-2-3-1 shape was effective in breaking down compact defenses, while the 4-3-3 offered more fluidity for Nkunku and Palmer to interchange positions.
Fixation:
The 4-3-3 / 4-2-3-1 formations are working well for Chelsea in terms of attacking balance, with Nkunku’s flexibility allowing him to drop deep and create overloads in midfield while also acting as a central attacking threat. However, Chelsea can sometimes struggle when forced to break down deeper defensive setups, relying heavily on wide crosses or fast breaks.
Improvisation:
To enhance flexibility, **Chelsea could experiment with a more fluid 4-1-4-1 or 4-3-2-1 when facing deeper defenses. This would allow Caicedo or Fernández to provide more protection at the back while letting the wingers (e.g., Madueke and Mudryk) invert more and provide additional central passing options. This would help stretch the defense vertically and create more direct attacking threats.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
3. Dominant Side of the Pitch When Attacking
Analysis:
Chelsea's primary attacking focus has been down the wings, especially through Mudryk on the left and Palmer on the right. Cucurella and James provide the width, while Nkunku and Madueke look to exploit the spaces between the opposition's full-backs and center-backs. Chelsea vs Fulham (3-0) saw their left flank being particularly potent, with Mudryk’s pace and Cucurella’s overlaps creating several dangerous situations.
Fixation:
While the left flank is typically more dangerous for Chelsea, especially with Mudryk, James on the right could be further utilized by having Palmer and James creating combinations for more central penetration. Nkunku's ability to play as a false 9 allows for flexibility, but Chelsea sometimes focuses on predictable attacks down the wing, which can be neutralized by compact defenses.
Improvisation:
Chelsea could further centralize their attack, using Nkunku and Madueke to play combination passes through the middle to draw in defenders, allowing for better penetration. Playing more diagonal passes from the flanks into the middle could allow James and Mudryk to move inside and challenge the center-backs directly.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
4. Game Rotations
Analysis:
Chelsea has displayed a good rotation system across these matches, which is essential for maintaining fitness throughout the season. The rotation of players like Madueke, Mudryk, and Jackson has given Chelsea flexibility in attack. However, players like Nkunku and Palmer have been heavily involved in almost every match, leading to possible fatigue in tight fixtures.
Fixation:
While Chelsea’s rotation has been solid, over-reliance on certain players like Nkunku and Palmer could lead to burnout in the long term. Mudryk, Madueke, and Caicedo have also seen relatively consistent game time, showing the importance of keeping the squad fresh.
Improvisation:
Chelsea should rotate key players like Nkunku and Palmer more frequently in non-crucial matches (e.g., Carabao Cup, UECL) to ensure their top players are rested for bigger matches. Also, incorporating more youth players like Malo Gusto or Harrison Murray-Campbell in these fixtures can help maintain momentum.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
5. Build-up Play
Analysis:
Chelsea has generally used a combination of both tiki-taka and counter-attacking styles. Against teams like Man City and Fulham, they showed quick counter-attacking football to exploit high defensive lines. However, against more compact defenses, Chelsea found success with tiki-taka — short, quick passes in tight spaces — especially in games like Tottenham and West Ham.
Fixation:
In games where counter-attacking was required (e.g., Man City), Chelsea did a good job exploiting wide spaces and utilizing the pace of Mudryk and Palmer. In games where tiki-taka was needed (e.g., Tottenham), the team relied on midfield triangles and quick passes between Caicedo, Fernández, and Nkunku to move the ball forward.
Improvisation:
To improve, Chelsea could balance their style further by using counter-attacks more selectively and focusing more on tiki-taka when facing deep-lying defenses. Implementing more fluidity in central passing lanes can help break down more organized teams. Mudryk and Palmer should be given more freedom to cut inside and challenge defenders with central dribbles rather than just relying on wide crosses. Enzo Fernández can be a key orchestrator in this, as his ability to move the ball quickly and break defensive lines is crucial.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Conclusion:
Dynamism: Chelsea has shown dynamic attacking play, mixing counter-attacks and tiki-taka effectively. However, further variation in build-up play can keep opposition defenses guessing.
Formation: The 4-3-3 system is working well but can be more fluid with occasional switches to a 4-2-3-1 to allow better midfield dominance when facing high pressing teams.
Dominant Side of the Pitch: The left side (Mudryk + Cucurella) remains Chelsea’s most potent, but more emphasis on the right side (Palmer + James) could help balance the attack.
Game Rotation: Chelsea’s rotation system works but needs further focus on managing Nkunku and Palmer’s game time.
Build-up Play: A combination of counter-attacking and tiki-taka is effective, but incorporating more central play and varied attacking movements can further improve their offense.
This analysis shows that Chelsea’s attacking system is evolving into a more balanced and dynamic one, but they can further improve by introducing more central movements and ensuring key player rotation for long-term success.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
After we have analysed the trends of the key analyses for the first half of the season, we shall go through our tactical notebooks further to make further improvisation so that we can continue dominate the game further.
In the next series, we shall see how we can further dominate for the second half of the season, perhaps winning all the cups we compete, who knows right?
Alright, we'll meet you guys at the next series.
See ya!!!
#832529 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
Let's see how does it goes after we go through the last matches that we covered on previous posts so far for upcoming matches until January Winter transfer window here.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
SEPTEMBER 2023
🔵 Chelsea Match Summary
Chelsea vs Man United (Home): 1–0
Chelsea vs Liverpool (Away): 3–0
Chelsea vs Panathinaikos (Away): 3–0
Chelsea vs Arsenal (Home): 4–1
Chelsea vs Ipswich Town (Away): 5–0
⚔️ Attacking Evolution
🔹 Possession & Passing Quality
-Possession was consistently dominant across all matches, indicating Chelsea's tactical control:
-Man Utd – 50%
-Liverpool – 55%
-Panathinaikos – 52%
-Arsenal – 56%
-Ipswich – 68%
-Passing Accuracy (ATT/CMP):
-Ranged from 89% to 91% overall across matches.
-High midfield and attacking third completion:
-Panathinaikos: 90% (Mid), 85% (Attack)
-Arsenal: 91% (Mid), 82% (Attack)
-Key passing stats:
-Chelsea vs Liverpool: 500/558 (90%)
-Chelsea vs Arsenal: 544/595 (91%)
-Chelsea vs Ipswich: 575/640 (90%)
🔹 Defensive Solidity
-Tackle Success Rates (KEY):
-Man Utd: 81% (26/32)
-Panathinaikos: 82% (23/28)
-Ipswich: 77% (20/26)
-Headers Won:
-Strong aerial duels in key games:
-Man Utd: 65% (22/34)
-Ipswich: 52% (22/42)
-Panathinaikos: 47% (15/32)
-Interceptions (ITC) & Clearances (CL):
-Consistent contributions from defenders like Tosin Adarabioyo, Trevoh Chalobah, Marc Cucurella, and Malo Gusto across all games.
-Chelsea maintained compact defensive lines with minimal CCC conceded (e.g., 0 clear-cut chances conceded vs Liverpool, Arsenal, and Panathinaikos).
🌟 Key Individual Contributions
🔹 Goal Scorers
-vs Man Utd: Malo Gusto ⚽️
-vs Liverpool: Cole Palmer ⚽️, Tosin Adarabioyo ⚽️, Noni Madueke ⚽️
-vs Panathinaikos: Trevoh Chalobah ⚽️, Nicolas Jackson ⚽️, Marc Cucurella ⚽️
-vs Arsenal: Enzo Fernández ⚽️, Marc Cucurella ⚽️, Jadon Sancho ⚽️, Cole Palmer ⚽️
-vs Ipswich: Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall ⚽️⚽️, Christopher Nkunku ⚽️, Trevoh Chalobah ⚽️, Mykhaylo Mudryk ⚽️
🔹 Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation (KEY, CCC)
Enzo Fernández:
Multiple key passes and assists across matches.
Arsenal: 2 assists, 3 key passes, 2 CCC (Man of the Match).
Cole Palmer:
Liverpool: 1 goal, 2 key passes.
Ipswich: 4 key passes, 1 assist.
Marc Cucurella:
Contributed key passes, crosses, and a goal (vs Arsenal and Panathinaikos).
Noni Madueke:
Ipswich: 4 key passes, 2 assists, 1 goal.
🔹 Defensive Standouts
-Tosin Adarabioyo:
High clearance, 100% tackle success vs Panathinaikos and Liverpool.
-Trevoh Chalobah:
Goals + defensive contribution (e.g., 3 key tackles vs Ipswich, 100% tackles won vs Panathinaikos).
-Caicedo & Fernández:
Anchored the midfield with above 90% passing accuracy and strong interceptions.
🔹 Crossing & Wide Play
Cross Completion ranged:
Highest: 35% vs Arsenal (6/17)
Lowest: 13% vs Panathinaikos (3/24)
Consistent threat from wide areas: Malo Gusto, Madueke, Cucurella all active crossers.
🔄 Tactical Evolution
🔹 Formation & Pressing
Chelsea operated with a dynamic 4-2-3-1 / 4-3-3, with fluid transitions.
High-Intensity Sprints:
Man Utd: 106
Liverpool: 138
Arsenal: 157
Ipswich: 100
Shows consistent pressing intensity, especially vs top teams.
🔹 Ball Progression Approach
-Strong reliance on:
Fernández + Caicedo for vertical progression.
Wing overloads through Madueke, Cucurella, and Gusto.
Short, high-accuracy passing chains emphasized over long balls.
🔹 Playing Time Management
-Substitutions and rotation were efficient:
Regular sub appearances from Nkunku, Mudryk, Sancho, Murray-Campbell, James.
Cup matches (Ipswich, Panathinaikos) were used to rotate squad while keeping shape intact.
🔹 Injury Concerns
-Levi Colwill & Filip Jørgensen marked with injuries during the span.
-Benoît Badiashile subbed early in Ipswich match due to possible knock.
-Depth effectively managed, no red cards across matches.
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OCTOBER 2023
🔵 Match Series Summary:
Chelsea vs RC Lens (Home) – 2-1
Chelsea vs Leicester (Away) – 3-1
Chelsea vs Brentford (Home) – 2-0
Chelsea vs TSC (Away) – 3-0
Chelsea vs Southampton (Away) – 3-0
⚔️ Attacking Evolution
🔹 Possession & Passing Quality
Match
Possession
Pass Completion
vs RC Lens
68%
92% (614/671)
vs Leicester
70%
92% (662/720)
vs Brentford
58%
90% (519/577)
vs TSC
72%
90% (542/603)
vs Southampton
58%
90% (465/516)
Chelsea’s control of possession was outstanding, averaging ~65% across all matches.
Their passing across all thirds was elite, with midfield passes exceeding 90% and attacking passes staying above 82%, showing well-coordinated progression and retention.
🔹 Defensive Solidity
Match
Tackle Success
Headers Won
Clear-Cut Chances Conceded
vs RC Lens
83% (15/18)
62%
0
vs Leicester
83% (15/18)
60%
1
vs Brentford
85% (34/40)
41%
0
vs TSC
80% (8/10)
52%
0
vs Southampton
74% (17/23)
30%
0
Chelsea’s defensive block has been reliable, conceding only 2 goals across 5 matches and 0 clear-cut chances in 4/5 matches.
Tackle efficiency consistently high, especially vs Brentford and Leicester.
Aerial performance slightly varied, particularly lower vs Southampton.
🌟 Key Individual Contributions
🔹 Goal Scorers
Match
Goals Scored
vs RC Lens
Sancho ⚽, Caicedo ⚽
vs Leicester
Nkunku ⚽⚽⚽ (hat-trick)
vs Brentford
Nkunku ⚽, Jackson ⚽
vs TSC
Jackson ⚽, Madueke ⚽, Caicedo ⚽
vs Southampton
Fernández ⚽, Palmer ⚽, Mudryk ⚽
Christopher Nkunku stole the show with a hat-trick vs Leicester and another goal vs Brentford.
Moises Caicedo scored twice (RC Lens & TSC), adding end-product to his ball-winning role.
Mudryk, Palmer, and Jackson maintained offensive consistency.
🔹 Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation
Player
Highlights
Cole Palmer
3 key passes vs Southampton, 2 assists vs TSC, consistent xG creation
Enzo Fernández
Avg 90%+ pass accuracy, 2 assists vs Southampton, CCC vs Leicester
Noni Madueke
3 key passes vs RC Lens, 1 goal & 1 assist vs TSC
Marc Cucurella
High passing accuracy (93%+), assists vs Leicester and Brentford
Palmer and Fernández are key progression players in midfield and half-spaces.
Madueke offers width, dribbling, and final third penetration.
🔹 Defensive Standouts
Player
Defensive Metrics
Tosin Adarabioyo
100% tackles vs RC Lens & Southampton, key headers vs TSC
Reece James
High tackle win rate, impactful pressing (Brentford, Southampton)
Levi Colwill
Dominant in aerial duels vs Leicester, key blocks vs Lens
Moisés Caicedo
100% tackle vs Lens, TSC; also active in interceptions and pressing
🔹 Crossing & Wide Play
Match
Cross Completion
Key Contributors
vs RC Lens
24% (6/25)
Madueke, Palmer
vs Leicester
17% (5/29)
Nkunku, Palmer
vs Brentford
20% (2/10)
Madueke, Cucurella
vs TSC
35% (14/40)
Cucurella, Palmer, Neto
vs Southampton
8% (3/36)
Palmer, Madueke, James
Crossing accuracy peaked vs TSC (35%) and dropped vs Southampton.
Wide players (Madueke, Cucurella) remained consistent threats on overlaps and underlaps.
⚙️ Tactical Evolution
🔹 Formation & Pressing
4-2-3-1 / 4-3-3 hybrid, with flexibility between Palmer as CAM or RW.
High-intensity sprints confirm a pressing identity:
vs Leicester: 135 sprints
vs TSC: 108
vs Southampton: 103
🔹 Ball Progression Approach
Relying on short passing triangles in midfield:
Fernández and Caicedo progressing from deep.
Palmer dropping in between lines to link up.
Frequent switches to wide overloads via Cucurella or James.
🔹 Playing Time Management
Heavy use of rotation: consistent subs like Nkunku, Madueke, Murray-Campbell, and Mudryk.
TSC and Southampton fixtures used to manage minutes ahead of tougher PL games.
🔹 Injury Concerns
Badiashile and Lavia were subbed off early in some matches, signaling possible knocks.
No red cards; discipline well-managed.
✅ Summary Table
Area
Key Metrics / Insights
Possession
Avg ~65%, peaking at 72% (vs TSC)
Pass Accuracy
89–92% consistently across all matches
Tackles Won
Avg ~80%+, solid defensive success rate
Goals Scored
14 goals across 5 matches; avg 2.8 per game
Top Scorer
Nkunku (4), Caicedo (2), Palmer (1G + 2A), Jackson (2)
Creative Leaders
Palmer (5 key passes), Fernández (4 assists), Madueke (2A)
Crossing Output
Best vs TSC (35%); wide play key via Cucurella, Madueke
Defensive Consistency
Only 2 goals conceded, 4 clean sheets
High-Press Identity
100+ sprints/game; intense off-ball movement
Rotation & Depth
Effective; subs made contributions (e.g., Nkunku, Mudryk)
Injuries
Minor knocks managed; no major red flags
🔚 Conclusion
Chelsea continues to demonstrate tactical maturity, squad depth, and a versatile attacking structure. The integration of pressing intensity with technical buildup has allowed them to dominate both weaker and stronger opponents. With Nkunku hitting form, Palmer controlling the rhythm, and Fernández & Caicedo anchoring, Chelsea look well-balanced heading into the next phase of the season.
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NOVEMBER 2023
🔵 Match Series Summary:
Chelsea vs Brighton (Home) (Carabao) – 3-1
Chelsea vs Aston Villa (Home) – 2-0
Chelsea vs TSC (2nd leg) – 8-0
Chelsea vs Ipswich Town (Away) – 4-0
Chelsea vs Crystal Palace (Home) – 3-0
Chelsea vs Panathinaikos (2nd leg, UECL) – 2-0
⚔️ Attacking Evolution
🔹 Possession & Passing Quality
Match
Possession
Pass Completion
vs Brighton
55%
90% (533/589)
vs Aston Villa
60%
92% (501/546)
vs TSC (2nd leg)
74%
87% (422/483)
vs Ipswich Town
60%
90% (536/598)
vs Crystal Palace
77%
92% (652/720)
vs Panathinaikos
55%
91% (538/591)
Chelsea's possession remained high across all matches, averaging ~65% with the highest at 77% against Crystal Palace.
Pass completion rates were consistently strong, with 92% in matches like Aston Villa and Crystal Palace.
Midfield passing also showed great precision, averaging 89–92% across games, demonstrating their strong ball circulation.
🔹 Defensive Solidity
Match
Tackles Won (%)
Headers Won (%)
Clear-Cut Chances Conceded
vs Brighton
82% (32/39)
58% (23/40)
0
vs Aston Villa
73% (27/37)
53% (25/47)
0
vs TSC (2nd leg)
75% (9/12)
52% (22/42)
0
vs Ipswich Town
80% (17/23)
50% (22/44)
0
vs Crystal Palace
78% (18/23)
53% (25/47)
0
vs Panathinaikos
77% (19/25)
34% (13/38)
0
Chelsea's defense remained solid, with minimal clear-cut chances conceded across all matches.
Tackling success was high, especially against Brighton (82%) and Ipswich Town (80%), showing a well-organized backline.
Headers won were decent, peaking at 58% vs Brighton and 53% vs Crystal Palace, though improving slightly in the aerial duels could make Chelsea even more dominant.
🌟 Key Individual Contributions
🔹 Goal Scorers
Match
Goal Scorers
vs Brighton
Cole Palmer (3', 70'), Enzo Fernández (23')
vs Aston Villa
Moisés Caicedo (15'), Christopher Nkunku (80')
vs TSC (2nd leg)
Pedro Neto (6'), Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall (12'), Cole Palmer (17'), Nicolas Jackson (41', 45+2'), Mykhaylo Mudryk (45+1', 83'), Tosin Adarabioyo (65')
vs Ipswich Town
Enzo Fernández (16'), Nicolas Jackson (24'), Cole Palmer (30')
vs Crystal Palace
Levi Colwill (72'), Trevah Chalobah (75'), Noni Madueke (87')
vs Panathinaikos
Christopher Nkunku (65'), Enzo Fernández (79')
Nkunku and Palmer were key contributors in several matches, with Nkunku scoring a hat-trick against TSC.
Cole Palmer had multiple impacts, scoring in games against Brighton and Ipswich.
Enzo Fernández continued to be a regular goal scorer, as well as an assist provider, notably scoring in Ipswich and Crystal Palace.
🔹 Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation
Player
Highlights
Enzo Fernández
Contributed key passes and assists across several matches, especially in Crystal Palace and Ipswich.
Cole Palmer
Key passer and goal scorer in Brighton and Ipswich, as well as providing creative link-ups in attack.
Christopher Nkunku
Provided 3 assists vs TSC and scored a hat-trick, making him Chelsea's most potent offensive force.
Marc Cucurella
Contributed key passes and crosses, providing width and support for the forward players.
Nkunku continues to be the focal point of attacking movements, linking play and creating scoring opportunities.
Palmer and Madueke have become vital for creating width and generating key passes and assists.
🔹 Defensive Standouts
Player
Defensive Highlights
Tosin Adarabioyo
Consistently high tackle success (especially vs Ipswich and Brighton). Key in breaking opposition play.
Moisés Caicedo
Anchored the midfield, contributing to interceptions and ball recovery; key in retaining possession in difficult situations.
Levi Colwill
Strong in aerial duels, headers won, and defensive coverage against Aston Villa.
Reece James
Defensively sound, interceptions and tackles especially against Crystal Palace and Ipswich.
🔹 Crossing & Wide Play
Match
Cross Completion
Key Contributors
vs Brighton
6% (1/17)
Cucurella, Palmer
vs Aston Villa
36% (3/8)
Gusto, Cucurella
vs TSC (2nd leg)
35% (14/40)
Cucurella, Mudryk, Palmer
vs Ipswich Town
16% (3/19)
Cucurella, Madueke, James
vs Crystal Palace
10% (2/21)
Cucurella, Palmer, Gusto
vs Panathinaikos
24% (6/25)
Cucurella, Palmer
Cucurella played a key role in wide play, contributing crosses and assists.
Palmer and Gusto provided excellent support on the wings, while Madueke continued to make an impact with his direct dribbling and crosses.
⚙️ Tactical Evolution
🔹 Formation & Pressing
Chelsea used a flexible 4-2-3-1 / 4-3-3 formation, with Nkunku, Palmer, and Madueke rotating in attacking roles.
Pressing intensity remains high, especially in matches like TSC (2nd leg) (124 high-intensity sprints), Ipswich Town (137 sprints), showing that the team presses aggressively when out of possession.
🔹 Ball Progression Approach
Chelsea’s ball progression remained fluid, with a blend of short, quick passes and occasional long balls.
Fernández and Caicedo are key players in moving the ball through midfield, while Palmer and Nkunku provided link-up play in the final third.
🔹 Playing Time Management
Rotation of players like Mudryk, Jackson, and Palmer ensured key players stayed fresh across competitions.
Substitutions like Mykhaylo Mudryk, Trevoh Chalobah, and Jadon Sancho provided important contributions when called upon.
🔹 Injury Concerns
Filip Jørgensen, Colwill, and Gusto faced minor injury concerns but managed to play through most games.
No major injuries reported post-match.
✅ Summary Table
Area
Key Insights
Possession
Avg ~60%, highest 77% vs Crystal Palace
Pass Accuracy
89–92% pass accuracy across matches
Tackles Won
77–82% tackle success across all matches
Goals Scored
26 goals across 6 matches (avg 4.33/game)
Top Scorer
Nkunku (7 goals), Palmer (4 goals), Jackson (3 goals)
Key Creators
Palmer (5 assists), Madueke (3 assists)
Defensive Consistency
0 clear-cut chances conceded in most matches
High Pressing
100+ high-intensity sprints/game
Squad Depth
Effective rotation with minimal drop in performance
Injury Management
No major injuries, minor knocks managed effectively
🔚 Conclusion
Chelsea’s evolution in attacking and defensive play has been impressive. The team's high pressing, combined with fluid ball progression from midfield to attack, has resulted in consistent victories. Nkunku, Palmer, and Fernández have been pivotal in the attacking setup, while Caicedo, Adarabioyo, and Colwill have ensured defensive stability. The tactical flexibility, combined with effective squad rotation, has kept Chelsea competitive across domestic and European competitions.
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DECEMBER 2023
🔵 Match Series Summary:
Chelsea vs Wolves (Away) – 1-0
Chelsea vs West Ham (Home) – 4-0
Chelsea vs Newcastle (Away) – 2-0
Chelsea vs Lens (UECL Away) – 2-0
Chelsea vs Man City (Home) – 5-1
Chelsea vs Brentford (Away) (Carabao Cup Quarter Final) – 2-1
Chelsea vs Everton (Away) – 3-1
Chelsea vs Tottenham Hotspurs (Home) – 2-1
Attacking Evolution
Possession & Passing Quality
Match
Possession
Pass Completion
Chelsea vs Wolves
61%
91% (512/562)
Chelsea vs West Ham
59%
86% (502/583)
Chelsea vs Newcastle
69%
91% (587/646)
Chelsea vs Lens
60%
89% (551/616)
Chelsea vs Man City
58%
91% (623/685)
Chelsea vs Brentford
63%
89% (536/598)
Chelsea vs Everton
54%
89% (536/598)
Chelsea vs Tottenham
53%
92% (521/567)
Possession: Chelsea maintained control in most matches, with the highest being 69% vs Newcastle.
Passing Accuracy: Consistently high, with a range of 86% to 92% across all matches, indicating efficient ball retention and playmaking in the midfield.
Defensive Solidity
Match
Tackles Won (%)
Headers Won (%)
Clear-Cut Chances Conceded
Chelsea vs Wolves
75% (21/28)
50% (9/18)
0
Chelsea vs West Ham
80% (20/25)
42% (14/33)
0
Chelsea vs Newcastle
92% (24/26)
52% (25/48)
0
Chelsea vs Lens
79% (22/28)
43% (12/28)
0
Chelsea vs Man City
80% (17/21)
55% (20/36)
1
Chelsea vs Brentford
84% (19/23)
48% (17/35)
1
Chelsea vs Everton
81% (19/23)
52% (21/40)
0
Chelsea vs Tottenham
78% (18/23)
50% (19/38)
1
Tackles & Interceptions: Chelsea’s defensive metrics were strong, winning a high percentage of tackles and interceptions. The team's defense kept clear-cut chances at a minimum, allowing very few opportunities.
Headers Won: The highest success in aerial duels came in the Man City (55%) and Newcastle matches.
Key Individual Contributions
Goal Scorers:
Match
Goal Scorers
Chelsea vs Wolves
Christopher Nkunku (pen)
Chelsea vs West Ham
Noni Madueke (3', 16'), Nicolas Jackson (25'), Moisés Caicedo (90+2')
Chelsea vs Newcastle
Cole Palmer (52'), Enzo Fernández (73')
Chelsea vs Lens
Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall (22'), Moisés Caicedo (86')
Chelsea vs Man City
Levi Colwill (scored), Nkunku (pen), Palmer (1 assist, 1 goal)
Chelsea vs Brentford
Mykhaylo Mudryk (scored), Cole Palmer (scored)
Chelsea vs Everton
Nicolas Jackson (goal, assist)
Chelsea vs Tottenham
Mykhaylo Mudryk (goal, assist), Enzo Fernández (assisted)
Nicolas Jackson, Nkunku, and Mudryk were central in attack across these matches, each scoring key goals and playing an essential role in creating chances for teammates.
Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation
Player
Highlights
Enzo Fernández
Played a pivotal role in key passes and assists. His influence was particularly visible in games like Man City (assist for Palmer) and Newcastle (goal).
Cole Palmer
Goal scorer and key creator, providing key passes in West Ham and Brentford matches.
Christopher Nkunku
Provided key assists, contributing a penalty goal in the Man City game.
Noni Madueke
Showed creativity, contributing assists and goals. Scored a brace in West Ham match.
Mudryk, Nkunku, and Palmer were the main contributors in the attacking third, either scoring goals or creating key passes. Enzo Fernández helped with midfield progression and orchestrated attacks.
Defensive Standouts:
Player
Defensive Highlights
Tosin Adarabioyo
Played a key role in tackles and interceptions. Showed solid positioning.
Levi Colwill
Strong in the air and defensively, playing a crucial role against Man City and Tottenham.
Benoît Badiashile
Contributed key clearances and defensive organization.
Robert Sánchez
Key saves in multiple matches, including Man City and Brentford, maintaining defensive stability.
Crossing & Wide Play
Match
Cross Completion
Key Contributors
vs Wolves
16% (1/6)
Cucurella, Mudryk
vs West Ham
23% (4/18)
Cucurella, Mudryk
vs Newcastle
14% (2/14)
Cucurella, James
vs Lens
19% (4/21)
Cucurella, Palmer
vs Man City
27% (5/18)
Cucurella, Mudryk, James
vs Brentford
22% (4/18)
Cucurella, James
vs Everton
29% (5/17)
Cucurella, James
vs Tottenham
18% (3/16)
Cucurella, James
Marc Cucurella and Reece James played vital roles in providing width and crosses into the attacking zone. James was particularly effective in wide areas.
Tactical Evolution
Formation & Pressing
Formation: Chelsea maintained a 4-3-3 / 4-2-3-1 setup in most of these games, with Nkunku, Mudryk, and Palmer providing flexibility in attack.
Pressing: Chelsea pressed high in matches against Man City, Tottenham, and Brentford, winning the ball back quickly and exploiting counter-attacking opportunities.
Ball Progression Approach
Midfielders like Enzo Fernández and Caicedo were key in linking defense to attack, progressing the ball effectively through short and long passes.
Wide Players like Mudryk and Palmer helped stretch opposition defenses and delivered crosses and key passes.
Playing Time Management
Rotation and fresh legs were crucial, with key players like Nkunku, Mudryk, and Sancho making impacts from the bench in certain matches.
Chelsea rotated well in Carabao Cup and UECL matches to keep players fresh for important Premier League games.
Injury Concerns
Nkunku’s injury was a concern, but Chelsea’s squad depth, including Jackson and Mudryk, ensured that they could still produce strong performances.
Mudryk’s flexibility helped in adjusting to different attacking roles as needed.
Conclusion:
Chelsea’s attacking play has evolved into a dynamic and potent force. With strong midfield play from Fernández and Caicedo, and creative contributions from Nkunku, Palmer, and Mudryk, Chelsea has consistently maintained control in matches. Defensively, Colwill and Badiashile have proven essential in organizing the backline, while Sánchez’s goalkeeping has ensured the team stays resolute. The tactical approach has been flexible, shifting from high pressing to maintaining control in midfield. Despite Nkunku’s injury, Chelsea has effectively rotated their squad, ensuring performances stay consistent across multiple competitions.
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After we have provide the brief summary and tactical analyses of matches for the first half of the season up until 31st December 2023, the next series we would take a look on what key analyses, fixation and improvisations that we can further improvise our team in terms of dynamism, formations, dominant side of pitch when we attack, game rotations and build-up play so that we can make some tweaks for the second half of the season afterwards.
See ya!!!
#832330 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
In this series, we would analyse how our players react on build-up play shape, how they interact and counteract through different teams, thus shaping how they exploit spaces further.
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In Chelsea vs Fulham here, they play on 3-2-4-1, with Gusto played as Inverted Fullback (Defend) to form as the third centerback on the right, while Cucurella inverted to the midfield besides Caicedo to form double no 6 occupying spaces left by Enzo which has pushed up beside Palmer
From here actually that they tend to build-up through the middle due to dominant numbers in the midfield. While Madueke and Sancho tends to go wide to stretch the fullbacks more wide than usual to give Palmer and Enzo some spaces in front of them to underlap to the zone 14.
For first goal scored, from wide, Madueke dribbles the ball while Palmer underlap through the space created by Madueke upon stretching wide earlier. While Sancho can make blindside runs easily due to Caicedo // Enzo // Jackson forming triangular shape which located nearby triangular defensive shape made by Wilson, Tete and Andersen. While Tete covers for Enzo, he mismarked Sancho on his behind here.
From the snapshot above, still the back 3 form with Caicedo as the main pivot still maintain. Cucurella gain the ball and pass to Palmer for potential counter-attacking phase.
Back 3 still intact, but now in front of them would be the midfield box shape has been formed consists of Enzo // Caicedo // Palmer // Jackson, while Madueke, Cucurella, and Sancho still standby for counterattacking.
From here, Madueke try to go wide to stretch the defensive line more expanded, providing space for Caicedo to exploit while Sancho, Jackson and Palmer to counter through.
More midfield box at the middle of zone 14, trying to circulate the ball here.
All of the sudden, Badiashile jump out of back 3 to overlap from the left-side
Badiashile passes to Sancho to carry the ball into penalty box, ended up being cleared by Cairney and picked up by Leno
Caicedo got the first ball, with almost flat backline with Cucurella shadowmark Wilson from afar.
Enzo passes to Jackson while getting ready to make blindside runs here.
Palmer, Jackson and Enzo can make blindside runs on multiple lanes at the same time here.
Still 3-2-4-1 but with almost asymmetrical shape on back 3
Palmer tried to cross into the box but got deflected by Antonee Robinson, got to Jackson, Enzo got ready to receive the pass from Jackson and make first-time shot, 1-0 to Chelsea
Same here again, back 3 with midfield box of Cucurella // Caicedo // Enzo // Jackson in front of zone 14
Caicedo crossing wide to Madueke, drag along Antonee Robinson wide as well, and Palmer dragging along Cuenca on the same direction to provide the space to Jackson here.
Madueke provide flat cross here to space occupied by Jackson, and Jackson finishes it, 3-0 to Chelsea
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Match with Nottingham Forest also reflects quite interesting movements from our players that make them won this match easily 4-0
This is from throw-in from Gusto. Back 3 quite asymmetrical due to Odoi dropped down and Campbell tightly marked.
Caicedo tighly marked by Elanga, same goes to Neto-Yates, Enzo-Milenkovic and Morato, Jackson - Moreno and Sancho - Ola Aina, while Dominguez were the one left to guard as last man defense here.
Gusto passed to Neto, one-two with Caicedo beside him, passed to Caicedo while Gusto stayed wide to attract Yates while giving the lane to Neto for space exploitation.
From here Caicedo have chance to pass to Neto since Gibbs-White is a little bit far to track.
Pedro Neto receives the pass from Caicedo, attracting both Gibbs-White and Morato along as he's dribbling inside
And from here, with a small percentage of shot from small space, Pedro Neto shoots rightaway, give Chelsea lead 2-0
Dominguez tries to make long ball to the front, with Awoniyi tightly marked by Badiashile here, Caicedo already standby on the front foot to grab the second ball
Got to Awoniyi, which accidentally make the second ball to Gibbs-White which quite far, thus Gibbs-White unable to grab the loose second ball with 4 players surrounding the ball with Murray-Campbell and Badiashile behind, and Enzo - Caicedo on the front.
Got to Caicedo here, with Enzo clearly unmarked, passes to him, with Sancho and Jackson got ready to make runs in-behind, with Pedro Neto also clearly can make deadly counter-attacking from his side as well.
This can be considered as build-up phase on nearby zone 14, with clear back 3 with Murray-Campbell and Caicedo as double pivot, Enzo freely dribbles forward while Sancho stretches more to the wide.
Build-up shape still intact with Enzo freely dribbles at half-space
And BOOOM!!! Far right corner here, Enzo scores cheekily, 3-0 to Chelsea for larger lead
Here Enzo drop deeper than usual, his Trequartista role as instructed to. With back 3 intact, with Murray-Campbell confidently single marked Elanga here. Front three gone flat line as above.
Madueke dropped deep, Enzo releases the ball to him. Guess who's going upfront?
That cheeky Caicedo with large space left wide open
Madueke making high lob-pass to the open space for in-run Caicedo towards the carved space by Jackson intentionally pull it open by dropping deeper and deeper since the first snapshot above.
There's nothing Milenkovic and Ola Aina can do here since Caicedo able to muscle both of them easily, and scores the game-ending goal 4-0
___________________________________________________________________________________________
There you go. Fuuuhhh!!!!
Multi-dimensional and multi-angle that our players can swish and swush their opponents to create chances, carved open those space much wide to exploit, with short and longggg passes made towards the penalty box that we can see here.
Feels like there's high chance that we can go deeper into the season to see whether they can achieve something more extraordinary. Perhaps so?
We'll wait on the next series on how does it fare to us up until January transfer window further.
See ya!!!!
#832111 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
Let's see how does it goes for the first few matches upon new season here.
Let's get through it!
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Chelsea vs Fulham (Away) : 3 - 0
Chelsea vs Bournemouth (Home) : 4 - 2
Chelsea vs Spartak Trnava (Home) : 6 - 0
Chelsea vs Nottingham Forest (Away) : 4 - 0
Chelsea vs Spartak Trnava (Away) : 4 - 0 (Aggregate 10 - 0 overall)
___________________________________________________________________________________________
There could be some interesting highlights we can see from each matches above here. Let's get through below.
1. Attacking Evolution:
Possession & Passing Quality:
Chelsea has consistently dominated possession in all matches, ranging from 60% (Fulham) to 77% (Spartak Trnava Home), showcasing their ability to control the tempo of the game.
Passing Quality has been top-tier, with Chelsea completing between 89% (Fulham) and 93% (Spartak Trnava Away) of passes, indicating efficient build-up play across all areas.
Defensive Passing: 96% (Spartak Trnava Home)
Midfield Passing: 93% (Spartak Trnava Away)
Attacking Passing: 80% (Bournemouth)
Defensive Solidity:
Tackles Won: Chelsea’s tackle success rate was consistently high across matches:
71% (Fulham) to 94% (Bournemouth), showing solid ball-winning in midfield and defense.
Headers Won: 55% (Fulham) to 57% (Bournemouth), maintaining good aerial control, especially against teams like Fulham.
Chelsea’s ability to intercept passes and win duels contributed to their strong defensive setup, limiting their opponents’ clear-cut chances.
2. Key Individual Contributions:
Goal Scorers:
Fulham: Enzo Fernández, Tosin Adarabioyo, and Nicolas Jackson contributed to Chelsea’s 3-0 win.
Bournemouth: Moisés Caicedo, Mykhaylo Mudryk, Cole Palmer (2 goals, including a penalty), played vital roles in the 4-2 win.
Spartak Trnava (Home): Nicolas Jackson, Christopher Nkunku (2 goals), and Cole Palmer (2 goals, including a penalty) helped secure the 6-0 win.
Nottingham Forest: Cole Palmer (penalty), Pedro Neto, Enzo Fernández, and Moisés Caicedo contributed to the 4-0 win.
Spartak Trnava (Away): Tosin Adarabioyo, Noni Madueke, and Cole Palmer scored to ensure a 4-0 win.
Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation:
Enzo Fernández emerged as a key creative force in Chelsea's midfield, consistently contributing to key passes and chance creation:
Against Bournemouth, Fernández contributed 3 key passes.
Cole Palmer also had an important role in attacking build-up and created 2 assists against Bournemouth.
Christopher Nkunku played a crucial role in creating opportunities, providing 2 assists and scoring 2 goals against Spartak Trnava (Home).
Defensive Standouts:
Tosin Adarabioyo has been the standout defender, contributing significantly in all defensive aspects:
15 successful tackles (Bournemouth) and consistently high pass completion.
Benoît Badiashile also contributed with 6 tackles in the Bournemouth match and solid passing.
Marc Cucurella played a crucial role in both defense and attack, contributing with 100% dribbling success.
Crossing & Wide Play:
Crossing Success: Chelsea’s crossing completion rate was variable:
13% (Spartak Trnava Home) and 11% (Bournemouth) indicate a shift towards less wide play in favor of more direct approaches, with crossing less of a focus.
Malo Gusto, however, contributed effectively in wide areas, completing 100% of his dribbles.
3. Tactical Evolution:
Formation & Pressing:
Pressing Approach: Chelsea exhibited a more high-pressing style, with 64 high-intensity sprints (Spartak Trnava) and 123 sprints (Bournemouth), showing an evolution in their pressing game.
Formation Adaptation: While the formation remained generally stable, there was flexibility in attacking positioning, with Cole Palmer operating in multiple forward roles, allowing tactical fluidity.
Ball Progression Approach:
Midfield Dominance: The Caicedo-Fernández partnership has been crucial in ball progression, consistently completing high pass success rates (91%-94%) in the midfield.
Shorter Passing Game: Chelsea has shifted towards a short-passing game with high pass completion, emphasizing ball retention and controlled build-up from the back.
Playing Time Management:
Squad Rotation: There was effective rotation of players across competitions to manage playing time. Key players like Christopher Nkunku and Mykhaylo Mudryk were substituted or rotated in to maintain freshness while maintaining a strong starting lineup.
Impact Substitutes: Players like Mykhaylo Mudryk and Jadon Sancho made important impacts off the bench, scoring and assisting in key moments.
Injury Concerns:
Injury Issues: Chelsea faced several injuries during the period:
Filip Jørgensen (Fulham) and Marc Cucurella (Fulham) were injured, though their absences did not affect the team’s strong performance.
Reece James and Malo Gusto were also marked with injury concerns but managed to contribute effectively when fit.
Conclusion:
Chelsea’s attacking evolution has been highlighted by dominant possession, high pass completion, and clinical finishing. Key individuals like Cole Palmer, Enzo Fernández, and Nicolas Jackson have played pivotal roles in both offensive creation and finishing, while Tosin Adarabioyo and Benoît Badiashile ensured defensive solidity. The team has shown tactical evolution through high pressing and ball progression, demonstrating a well-rounded, adaptable style. The effective playing time management has kept players fresh, while injury concerns were addressed with squad depth. Chelsea’s strong start across domestic and European competitions points to a balanced and efficient approach moving forward.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Such an interesting insights for a few early matches here.
But how does our players contributing towards the build-up play?
What build-up formation do our players consistently doing so across matches?
Is it their own creativitiy, off-the-ball movement, blindside runs or maybe crashing aboard through half-spaces that those goalscoring chances has been created?
We shall see on the next series further with extensive formations onwards.
See ya!!
#831493 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
🔵 Chelsea Preseason Friendlies – Summer 2023 Summary
Results Overview
Chelsea 3-0 Plymouth: Palmer (2’), Jackson (13’, 39’)
Chelsea 3-0 Huddersfield: Jackson (43’, 85’), Fernández (80’)
Chelsea 3-0 Real Betis: Caicedo (15’), Jackson (61’, 83’)
Chelsea 4-1 Villarreal: Fofana (28’, 40’, 69’), Palmer (66’); Pedraza (35’)
Chelsea 1-1 Lazio: Madueke (90+1’); Castellanos (90+5’)
Chelsea 4-1 PAOK: Lavia (27’), Neto (45’), Madueke (57’, 63’); Colley (38’)
Overall Performance Metrics
Attacking Evolution
Match
Shots
On Target
xG
Clear-Cut Chances
Goals
vs Plymouth
12
8 (67%)
1.96
3
3
vs Huddersfield
13
6 (46%)
1.13
0
3
vs Real Betis
14
6 (43%)
2.56
2
3
vs Villarreal
20
7 (35%)
3.46
2
4
vs Lazio
12
4 (33%)
0.95
0
1
vs PAOK
20
10 (50%)
3.02
1
4
TOTAL
91
41 (45%)
13.08
8
18
Chelsea displayed progressive improvement in shot creation throughout the pre-season, culminating in 20 attempts against both Villarreal and PAOK. The 3.46 xG against Villarreal represents the peak of their attacking efficiency, though the finishing efficiency (converting 1.13 xG into 3 goals against Huddersfield) showed clinical finishing ability.
Possession & Passing Quality
Match
Possession
Passes Completed
Defense Pass %
Midfield Pass %
Attack Pass %
vs Plymouth
63%
89% (480/542)
96%
86%
86%
vs Huddersfield
63%
89% (512/578)
92%
89%
85%
vs Real Betis
58%
91% (556/614)
94%
92%
80%
vs Villarreal
59%
88% (486/551)
93%
88%
81%
vs Lazio
64%
90% (587/649)
95%
92%
77%
vs PAOK
69%
92% (636/693)
97%
92%
80%
Chelsea maintained consistent ball dominance, with possession percentages ranging from 58-69%. Their passing accuracy showed impressive consistency across all matches, with an upward trend culminating in the PAOK match with 97% defensive passing accuracy.
Defensive Solidity
Match
Tackles Won
Headers Won
Crosses Completed (Allowed)
Fouls Committed
vs Plymouth
71% (12/17)
51% (27/53)
21% (5/24)
9
vs Huddersfield
87% (13/15)
49% (26/53)
0% (0/6)
15
vs Real Betis
79% (19/24)
60% (21/35)
13% (3/24)
17
vs Villarreal
79% (19/24)
61% (33/54)
24% (4/17)
8
vs Lazio
72% (21/29)
65% (36/55)
22% (4/18)
15
vs PAOK
74% (14/19)
51% (20/39)
11% (2/18)
9
The defensive statistics show excellent tackle success rates, particularly against Huddersfield (87%). The progressive improvement in aerial duels won (peaking at 65% against Lazio) demonstrates the team’s physical development throughout pre-season.
Key Individual Contributions
Goal Scorers
Nicolas Jackson: 6 goals (2 vs Plymouth, 2 vs Huddersfield, 2 vs Real Betis)
Datro Fofana: 3 goals (all vs Villarreal)
Noni Madueke: 3 goals (1 vs Lazio, 2 vs PAOK)
Cole Palmer: 2 goals (1 vs Plymouth, 1 vs Villarreal)
Pedro Neto: 1 goal (vs PAOK)
Romeo Lavia: 1 goal (vs PAOK)
Enzo Fernández: 1 goal (vs Huddersfield)
Moisés Caicedo: 1 goal (vs Real Betis)
Creative Hub: Passing & Chance Creation
Enzo Fernández: Consistently excellent passing metrics (87-100% completion) with 16+ key passes across matches
Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall: 7 key passes in a single match vs PAOK, showing significant creative potential
Cole Palmer: Versatile contribution with key passes and high xG (1.0 vs Plymouth, 1.2 vs Villarreal)
Noni Madueke: Developing playmaker with 5 key passes and 2 clear-cut chances vs PAOK
Moisés Caicedo: Consistent midfield presence with 90%+ pass completion in most matches
Defensive Standouts
Tosin Adarabioyo: Elite defensive numbers including 12 tackles (66% success) vs Plymouth and 107 passes (94% completion) vs PAOK
Levi Colwill: Excellent ball-playing defender with 96% pass completion vs Plymouth and 100% tackle success vs Villarreal
Benoit Badiashile: Strong defensive contribution with 12 tackles (75% success) vs Lazio
Trevoh Chalobah: Versatile defender showing 80% tackle success vs Real Betis and PAOK
Harrison Murray-Campbell: Promising display with 7 tackles (100% success) vs PAOK
Crossing & Wide Play
Match
Crosses Attempted
Completion %
Key Crossers
vs Plymouth
37
19%
Fernández (11), Madueke (10)
vs Huddersfield
35
23%
Mudryk (10), Dewsbury-Hall (9), Sancho (9)
vs Real Betis
24
13%
Neto (9)
vs Villarreal
17
24%
Palmer (5), Cucurella (4)
vs Lazio
18
22%
Neto (7), Fernández (4)
vs PAOK
22
18%
Neto (7), Madueke (3)
The crossing statistics show tactical versatility, with different players taking primary crossing responsibilities in each match. The completion percentages (peaking at 24% vs Villarreal) suggest calculated improvement rather than random crossing.
Tactical Evolution
Formation & Pressing
High-Intensity Sprints: Progressive increase from 98 (Plymouth) to 129 (Villarreal) shows improving fitness and pressing intensity
Fouls Pattern: Higher foul counts in middle matches (15-17) with reduction in later games (8-9) suggests more controlled pressing
Discipline Management: Yellow cards reduced from 4 (Plymouth) to 0-1 in later matches
Ball Progression Approach
Dribbling Focus: Key dribblers emerged across matches:
Palmer: 6 dribbles vs Plymouth
Enzo Fernández: 5 dribbles vs Huddersfield
Mudryk: 4 dribbles vs Real Betis & Villarreal
Madueke: 6 dribbles vs PAOK
Tactical Passing Shifts: Increased midfield passing accuracy (86% → 92%) with slight decrease in attacking third passing (86% → 80%) suggests more methodical build-up
Playing Time Management
Chelsea utilized the pre-season to distribute minutes effectively:
Core defensive players (Colwill, Adarabioyo, Chalobah, Cucurella) received substantial minutes
Attackers rotated strategically to manage fitness (Jackson, Palmer, Madueke, Neto)
Midfield core of Fernández and Caicedo featured prominently
Emerging talents given platforms (Fofana, Lavia, Murray-Campbell)
Injury Concerns
Levi Colwill: Injured at 42’ vs Villarreal
Pedro Neto: Injured at 68’ vs PAOK
Nicolo Rovella (Lazio): Injured at 78’ in the Chelsea match
Gerard Moreno (Villarreal): Injured at 60’ in the Chelsea match
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Conclusion
Chelsea’s pre-season campaign demonstrated methodical progression, with players adapting to tactical demands and showing increasing physical conditioning. The consistent possession-based approach yielded 18 goals across 6 matches while conceding just 4, suggesting a well-balanced team.
Nicolas Jackson emerged as the primary goalscoring threat with 6 goals, while a variety of other players contributed to the scoring. The midfield control was orchestrated primarily through Enzo Fernández and Moisés Caicedo, with various attacking options showing creative capabilities.
The defensive unit showed excellent chemistry, with particularly strong performances from Tosin Adarabioyo and Levi Colwill. The progressive improvement in expected goals and shooting volume suggests increasing attacking cohesion, while the disciplinary record improved throughout the pre-season.
This comprehensive preparation positions Chelsea strongly for the competitive season, having tested various tactical approaches while maintaining core principles of possession and pressing.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
That's all for our friendlies now.
Next series would be how we try to thrive on first half of 2023/2024 season further using those guys at the limited squad size until January transfer window
See ya!!!
#827711 [FM24] ATHLETIC BILBAO (or usually mentioned as ATHLETIC CLUB?) REBUILD CHALLENGE
Irfan Roslan
PART 8 : NEW SEASON, NEW IDENTITY
Alright so in this one, we shall see how our new identity, in back 3 formation shall be going further through. So in selected friendlies from previous part, we would see how this could shape our new season with the new identity to challenge for La Liga title once again, especially in UEFA Champions League this season.
LYON 2 - 4 ATHLETIC BILBAO
This friendly is one of the selected ones that we can analyse, as this already given some impact when competing with one of the big teams in Ligue 1.
Seems un-organized, I do admit this. With Sancet as the Roaming Playmaker, I don't expecting he would roam much higher than usual. Will tend to pick it up later on once season starts.
To compensate the amount of bodies at the middle third, Laporte drifting inside to form defensive box to circulate the ball and passes to Vesga.
Once Vesga passes to Nico Williams, all of the sudden all three Lyon players pressurize him, and at the same time Tagliafico unmarked Gorosabel
With trio 1-v-1 situation at th middle of the pitch, with Fofana lacking in defensive play discipline that Aihen Munoz simply standby to bombard forward.
Nico Williams releases Gorosabel with a swift passes to the space and counter-attack triggered here.
After dribbled until nearly to the edge of the penalty box, Gorosabel pressurized by Tagliafico, which senses the danger and dropping back to his own space, passes to Nico who are free from being marked.
Nico Williams, his major ability is at the half space, waiting patiently before receiving the pass from Gorosabel.
In the penalty box, 3-v-3 already occured.
FOCUS ON CALETA-CAR'S POSITIONING HERE
Nico WIlliams drift inside to exploit space not monitored by Niakhate.
AIhen still on standby mode to bombard forward towards the large space left by Maitland-Niles which being dragged inside by Berenguer.
Just for extra note, I do intentionally put Berenguer to drift inside for wingbacks to exploit and conquered the space left by opponent's fullback / wingback, and this situation truly mesmerized this intention very clearly.
After drifting inside, Williams make swift crossing to Aihen Munoz here on the left side of the pitch.
Meanwhile Gorosabel is overlapping him from the back.
And from here Aihen crosses into the penalty box, Caleta-Car intends to clear the ball out but instead making own goal here. Lyon 0 - 1 Bilbao
Back 3 still intact. Middle 2 also intact here. Aihen and Gorosabel have much space to exploit in behind.
Sancet passes to Berenguer which drifting inside here, Inaki Williams ready for bursting forward.
Berenguer passes to Inaki and Inaki dribbles in between Caleta-Car and Niakhate here
And now he continues dribbling at zone 14 which makes him being marked in a 3-vs-1 situations.
Berenguer standby to crash into box along with Sancet at his back.
Towards the edge of the box here, Inaki makes a cutback here, passing to Berenguer which goes to the space he has left, along with Sancet.
Receives a cutback pass here, Sancet arrives beside him and passed by Berenguer, who Sancet shots into the net, Lyon 0 -2 Bilbao
Gorosabel holds the ball here, Nico Williams slowly arrive at the halfspace, while Berenguer and Inaki being marked 1-vs-1 with Maitland-Niles and Caleta-Car. Sancet roaming at zone 14 here.
And now he (Gorosabel) passes to Nico Williams. 4-vs-3 inside the penalty box here.
Nico Williams crosses the ball from wide. Ball arrives to Sancet and Sancet heads to the net. Lyon 0 -3 Bilbao
ATHLETIC BILBAO 4 - 3 ROMA
In this friendly also got quite interesting in terms of our players movement to create chances further up the pitch.
From this throw-in, Vesga picks up the ball, moving forward while Lekue underlaps him and goes one-two with Vesga here.
Yeray cross front with expectations Lekue / Vicandi to grab the ball, but won by Saud, and the second ball got to Lekue further.
Vesga sees the chance, going forward to the edge of the penalty box passed by Lekue.
Vesga crosses the ball into the penalty box, headed in by Zarraga at the edge of the goal posts. Bilbao 1 - 0 Roma
Vencedor taking the corner, crosses to the middle of the penalty box. Headed in by Vicandi, Bilbao 2 - 1 Roma
Back 3 and Duo mid still intact again. Lekue got the ball. He attempts to cross inside the box.
Crossing connects to Serrano and he heads in. Bilbao 3 - 2 Roma
Nico Williams tried to dribble for cross, At zone 14, 4-vs-3 situations with Djalo barely marked by Saud here.
Nico Williams crosses in, headed away by N'Dicka, second ball to Prados while being marked by Pellegrini.
Prados passes to Sancet once won the second ball again here, and Sancet simply shoots straight to the goal.
Bilbao 4 - 2 Roma.
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Such a bizarre movements made by our players here, even in friendlies we do see how further our players can impact here from our new identity this new season.
So let's hope that the new season shall gone good till the end further.
See ya!!!
#827657 [FM24] ATHLETIC BILBAO (or usually mentioned as ATHLETIC CLUB?) REBUILD CHALLENGE
Irfan Roslan
PART 7 : ATHLETIC BILBAO RESTART?
Some of those would say “Scramble it up and build from scratch again….only if you did have stainless steel guts to do so!”
Some of those fanatics, just to keep their own identity, would stick to “same principle, same player, good to go”
But nahh~ I'm scramble it up.
Because?
I need to challenge myself to which extend do my players can bring us over. Helter-skelter as it is, at least worth a try, ain't it?
So I may decide to scramble it up, from formations, tactical instructions yada yada~
And HERE…WE…AREEEE….
I'll be implementing a back three for Bilbao
“Are you crazy bruh????”
YES.I.AM
FYI, I'm quite lunatic and fanatic on back three, not because of Antonio Conte during Italy's Euro, Chelsea's EPL season or Juventus raiding Scudetto multiple times.
As per what I'm already said on previous parts, I do emphasize more on defensive solidity first. Once the defence is there, only then we may tweak this and that to complement the attacking force that we have for this season.
So here we are.
ARENTEIRO 0 - 2 ATHLETIC BILBAO
This is only first friendly, against a non-league team. Not expect much. Higher number of high intensity sprints ( as usual ), more headers won (53% vs Arenteiro's 42%)
More XG produced (3.11 vs 0.30)
MARSEILLE 3 - 1 ATHLETIC BILBAO
Clearly being fluked here. High intensity sprints not converted into chances, with 6 off-target clearly defines that.
LYON 2 - 4 ATHLETIC BILBAO
Stick with the defensive solidity, take a look on those stats.
43% possession vs Lyon's 57%
XG's 2.15 against Lyon's 1.08
Passes completed also got less, with 387 completed passes out of 435 passes made, compared to Lyon's 515 completed out of 575 passes made.
But in terms of high intensity sprints, still those guys already familiar with counter-attacking style implemented last season, with 129 against Lyon's 102, and lesser shot of target, quite efficient there.
LILLE 2 - 3 ATHLETIC BILBAO
What a comeback here, from 2-1 down on first half, we got the important goals we needed on second half thanks to Williams and Djalo's goals here.
A little bit higher XG than Lille (2.58 vs Lille's 2.07)
175 high intensity sprints vs Lille's 141
But with higher efficient shoot with 9 on target out of 17 shots made compared to Lille's 3 out of 11
ATHLETIC BILBAO 4 - 3 ROMA
Now would be the outlier.
Our XG's 2.27 vs Roma's 2.75 (comparing to blitz goals scored here, quite frantically speaking, seems both teams tried to iron out and cancelled out each other)
But with less on target (2 against Roma's 4 SOT) which can be impressed a little bit here.
But maybe due to transitions quite tricky and Roma's goalkeeper is truly on-form during this game, we got 12 corners and 12 fouls, fair share of amount here..
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On the next series, to observe on how does the new formation may possible push our squad to a new height (although non-guaranteed yet….so to speak), we'll be covering on selected friendlies above to see on how does the player movements in this new formation may take much further.
See ya!!
#827562 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
Let's see how is it goes for our friendlies before our 1st season would start.
Those friendlies would be
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Let's see how does our friendlies do the fare to us rightaway
CHELSEA 2 : 0 ATHLETIC BILBAO (Palmer 7', Jackson 18')
Dominant in possession (59% with Bilbao's 41%)
More passes completed (521 completed out of 581 total passes vs Bilbao's 369 out of 422 passes)
More shots on target (6 vs Bilbao's 4)
At 04:31, our players made the off-the-ball shape of 3-2-5 successfully, as expected.
Colwill - Chalobah - Gusto
Cucurella - Caicedo
Sancho - Enzo - Jackson - Palmer - Pedro Neto
Now at 05:33, only 1 minutes after 1st highlight
Pedro Neto already drag Yuri wide, Jackson already dragging 2 Bilbao players, Yeray and Sancet, with him at the middle.
Palmer due to his Trequartista role, tend to roam, making Vesga and Vivian conservatively shadow-marking him to anticipate any possible burst forward action, Enzo pinning both Gorosabel and Nico Williams.
All of the sudden Sancho got so much space in front of him to be exploited.
Hint : Ball is at Cucurella.
Guess to where Cucurella passes to?
To Sancho at the so-much-space in front of him while Pedro Neto, Palmer, Jackson and Enzo already take action to move forward
When ball already arrive in front of Sancho, Bilbao slowly tilted towards Sancho's space, but at the same time, giving Pedro Neto to exploit the space left by Yuri
Sancho now being double-marked by Gorosabel and Nico Williams, Yuri-Vivian-Yeray making 3 vs 2 with Jackson and Palmer in the middle
Gorosabel got the ball, Jackson and Palmer still stick at the middle, Enzo nearby zone 14 at the edge of the penalty box, Pedro Neto with his rich-space to be bombarded once he has the chances to do so.
Gorosabel passes to Yeray to be cleared forward to avoid Jackson snatches the ball as Jackson is only behind him, Enzo being shadow-marked behind by Prados and Sancet.
Caicedo - Cucurella - Colwill providing Bermuda Triangle instantly nearby Zone 14 and half-spaces
Chalobah and Gusto 2 vs 1 with Inaki Williams
Ball goes to Sancet and at the same time being marked by Cucurella, all front five retreat backwards to act as potential support for mid-counterattacking phases.
Sancet headed back to Yeray due to being tightly-marked with some expectation that Yeray will compose himself to control the ball, but instead he headed forward again, which no one get the third ball (1st from Yeray to Sancet, 2nd ball Sancet to Yeray, 3rd ball from Yeray to no man's land)
Sancet nearly got the third ball but accidentallypassed to…no man's land again.
While in no man's land, Caicedo quickly leave his space to get the ball, Sancho already sped up to the available space for him to exploit.
Jackson dropped back to Zone 14, Palmer already get into the penalty box provided by Jackson early, Enzo already starting his forward move and Pedro Neto simply drag wide again to distract Yuri….again for 2nd time.
Yuri after realizing the space left behind, quickly cover back to mark Pedro Neto, and suddenly again Vivian already 1 vs 2 with Jackson and Palmer, I dunno why Berenguer is dominantly outlier in Bilbao system.
Caicedo on the ball.
Caicedo releases the ball to Cucurella and then Colwill that has been marked by Sancet, and make blindside runs in behind Sancet himself to drag him away. Jackson starting to run inside and Sancho drag wide again to provide space to Enzo exploit.
Gusto - Chalobah - Colwill still neatly marking Inaki Williams here.
Colwill passes to Palmer at Zone 14, Pedro Neto and Sancho knows what they need to do, dragging both fullbacks wide to give as much space as possible here.
Caicedo gets more inside and Palmer releases the ball to Caicedo back. Take a look at Pedro Neto's, Jackson's and Sancho's positioning
After a few passes here, the ball goes to Palmer again, Pedro Neto seems waiting to get the ball passed to him.
As expected, Palmer passes to Pedro Neto again, while Palmer preparing to make curved runs in behind Vesga here.
Now Gusto already left the back 3, Caicedo take over as Gusto will cover Berenguer for potential counter-attack as if he gets the ball later.
Pedro Neto got the ball, Vesga suddenly distracted to him wide, accidentally providing Palmer acres of space in front of him opened.
Pedro Neto passes the ball to the open space while Palmer goes in.
Back 3 still intact here, Gusto with Berenguer. Palmer shots in, Goal 1-0
For the second goal here, it happened from a free kick taken by Palmer. Nothing unusual or spectacular here.
After a few passes from the free kick, there you go. 3-2-5 again still intact.
Sancho crosses inside the penalty box while Jackson, Palmer and Pedro Neto poaches the crossed ball.
There you go. Jackson snatches the ball, and shoots to the net. 2-0 for Chelsea!!!
CHELSEA 5 : 0 STRASBOURG (Enzo 3', Caicedo 13', Mudryk 26', Gusto 35', Jackson 64')
Early buildup would be as usual 4-2-3-1, with Badiashile suddenly the farthest leftback there
And during buildup phases, goes to 3-2-5, with Badiashile tuck inside to midfield beside Caicedo, with Enzo starting to bombard forward to form the front 5.
Ball is at Mudryk
With one long direct pass goes to Enzo, activating the remaining front 4 including Enzo to counterattack at multiple slots
After few passes, Enzo exploits the half space uncovered and receive the pass from Jackson, which drift wide.
And BOOOOM!!! Enzo scores!!! 1-0
Exchange of passes between Enzo and Badiashile near the edge of the pitch.
Badiashile directly passes to unmarked Caicedo
And BOOOMM!!! Caicedo scores!!! 2-0
Same 3-2-5 shape
Palmer goes wide, Mudryk cuts inside at the same time here.
Palmer goes wide, Mudryk at half-space inside the penalty box. Palmer passes to Mudryk and Mudryk finishes elegantly. 3-0
A short free kick there by Palmer, but instead of crossing, he's passes directly on the visible lane toward Gusto directly.
There you go, Gusto scores easily, 4-0
Still 3-2-5 buildup shape. Has potential to counter attack easily here.
Few passes here and there. Caicedo passes to Palmer at half-space, with Mudryk ready to exploit the space in-behind.
Palmer passes to Mudryk as expected here.
Mudryk passes straightaway to Jackson at the vacated space and Jackson finishes it. 5-0 easily.
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This series we do only cover for Athletic Bilbao and Strasbourg for you guys to have proper idea on what I'm trying to do with those guys with different sets of wingers used on different matches.
So the rest of the friendlies we'll try to cover on the next series.
See ya!!!
#827277 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
In this one, we will take a look on how we can construct our tactics and formations to utilizing and maximizing our current player's maximum potential on the pitch
Sooooo…..let's jump along, shall we?
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So far from here, we do have 24 players in our squad
But in terms of squad depth,
For me, I'm considering this as ‘satified’ depth already. As those players are able to work on multiple positionings, so it may take impact on different phases of play moving forward.
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After making some alterings in FMRTE software to reflect real-life injury on players which may not available for Maresca's player usage in his perusal, below would be the almost true reflection (or what do we say, ALMOST EXACT I guess) on players at Maresca's disposal
Below would be counted from 2023 date as per the database when FM24 is released
Fofana would be out until March - May 2024 due to ACL injury
Reece James would be out until mid-August due to recurring hamstring from last year, expected to recover around mid-August or early September
Nkunku still on ongoing knee issues, expected to recover around Mid-August 2023
Romeo Lavia still recovering from multiple injuries, expected to comeback on mid-late July 2023
After put aside those injured players, so I'm expecting only 20 players to be used for this season.
INTERESTING….HMMMM….
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So let's identify which key players do we need to focus as priority in our tactical and formation setup, thus would prioritizing to provide maximum gametime on the pitch (considered as undroppable player(s))
COLE PALMER
One of the key cog during Pochettino's era, now to be continued to be used by Enzo Maresca as the main focal point upon all phases of play, by which we could implement the same here.
Overall here, his technical attributes provide the biggest impact, next to be physical and mental aspect of the game, which shows this guy is quite exceptional as a very technical player in my perspectives.
His dribbling (15), finishing (16), first touch (16), decisions (14), vision (14), flair (15), technique (16), balance (16), acceleration and agility (15) clearly shows as such
Could possible to be played as Trequartista or pure no 10 as the AM role, could considered played as Advanced Playmaker, depends on later decision throughout the season further
NICOLAS JACKSON
Mainly played as No 9 in Maresca's system, would also to be considered for consistent game time depends on consistency and form on the pitch. Otherwise, other players that seemed to be fit, would play on No 9 position.
For the overall, I would considered his physical attributes as his main asset, next by his technical attributes which all considered to be ‘more than satisfied’ level for me. Only his mental aspect of the game that clearly shows there's some space for improvements, which can be done via training regimes weekly.
PEDRO NETO
This Portuguese winger, although most of them feels this guy are not contributing enough this season, but for me, he's more to underrated player in Chelsea.
According to Fotmob, he already played 46 games in total, contributing 15 goal contributions (7 goals 8 assists).
For me he almost function more of small forward (SF) or point guard (PG) in basketball, mostly on creating chances. Bases on FBREF website, across all wingers, his assists (70th percentile), xAG (Exp Assisted Goals) (79th percentile), progressive carries (82nd percentile), and progressive passes received on any phases of play he found (79th percentile) would be considered more than average.
But when compared among forwards (due to his tendency on staying on the final third most of the time), he nearly topples most stats as below;
So that's why I'm considering him as the most underrated player, which considered on the price tag of €60million (£51.4m) plus add-ons when Chelsea bought him from Wolves.
Slowly but surely, we can exploit his advantage to our effectiveness on the final third phases of play further.
JADON SANCHO
Yeah right maybe most of Chelsea fans would mock me on why he's been the chosen one for being among the selected key players for this season.
Put aside his attitude in real-life, I'm not immersed enough on real-life basis yet for Sancho, when considering his greatness period during Dortmund era, possible to be revived under this season.
For those attributes, overall for me is a so-so, but his technical aspect of the game would stand-out more than the other two, so it could possible that he would be gained much more on final third to exploit as much space as possible using his off-the ball movement (14), his agility (17) and pace (14), along with his technique (17), dribbling (18), and first touch (16) as well as passing (16) would be much valuable and possible to gain multiple goal contributions for us this season.
MOISES CAICEDO
Key cog under Pochettino and Maresca this season. We would consider him as the Chelsea general after justifying his £115 million price tag bought from Brighton & Hove Albion on 2023 by making Chelsea winning UEFA Europa Conference League.
Most existent Chelsea player on the field by playing all available games this season
From his attributes, we would consider him to roam and grab those balls to execute counter attacks from all sides he able to grab the ball.
His physical totally stands out as well as his tackling (18), and work rate (16). Would much to be favorite across all European teams to have him.
ENZO FERNANDEZ
Considered as Chelsea commander this season. Those technical attributes are at utmost top level already. Waiting to be seen how the commander-general combo in the middle of the pitch would do the favor for Chelsea this season.
Take a look of his stats recorded in FBREF as well.
All nearly dominating the top quartile. Marvelous I could say here.
MARC CUCURELLA
One to be considered as key cog in Chelsea this season.
He would be an important asset to impact Chelsea's mental aspect of the game at all times.
Only time will tell on how he could impact for us later on.
LEVI COLWILL
Lastly, the Chelsea leader himself.
Strong presence at the backline to be paired with any of the available centrebacks, as well as his passing (14), technique (14), positioning (14), composure on games (16) as well as decision-making (14) as well as work rate (14), truly reflect himself as Chelsea's dynamo of the team to protect the backline this season.
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After identifying those key players that deemed indispensable (depends on form), below would be the formation we would chosen.
After considering to try to replicate Maresca's tactics, this would be it.
Palmer with Trequartista role, RW would be put under Inside Forward (Attack), LW would be only In Inverted Winger to combat the final third of the game, No 9 as Complete Forward to make it function across all phases of the gameplay. (Work Ball into Box and Pass into Space may have benefits on those four trident of attacks here, perhaps)
In the middle, Enzo with Segundo Volante (Attacking), making him to go up and down of the pitch through the middle, alongside Caicedo as Half Back (Defend) to protect the backline (Focus Play through the middle)
Cucurella with Inverted Fullback (Defend), but on personal role, I do set his as Wingback (Attack) on providing his free license to roam above (Overlap Left)
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Let's see how does it goes further on the pre-season consists of 10 friendlies have been decided.
Wait for the next series after this.
See ya!!!
#827164 🔵 "Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire" 🔵
Irfan Roslan
🔵 Blueprint to Blue Glory: Rebuilding Chelsea Under Boehly to Echo the Roman Empire 🔵
When Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital took over Chelsea in 2022, the club stood at a crossroads. Gone was the ruthless efficiency of the Roman Abramovich era—a time defined by silverware, superstar managers, and an unapologetically results-first philosophy. In its place emerged a new vision: youth-driven recruitment, long-term project planning, and an ambitious attempt to redefine Chelsea’s footballing identity in the modern age.
But with big spending came bigger scrutiny. Can this new era truly deliver the same level of dominance once enjoyed under Roman’s watchful eye? Can a club once synonymous with instant success learn the patience required to build something sustainable, yet still elite?
This save is my answer to those questions.
In "Blueprint to Blue Glory," I take on the Chelsea project in FM24 with a clear objective—rebuild the squad with structure, discipline, and purpose, while staying true to the high standards that made Chelsea a powerhouse in the 2000s and 2010s. Tactical balance, youth integration, and a refined recruitment model will be the pillars of this journey. No shortcuts, no chaos—just calculated steps back to the top.
The Roman empire may have fallen, but under Boehly, it’s time to prove Chelsea can rise again.
“ARISE!!!”
[ Sung-Jinwoo, Solo Levelling]
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As usual, typical owners would greet gracefully for a new manager in-charge for Chelsea team
Director of Football would be the ex-Brighton's Director of Football which Boehly has recruited during early takeover when most of the Brighton's staff has been brought upon along with Graham Potter (Well…yeah..)
Within the club's history, Chelsea has won
-UEFA Champions League (2012 // 2021)
-English Premier League (1955 // 2005 // 2006 // 2010 // 2015 // 2017 under Conte)
-FIFA Club World Cup (2021), which in real-life Chelsea still participating due to 2021 UCL success
-European Cup Winners Cup (1971 // 1998)
-UEFA Europa League (2013 // 2019)
-UEFA Super Cup (1998 // 2021)
-FA Cup (1970 // 1997 // 2000 // 2007 // 2009 // 2010 // 2012 // 2018)
-Carabao Cup (1965 // 1998 // 2005 // 2007 // 2015)
-FA Community Shield (1955 // 2000 // 2005 // 2009)
From the above, all of these would be silverwares that have been won under Roman era. With much more financial muscles that can be pumped into our squad year by year, perhaps it is not impossible for us to replicate things right further.
In terms of facilities, so far I'm not concerned much. As long as there's home venue for us to show the true value towards Stamford Bridge fans, we would preserve as long as we could.
But the current worriness is the transfer budget. With nil transfer budget and loads of wage budget (4.2m p/w), I don't think we would have problems…..for now I guess so. smirks
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BOARD CULTURE
When we try to observe and take an initial look on our board culture overall, I'm not surprised.
Maybe because of past achievements under previous owners that are possible to be achieved, it is reasonable that they may want to replicate again those achievements, but with much financial muscle under Boehly-Clearlake capital, they would also want to manifest a successful era with more trophies and utmost dominance as per what Real Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain and Barcelona able to enjoy past decades.
SUPPORTER CULTURE
In terms of supporter's side, they also want to embrace an attractive football being implemented into their own favorite football clubs, including Chelsea here.
For current expectation, they would expect no less than qualifying for Europa League….for now.
Also due to domestic rivals, they also expecting us to finish and dominate Spurs, Liverpool and West Ham in the standings to be worthwhile for some time.
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So far that's all for the introductory here. On next post, we'll try to identify the key players that we would focus on, and to what tactical instructions, formations that we want to implement across all seasons.
This is to ensure that cohesion among the players in the squad are truly strong toward the end of the first season (hopefully), thus mentoring would be much easier for newcoming players at later season in the future.
See ya!!!
#826333 The Werkself Way: A Data-Driven Youth Revolution at Leverkusen in FM24
Irfan Roslan
The Werkself Way: A Data-Driven Youth Revolution at Leverkusen in FM24
2ND SERIES : CONTINUING XABI ALONSO'S LEGACY, BUT IN DIFFERENT PHILOSOPHY
TRANSFERS IN AND OUT
Once I've been appointed, I need to dissect the squad first, somehow I do realize, before I've being accepted, Leverkusen already sold / release for free.
Kossounou has been sold to Atalanta for 25m after being loaned out for a season, the past season, perhaps with a mandatory release clause I guess.
Meanwhile Jonathan Tah being released for free after Rolfes decided not to renew his contract, or maybe due to Tah seeking new challenges abroad.
Frimpong, although being buyout by Liverpool before the database being updated earlier, seems reflecting the same situation in real life for 34.5m.
And Timo Hubers being sold for 1.6m, with add-ons may up to 2.1m further, if add-ons being met.
Due to being provided around 63m something, perhaps from those Kossounou and Frimpong sales, I do need to manoeuvre something in my current squad before the new season kicks-in.
So I bought these guys in.
Todibo being permanent around 35.5m, with add-ons, if met, may raise up to 46m.
Adrian Bernabe from Lyon for 31m, with add-ons, if met, may raise up to 33.5m
Soumaila Diabate from Salzburg for 1.6m
Stankovic on-loan with permanent 2.5m
Romeo Amane for 5m
Nacho Ferri from Frankfurt for 2.5m (3.5m with add-ons)
And Nicolas Romero for 8.25m (9.25m with add-ons) from Minnesota
When I dissect the squad, it seems that our defence is quite poor in numbers, so Todibo would be the one of the key players
I know that this may looks like quite a bunch of players.
But actually I'm just reused the 75m money when Tapsoba being sold to Real Madrid to buy younger players, but surely using data analytics.
TACTICS AND FORMATIONS
For formations, I intend to continue Xabi Alonso's 3-4-2-1 tactics in real life instead of sticking to my own 4-2-3-1 implemented from Lyon last season.
I do agree that why I want more difficulties by changing formations instead of sticking to the formation I've used to won Ligue 1 with Lyon last season.
In this new season, I do want to be more solidified in backline, while maintaining counter-attacks on multiple angles across the next thirds of the pitch.
From the transfers-in that I made, Tenas would be the mainstay protecting the goalpost replacing Hradecky.
Backline of 3 players consist of Piero Hincapie, Dean Huijsen and Jean-Clair Todibo. with Nicolas Romero, Pascal Struijk, Adamo Nagalo, Stanisic, Belocian and Albian Hajdari to rotate among themselves, especially when we want to focus on multiple folds of competition to gain even slightest advantage further.
Next layer, wingbacks would be Gutierrez, Brandon Williams and Elias Jalert
Midfielders, or DMs, would be Bernabe, Xhaka, Andrich and Alex Garcia
No 10s consist of Florian Wirtz, Jonas Hoffman, Fermin and Martin Terrier, which I've convert him as No 10.
Upfront as the sole pole attacker would be Boniface and Schick, with somehow I do use Terrier as well.
I do also planning to implement 3-4-1-2 for further flexibility in attacks and exploitation of space in behind.
SO WHAT'S HAPPENING AFTER THAT?
Not making any losing streak, just winning streaks that our team do understand and immersed into.
HOW'S THE OVERALL PERFORMANCE?
Boniface gone to be top scorer of our squad with 19 goals scored in 20 appearances,
Wirtz next with 19 goal contributions (12 goals 7 assists) across 23 appearance
Patrick Schick also, after considering he's on long-term injury 2 weeks (Pulled Knee Ligaments) and 3 days (Hamstring) doesn't give him any difficulties to score bag of goals (13 goal contributions; 9 goals 4 assists) in only 14 appearances.
Jonas Hofmann, although he's the most veteran, seems to prove he did have more in his tank, by providing 16 goal contributions (5 goals 11 assists) in 19 appearances
Gutierrez also functions as our main provider besides Hoffmann, to contribute 11 assists, besides Jalert with 4 goals and 7 assists in 24 appearances.
Which means our both formations are quite functional to complement all players available in our squad here.
MAIN HIGHLIGHTS FOR FIRST HALF OF THE SEASON
7-0 win vs SC Paderborn
Brilliant performance from Boniface as he's freely scoring 5 goals in the game, thus gaining POTM of the game
Also Hoffman was very functional beside Boniface as he also freely scoring 2 goals and 3 assists in the game as well
5-0 win vs PSV Eindhoven in UEFA Champions League
3-0 win vs Arsenal in UEFA Champions League
5-2 win vs Stuttgart
6-0 win vs AEK Athens
3-0 win vs Real Madrid
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Perhaps this would be the sufficient enough to highlight our first half-season with Leverkusen
Wait for the next series whether we can still replicate unbeaten season like what Leverkusen has done under Xabi Alonso further.
See ya!!!!
#825931 The Werkself Way: A Data-Driven Youth Revolution at Leverkusen in FM24
Irfan Roslan
The Werkself Way: A Data-Driven Youth Revolution at Leverkusen in FM24
1ST SERIES : MAKING MANAGERIAL CHANGES DECISION
After I carry Lyon team during 2023/2024 season with unexpected turnaround during the last game of the season against Paris Saint-Germain where I won and take over to the 1st place with 86 points, 1 point above them, I feel that I would like to express myself and offering my services to other clubs available.
Even though it seems like disrespect, but this has been discussed with Lyon board members that at least gave me a chance to proof and offer myself to others so that I can expand my CV and managerial portfolio to strengthen my reputation in world football
After I chase to Inter Milan and attending their interview, which, perhaps, their choice towards ex-Die Werkself manager himself Xabi Alonso, thus I do understand that his reputation holds more bigger impact on their consideration.
So not long after, I apply for Leverkusen managerial position, and they called me for an interview further.
Not long after Leverkusen interview, Lyon board members approach me to renew the contract with them, since my contract with them only until 2026, worth 11k p/w only.
But still, their offer is quite low, as I demand, not much I guess, only 27.5k p/w for 3 years
And they rejected instantly at the moment.
So for me, I guess it's time for me to search for new challenges, perhaps.
And not long after contract rejection happened, Simon Rolfes, Leverkusen's Managing Director, approach me to be appointed as Xabi Alonso's successor with 26.5k p/w for 3 years contract.
Suit enough on what I'm searching for, and I accept their offer and with heartfelt moment, need to leave Lyon for Die Werkself.
So here we go!
#825919 Olympique Lyonnais Rebuild to Glory Days
Irfan Roslan
Series: Reviving the Lion – Rebuilding Olympique Lyonnais in FM24
5th Series : Split Series
In this short series here, I'll try to split off my career into two different pathways, which are
1) Staying with Lyon to continue rebuild
2) Applying for other career team to continue further adding my managerial career portfolio CV and experience to strengthen my reputation as well.
For those who want to stick for Lyon rebuild, can continue to read through this series.
For those who would want to know how I can replace Xabi Alonso (which unfortunately been the Inter Milan's board favorite to take over Inter Milan, while me, would take over from him, which we'll cover through the link here onwards :
https://sortitoutsi.net/content/71304/die-werkself-rebuild
So those who want to see how I rebuild Die Werkself, can click the above link.
See ya!!
#825612 Olympique Lyonnais Rebuild to Glory Days
Irfan Roslan
Series: Reviving the Lion – Rebuilding Olympique Lyonnais in FM24
4th Series : Europa League and Coupe de France Finale
So this is the result for Europa League Final, which is not much expected since I made the last-minute resort to decide on formation changes to create unexpected outcome, which came fruitful.
Clearly counter-attacking style that I already implemented in them. Low possession (39%), fairly high number of high intensity sprints, shots, shots on target and XGs.
But with a harsh strength and physical game that almost all our players got the yellow card here haha!
In Coupe de France final game, easy game for us to dominate in terms of shots, shots on target and XGs here.
And not long after we won Coupe de France final, something exciting happens.
Inzaghi been sacked by Inter Milan in-game, which suddenly opens up my mind to wandering around other top leagues.
It's not like I would like to leave Lyon so early in my career here. But who knows if the chances are there for me to take.
It's my only chance as well to keep improving my tactical to the new level, I hope so.
#825402 Olympique Lyonnais Rebuild to Glory Days
Irfan Roslan
Series: Reviving the Lion – Rebuilding Olympique Lyonnais in FM24
3rd Series : 2nd Half of 2023/2024 Season Performance
March 2024 - 11th May 2024 : Major domination continues
No issues at all, as we're dominating almost all of those matches including goal-winning penalty match against Paris Saint-Germain during Coupe de France Semi Final.
During last period here that I'm trying to blend along younger players that considered as fringe players such as Lilian Coponat (19-year old centerback who can also play as a 6), Jeremy Mounesse (19-year old centerback), Romain Perret (20-year old No 10, rotating with Almada and Cherki sometimes), Chaim El Djebali (20-year old No 10 who scored 5 goals alone), and Samuel Bossiwa (dominant left winger which produced more assist counts in right wing position rather than left wing dominant ones).
18th May 2024 : Title Decider Match
During this date here, Lyon is on 2nd place with 83 points, while Paris Saint-Germain is on 1st place with 85 points.
2 point difference, 1 match left for both to decide who's gonna win the title
So on the last game of the season, I intend to change my dominant formation to a first-time change formation, from 4-2-3-1 to 4-2-4
Below would be how it goes on how we want to play under 4-2-4.
Focusing on wing play, very low and compact block, focusing more on counter attacks + adding another headbutt beside Mikautadze. Benefitting Cherki and Nuamah's pacy dribbling at both sides, while Tagliafico supporting Cherki at the back while Schoppner dropping back to add defensive solidity, Williams covering at the back of Nuamah just in case of facing PSG's counter-attack.
And the outcome??
We won 1-0, Lacazetter scoring the one and only goal early in the game, at 3rd minute.
38% possession compared to PSG's 62%
Such classy performance whereby we produce more shots on target (5 vs 2) than PSG in this game, slightly more XG as well, more corners and fouls produced, lesser shots off-target.
So the randomly change formation is very satisfied just to topple PSG down from their title winning side by slight 1 point, at the last matchday of the season.
Bitter to swallow by PSG fans, players and manager itself, where their only loss is to us at the end of the matchday haha!!
Squad Analysis at the End of the Season
Throughout the season, Duje Caleta-Car has performed above my own expectations, playing 46 games in total (41 games started, 5 from bench), scoring 8 goals and 1 assists, mostly headers here during corner kicks.
Rayan Cherki would be the next one where he played 40 games (36 starts, 4 bench), contributing 26 goals contributions (11 goals, 15 assists)
Next one, our man of steel in between the goal posts, Lucas Perri. Although I do think that, for the sake of our focus of academy players to be implemented later on, but need to decide more closely as to avoid from being easily toppled down at the start of the season, even though I have brought in Maduka Okoye as his backup on cup matches as emergency cover.
Ernest Nuamah also played 43 matches (36 starts, 8 from bench), producing 28 goals contributions (14 goals, 14 assists)
Moussa Niakhate also would be a head-on for me to lead this season with 35 games played (although fewer games played during to his participation in African Cup of Nations during end of December - early February)
Next would be our own loanee itself, Thiago Almada, played 44 games (30 starts, 14 from bench) producing 35 goal contributions (26 goals, 9 assists)
Mikautadze (20 goal contributions, 15 goals 5 assists), Lacazette (fewer games played due to long-term injury, but still contributing 15 goal contributions, 12 goals 3 assists), Veretout (16 goals contributions with 10 goals and 6 assists from no 6 position), Fofana (6 goals 6 assists) and Abner Vinicius (2 goals 7 assists) also worth to mention here as well.
So there's 2 remaining fixtures here; facing Aston Villa on Europa League final, and USL Dunkerque at Coupe de France final
So after those fixtures ended, we'll try to configure how we can improve our team more before 2024/2025 season begins on this July further in the next series.
See ya!!
#825401 Olympique Lyonnais Rebuild to Glory Days
Irfan Roslan
Series: Reviving the Lion – Rebuilding Olympique Lyonnais in FM24
2nd Series : 1st Half of 2023/2024 Season Performance
From previous series we do believe that we have mentioned earlier we'll be using 4-2-3-1 due to almost no pure center midfielder in our squad from our perspectives.
Which the 2 refers to pairing no 6s we use in our formations.
Although I'm not familiar much for 4-2-3-1 nor 4-3-3 due to previous failures to dominate, but somehow we have reached almost-jackpot achievements towards total domination and became all-time challenger to Paris Saint-Germain in Ligue 1
From friendlies in pre-season towards end of October
In friendlies, there's nothing to be focused much as it is only for warmup and synchronization of formation for those players to blend into.
And from the beginning of the season only that the strides are there. From a few draws throughout September and a loss as well, seems that our players kinda jiggling on how to synchronize as I'm just mix and match as well as making frequent changes due to injuries happened.
And on October, only that we do have a few wins and a minor gap which we lost to Monaco, for me it is normal here.
November 2023 - February 2024 : This is where the domination starts
And during November schedule turnarounds that all of the sudden we have consistent winning streak, although there's some minor gap on winning state here.
So far Athletic Club, Nantes, Qarabag FK, Lille, Reims, Strasbourg and Auxerre that makes our players some headache as they implement very compact low block to avoid from Cherki, Fofana, Almada and Nuamah to convert every golden chances to grab the winning opportunities early in those matches.
But somehow we easily crushed OGC Nice on back-to-back at the end of February which quite surprise there. Yeah ya know, Ratcliffe-empire-based club supposedly able to strengthen, however it's their thing to settle up, not us.
TRANSFER BUDGET ALREADY GIVEN
Since we did marvelously consistent, along with much improved financial standings, our board (especially Textor, need to give him credit tho!!) already agreed to give us £36.26m to manouvre our signings to improve more into our squad, as well as immersing our own academy products to strengthen our academy standings as well.
We actually have done offloading veteran players that didn't much play part in this season due to injuries + heavy-bloated wages, so we already have freed around £180k p/w for next season.
But also since January winter transfer window here also that we have sort out a few transfers that costs us £26m (£30m if included bonuses) and additional £200k p/w in terms of younger players than ongoing veteran players. Which for me, much more feasible for any future offload if we able to collect at least certain increment of profit to boost our incoming war transfer chest for future seasons. Who knows right?
Besides the youngsters, we do also pickup the main man under Michael Keane, aged 32 years. Maybe, somehow, some of the audience may question here, why did I sell out Tolisso and Clinton Mata and pickup Keane here? Is it that their leadership is not sufficient enough along the season?
It's not like that guys. Somehow I do understand those tricky questions unable to be answered straight away, as I actually also do go to Everton games (in this save only, not IRL) that Keane were exceptional on leading the backline considered as last man's standing (btw Everton stands at 13th in Premier League, which further proves my decision to be quite accurate here.
Take a look on how Keane performs well in the season.
Along 32 games played (22 starts, 11 from bench), he only lost in possession of 3.96 times per 90 minutes, 45.24 completed passes per 90 (consumes 89% passes completed overall), 3.81 progressive passes per 90, 5.73 headers won per 90, and 11.77 possession won per 90.
For me it's quite impressive when considered he's on the veteran age but still ample to produce quite impressive metrics as well as reflecting his leadership in the backline.
We'll continue to explain on the next series onwards.
See ya!!
#825089 Olympique Lyonnais Rebuild to Glory Days
Irfan Roslan
Series: Reviving the Lion – Rebuilding Olympique Lyonnais in FM24
1st Series : Introduction
1.The Fallen Kings of France
“From Juninho’s screamers to Benzema’s brilliance—how did Lyon go from seven straight Ligue 1 titles to fighting mid-table mediocrity?”
The post-2010 era saw Lyon lose more than games. They lost direction.
Aulas, once the face of modern French football management, couldn’t prevent the growing disconnect between vision and execution. Overreliance on short-term fixes, late contract renewals, and lack of identity in recruitment dragged Lyon down. Talents like Ndombele, Aouar, and Memphis Depay either peaked too soon or departed without maximizing their value.
Enter John Textor, an American businessman with a grand vision but also heavy baggage. Lyon's financials are crippled by debt, with poor European finishes and decreasing domestic appeal weakening revenue streams.
In this FM24 rebuild, the plan is clear:
1. Youth Development: Double down on the academy. Lyon’s DNA must be reignited.
2.Smart Recruitment: Find undervalued gems and sell high when necessary.
3.Tactical Identity: Possession-based, fast transitions, and faith in young legs.
4.Financial Recovery: Sell wisely, avoid overpaying, and balance the books.
It’s not just about winning matches. It’s about fixing a broken ecosystem.
2.The Blueprint – What Went Wrong, and What We’ll Do Differently
The decline wasn’t instant—it was a slow burn. After years of financial missteps, over-reliance on player sales, and managerial turnover, Lyon lost the competitive edge. Aulas’ magic touch faded, and the club began losing top talents for nothing: Houssem Aouar, Memphis Depay, and Moussa Dembélé all left on free transfers. High-wage underperformers came in. Transfers lacked vision. The once-praised academy was underutilized.
Enter John Textor, the American businessman who took over in 2023. His first job? Stabilize a sinking ship that held €300 million in debt. But he has a tool—one that has always served OL well: the youth academy.
In this save, our plan is clear:
Restore the club’s identity by emphasizing young, homegrown talent
Rebuild financial stability through smart selling and wage control
Develop a tactical philosophy that complements Lyon’s traditional attacking identity
Return to Champions League football within three seasons
3.Squad Audit – The Good, The Bad, and The Loaned-Out
Lyon’s FM24 squad is a mix of promise and problems. Here’s a snapshot of key players:
The Foundation:
Moussa Niakhaté – A commanding center-back signed from Nottingham Forest for €31.9 million, expected to anchor Lyon's defense.
Ernest Nuamah – A dynamic 20-year-old right winger acquired from RWD Molenbeek for €28.5 million, bringing pace and creativity to the flanks.
Georges Mikautadze – A prolific striker who returned to Lyon from FC Metz for €18.5 million, aiming to lead the attack with his goal-scoring prowess.
Abner Vinícius – A 24-year-old Brazilian left-back signed from Real Betis for €8 million, providing depth and competition on the left side of defense.
Duje Ćaleta-Car – A Croatian center-back whose loan from Southampton was made permanent for €3.59 million, adding experience to the backline.
Lucas Perri – A Brazilian goalkeeper brought in from Botafogo for €3.25 million, expected to compete for the starting spot between the posts.
Thiago Almada – An Argentine attacking midfielder on loan from Botafogo, adding creativity and flair to the midfield.
Tanner Tessmann – An American midfielder signed for €6 million, bringing energy and versatility to the central midfield. Being loaned out to give sufficient playing time.
Warmed Omari – A central defender on loan from Rennes, providing additional options in defense.
Rémy Descamps – A goalkeeper acquired on a free transfer, expected to serve as a backup option.
The Concerns:
Inconsistent Defense: The backline lacks leadership and composure. Rebuilding starts here.
Goalkeeper Instability: Not a reliable long-term No.1 in sight.
Squad Balance: Too many average players on high wages who don’t fit the system.
We’ll clean house early—offloading players who don't fit the philosophy, reinvesting in young signings, and keeping key leaders to maintain team dynamics.
Immediate plan: trim the wage bill, bring in a reliable CB and GK, and promote hungry youth.
4.Tactical Renaissance – Redefining the Lyon Identity
We’re bringing back the Lyon DNA: attacking football built on technique, pace, and tactical discipline.
Formation: 4-2-3-1 or 4-3-3 DM Wide (depending on opposition).
From here we decided to stick to 4-2-3-1 to implement team cohesion among players in our squad.
Key Tactical Ideas:
Mentality
Decide to use attacking since we want to engage opponents at their thirds.
In Possession
Fairly narrow attacking width
Play Out of Defence
Slightly More Direct with Various Tempos Used, depends on oppositions
Hit Early Crosses and Shoot on Sight, to exploit zone 14 areas.
Play for Set Pieces
Run on Defence
In Transition
Counter-press
Counter
Slow Pace Down
Out of Possession
High Press
High line of engagement
Prevent short GK distribution
Get Stuck In
Drop Off More for conservatism to avoid counter-attacks (defence-first)
Trap Outside and Avoid More Crosses.
Team Roles:
Fofana usually used on the left to mimic Malouda-style drives (Interchanging roles between Winger (Attack) and Inside Forward (Attack)
Nuamah on the right as Winger (Attack) for direct attack
Cherki at no 10 spot to play on the middle of zone 14, as Attacking Midfielder (Support) to roam and provide support, also interchanging roles on Wingers sides when Almada playing at no 10 spot
Deep Lying Playmaker (Support) to pump long-balls from deep
Anchor (Defend) to protect the backline more
Full-backs on Support on the right and Wingback on Support on the left to provide final third additional support to wingers to cover wide areas
This setup allows fluid buildup while giving your brightest players space to shine. And most importantly, it gives the kids a clear structure to learn within.
5.Transfer Market Surgery – Smart Moves, No Panic Buys
Rules of the Rebuild:
No signing players over 26 unless they’re stopgap free agents. Useful for leadership guidance.
Sell at peak value; don’t wait.
Prioritize resale potential and mentality.
First and foremost, prioritize Lyon academy product-byline factory to save money. It's not only to rebuild their honor, but also rebuild their finances back
Targets by Position:
CB: Look to Ligue 2 or Croatia/Belgium for cheap, physical defenders.
GK: A young, modern sweeper keeper.
DM : A solid defensive midfielder pairing which one would be protecting backlines and the other one to circulating the ball through the middle of the pitch and slashing balls to various directions to launch counter-attacks
RW/LW: Technical wingers with flair and stamina. Think Eredivisie or Scandinavian leagues.
Avoid the trap of overpriced Ligue 1 players. Think like Monaco under Jardim: cheap, young, talented, and fearless.
6. The Factory Reopens – Lyon’s Youth Revolution
Lyon’s academy produced Benzema, Gonalons, Umtiti, Tolisso, Fekir, and Aouar. It still has that magic.
Youth Development Goals:
Maximize Individual Training for technical growth
Improve Mentoring Units with senior pros
Give cup and league minutes to top talents
Use Affiliate Clubs for quality loans
Promote talents like Mohamed El Arouch, Skelly Alvero, or Yanis Benyahia and build around them. Remember, one wonderkid could fund the rebuild. Although Skelly Alvero has been sold at this time of standpoint.
Let's see how does it goes in the next series. See ya!
#823495 [FM24] ATHLETIC BILBAO (or usually mentioned as ATHLETIC CLUB?) REBUILD CHALLENGE
Irfan Roslan
PART 7 : WONDERFUL CLOSING FOR 2023/2024 SEASON
So far we have clinched La Liga title for the 9th time.
So how does it goes for Europa League? Let's take a look.
With Atletico Madrid, they tend to bombard us with multiple counter-attacks just taking a look on their high intensity sprints (209 vs Bilbao's 207) with higher domination on-the-ball (58% possesssion vs Bilbao's 42%)
But still those guys, even though they do know nothing they could have done since winning La Liga title before, still having the fighting spirits to dominate a game.
Next, in Europa League final, facing Tottenham Hotspurs is such a big boulder in front of us before clinching Europa League title . Multiple high intensity sprints to counter-attack, but these guys stay compact to avoid any slight chances able to be converted.
And the last game would be facing Sociedad.
Maybe it could be that when facing Tottenham in the final they have gone all-out to fight for the UEL glory, I've given them chances to get cooldown to face Sociedad and currently satisfied to get 1 point in this game.
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So perhaps, that's the end of our 2023/2024 season. Glorius with traditional 4-4-2 tactics implemented. Suitable for players at our disposal, thus tweaking and enhancing every single player's abilities to convey on the pitch.
Won La Liga title for the 9th time, won UEL hardly fought, topple down Real Madrid to clinch Copa del Rey
Let's get those players some long rest to enjoy their vacation.
While me?
Continuing to improve our team tactically, technically, mentally and physically for our summer training camp on next season further.
Perhaps a new formation I guess?? Or would you guys prefer to stick to the current formation here only.
Let me know you guys' opinions at the comments down below 😉
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END OF SEASON ANALYSIS
So basically every time we end our season , we would try to check on who's performing the most of our team, who would still lacking and not performing at all and who would be considerate to be offloading from our books to balance our financial standing for long-term, as per what we have mentioned earlier in Part 1
Not surprising here since Inaki dominates the most, with 43 games played (41 starts, 2 from bench), scoring 33 goals and 5 assists across all competitions.
Take a look at ma' boys stats here.
In La Liga and UEL he clearly performed at the highest level here.
La Liga stats : 25 starts (2 from bench), 21 goals 3 assists. 15.36 XG and 3.80 XA
Europa League : 13 starts, 11 goals 2 assists, 10.05 XG and 1.26 XA
Only in Copa del Rey that somehow his time mostly injured so I need to compensate him with other backup players further.
Next, Gorka Guruzeta, our 2nd most performers of the season.
With 59 games played (40 games started, 19 from bench), he able to nearly outscore Inaki in all metrics.
Nico Williams' performances also very good in my opinion.
Although most of the time in La Liga he almost fatigued, but still contributing the overall metrics very nicely.
In Europa League here only that he totally dominates that he has been entitled with UEFA Europa League Young Player of the Season
He also dominates in UEFA Europa League Player of the Season, which also our other two players also dominate for 2nd and 3rd position.
Next, our underrated player of the season, Alex Berenguer.
With 53 games played (37 starts, 16 from bench) he able to contribute 31 goal contributions (12 goals 19 assists), with total XG and XA of 12.24 and 16.43 accordingly.
Quite satisfied when our 6th man (underrated player in basketball team definition) able to carry over the burden of the team when Inaki and Nico most of the time also got injuries and rests.
Next, our academy player, Aingeru Olabarrieta
Although not playing so much due to preferring Nico and Alex Berenguer (also Djalo), but still he scores crucial goals in La Liga as well as dominating the pitch.
And still justifies our academy player still making enough contributions for his first season in the senior team this season.
Next, Ekain Azkune.
Justifies his role as the backup / bench player of the season, with 9 goals and 3 assists.
There would be some slight improvements needed to be done by Sancet here. Although he's not reaching the target by a slight margin from my perspectives, but overall, he's already at a high level to perform consistently all the time.
Although his contract saga is strucked during he's on the top-level performance ( I don't know whether AI intentionally do the same trend with other career modes whereby any top performers would riot to seek for contract improvements), but still I'm not bothering or ignoring him as the one's that would provide the final say on anything….
is me myself only, as the manager.
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That's all for now.
Let us close this season with the smile on our face after knowing them have performed at their very best, even the underrated players as well.
See ya!!
#823474 [FM24] ATHLETIC BILBAO (or usually mentioned as ATHLETIC CLUB?) REBUILD CHALLENGE
Irfan Roslan
PART 6 : JOURNEY THROUGH WINNING LA LIGA TITLE 2023/2024 SEASON
Let's continue our journey further here, aite' mate?
So since from the last Las Palmas game, we do only losing only once, with Aston Villa on Europa League Quarter Final First Leg at away games, where we're beaten for 2-3.
Let's see how does it goes statistically here.
On this game we decide to give Inaki Williams some rest due to his fatigue already drop at a serious level, so we intend to chop and change players selection in this game and still we tend to have higher intensity sprints (130 vs 113)
Clear counter-attacking style when facing Valencia. Low possession (42%), higher intensity sprints (189) and XG (2.38) clearly justifies the counter-attacking we've implemented almost the whole season here.
Alright so let me clarify here something.
Actually we don't expect this game would be the hardest one we would need to swallow.
Because of why?
1) Our counter-attacking style clearly been nullified, 2) Although all shots produced were on target (9 shots / 9 on target) at 100% efficiency, but still in terms of conversion is much worse with only XG of 1.19 able to be produce
2) Our high intensity sprints also been nullified here as well that our 218 intensity sprints cannot produce superior performances I've expected from them.
But it's okay, only first leg. We believe we can bounce back on 2nd leg further.
Making some tweaks due to key players resting, so I tend to prioritize the defensive shape as the off-the-ball shape to make sure the defensive solidity is still there although most of the key cogs being rested.
36% possession, 150 high intensity sprints (vs Getafe's 106), higher XG produced (2.49 XG's vs Getafe's 1.32)
Finally we've been able to bounce back on 2d leg in total domination!!!
And we're been able to proceed to the semi final of UEFA Europa League with aggregate score 6-3
In this Copa del Rey final, it's unlucky for Real Madrid to have Vinicius Junior to be given red card at the early game on 33th minute.
Nonetheless, we shall need to take the golden opportunity here to dominate them with Guruzeta and Nico scoring for us in the final stage here.
Positive head start to gain dominant lead in the first leg UEFA Europa League Semi-Final first leg, by which we totally compact on our defensive shape and making counter-attacking more efficiently.
They can take the ball, we take 3 points at Old Trafford.
Berenguer got his brace in this game, totally underrated player here.
In San Mames, once again we dominate the game here!
Nico scoring a brace!
And finally we have been qualified to the UEFA Europa League Final to gain another precious cup into our trophy cabinet.
Indeed a final showdown by Alaves to delay our moment to clinching La Liga title. Up until 83rd minute only Nico able to score an important goal, thus became the title decider of the goal scored, which make us winning the La Liga for the 9th time.
What an achievement!
Let's continue to the next part after this to see if we can clinch for UEFA Europa League cup at the final.
See ya!!!
#823368 [FM24] ATHLETIC BILBAO (or usually mentioned as ATHLETIC CLUB?) REBUILD CHALLENGE
Irfan Roslan
PART 5 : RUNNING THROUGH MOST OF LA LIGA 2023/2024 SEASON
In the past parts, we've gone through those tactics along with specifying those instructions for our team to contribute and execute even further.
So let's take a look at how does it goes.
Is it, or is it not?
IT IS TRUE.
I'm not doing any sorts of reloads as what you guys might have a first glance after lookng at the winning-and-not-losing streaks above.
I'm tailoring every single of those matches and even attending it live in those virtual games as well.
Only those matches that we skip from winning it would be with Barcelona (3-3), Tottenham (1-1), Real Sociedad (2-2), and Celta Vigo at away game (1-1).
And the rest is history.
As usual, we would conquer the possession side, interconnecting passes between three departments, with high intensity sprints matches our philosophy of counter-attacking in fast-paced style
As usual we do get the ball more often although not totally in terms of possession (51% compared to Sevilla's 49%)
In terms of expected goals (XG), Sevilla supposedly taking the win here but Simon performed in a great state to nullify the goal threat by Sevilla.
Seems like at this time our defensive backline is quite loose as Espanyol able to convert their chances to 2 goals from XG of 1.18 out of 6 shots on target.
In this game also, Tottenham able to produce more high intensity sprints than us (190 vs 155), but still they were ineffective on frontline spaces to convert their counter-attacking transition.
Las Palmas also got higher amount of high intensity sprints than us (168 vs 146). Their shots on targets also got higher than us (11 shots on target vs 8), but still their XG is even with the goals scored (2.12 XG with 2 goals scored)
So far this is the highest possession we can achieved, with 62% (vs 38% of Mallorca). Seems here Mallorca would keep their off-the-ball shape much stronger, due to the higher XG we achieve (XG of 3.71 from 7 shots on target, 3 are convertible to goals) and higher intensity sprints (164 vs 158)
This is the recorded one which we achieved 1) the lowest possession (48%) and lowest amount of highest intensity sprints (108 vs 136) which seems that our intention of doing counter-attacking style of play is being realized at this phase.
Here, we did not convert most of our chances when we compared our shots (26), Shots on Target (12), XG (4.51) with the goals scored (3). It could be that our players at this moment are already facing some sort of fatigue, thus misplacing and mispositioning themselves to convert most of those chances .
This is also reflecting our counter-attacking with high accuracy precision so far as we spoken of. With 112 high intensity sprints, 45% possession, 2.95 XG out of 5 shots on target, but able to convert to 4 goals
Pure counter - attacking style from Bilbao here. Although Leganes considered bottom-of-the-league teams in La Liga, but still we can feel impressed as Leganes trying to take the domination of the game 52% vs 48% of Bilbao) but 4 goals converted from 7 shots on target with 1.80 XG chances produced in this game.
Seems that in this game, the right side of the pitch dominating this game, as our academy player, Olabarrieta (or called Olabar) scoring brace of goals, continued by Nico on the near end of the second half.
From here, seems that our players want to decide to use counter-attacking style from the training they have done beforehand. With XG of 2.86, high intensity sprints of 168 and 42% possession, clearly stated that they would prefer to dominate defensively on low-block before hit on counter-attacks.
In this game, we tend to change our game to keep off-the-ball shape to preserve our aggregate score from 1st leg. 43% possession, with low XG of 1.08 and only 1 shot on target, clearly stating that we would only delaying the game from defence to midfield only (Passes completed by defence of 87% and midfield of 82%)
With Atletico Madrid, which is one of the La Liga giants besides Barcelona and Real Madrid, we able to dominate them in terms of XG (1.94 vs 0.29), Shots on target (6 vs 5) and lastly High Intensity Sprints (192 vs 187), reflects our style of counter-attacking is taking shape at the fullest
What the great Jose Mourinho have quoted before, which reflects his resilience on the pitch
“They can take the ball home, I take 3 points”
And here already proved it. The players decide to strengthen the off-the-ball shape, reflected on higher amount of high intensity sprints (128 vs Barca's 94'), low possession 47% with Barca's 53%, but still, from those high intensity sprints, they tend to produce 15 shots on target, the highest so far I guess, and XG of 5.74 but able to convert only 3 goals, which cleary reflects Ter-Stegen's dominance in front of the goalposts.
Facing 3-4-2-1 formation which the new manager of Valladolid which just came in at this game, doesn't falter us out, as we clearly dominate them in terms of goal convertible (7 shots on target, XG of 2.14 with 5 goals scored)
Same script here, Barcelona tend to dominate, we tend to hunt for goals, with XG of 3.94 from 9 shots on targets, 2 were convertible to goals. 214 high intensity sprints with Barca's 105, with possession of 38% with Barca's 62%.
Same script with Hoffenheim, they want to dominate with the ball, we tend to dominate off-the-ball.
Seems luck is on our side, with XG of 0.84 out of 5 shots on target, we able to convert to 3 goals in this game with 33% possession and lower completed passes of 80% compared to Villareal's 90% with 67% possession.
We decide to go all out for UEL round of 16 for second leg to preserve our lead from first leg, which ends 3-2. With highest XG of 4.14 from 9 shots on target, 207 high intensity sprints along with more shots produced in this game, tends to reflect our intention of all-out attack.
We end our posts here with the last game with Las Palmas. Total domination interms of XG (2.40), possession (57%) and high intensity sprints (151). Also we can take note of the average rating of each players in this game clearly stated we able to dominate them in this game (7.23 average vs 6.56)
That's all for now for this posts. For the next post, we will provide the remaining games' results and what would happened next, whether we can be the Invincibles of La Liga, or there would be certain downfall due to key player's injuries or else.
See ya!
#822926 FM 24 - FC Schalke 04
Irfan Roslan
Kindly check my PM, thanks.
#822330 [FM24] ATHLETIC BILBAO (or usually mentioned as ATHLETIC CLUB?) REBUILD CHALLENGE
Irfan Roslan
PART 4 : BEGINNING OF LA LIGA 2023/2024 SEASON
Welcome back !!
Alright just in case for a revision here, we do mentioned that we would comply for 4-2-2-2 formation with Wingers and CM-DM pairing on the past right?
So just to let you know, so far the results are very fruitful for the first 5 games for now.
The first 5 games of the season we would face
Real Betis (A)
Real Madrid (H)
Celta Vigo (H)
Sevilla (A)
Osasuna (H)
Basically what I can do here is to construct a training schedule for a week in order for them to have the ‘muscle memory’ to do and execute the counter-attack at will from all angles and position.
Like below;
Above would be the Saturday match preparation training schedule BY WHICH, is the most effective ones for the first 5 games here. It is also implement for Wednesday games as well, just to make minor changes on those training regimes
So after we gone through the first 2 games here, the results are quite surprising ;
5 goals scored. 1 goal conceded. With much smaller squad than others have.
That's why I'm focusing on the team cohesion so that, when the training schedules are executed, those players would have the chemistry built around and between them.
So the results already being produced so early than expected.
BUT…….
We do have the remaining 3 next games to decide whether we can retain the tactical instructions or not. And this would be explained at the next part.
In this part we'll focusing on the movements of the players that contributing to the goal. As it is important to observe whether they have the cohesion needed and tactical understanding and superiority on all players, not being exempted any one of them, even those bench players also have produced so far.
So let's focus on this Real Betis game first.
From this, I do understand and well observe that so far, all players being listed in XI this gameday, has well executed on the gameplan that I tend to plan for.
With Betis playing in 4-2-3-1 formation to put more body in midfield for numerical superiority, we stick to 4-2-2-2 CM-DM formation here as always.
In terms of amount of shots produced, I do see that mostly our wingers able to produce something on the final third for any of the available front lines to finish it.
But seems that Adrian, Betis' goalkeeper, is so much superiority that out of 8 on-target, only 2 of them able to convert to goals.
I do not concern yet on the lacking of goals as they do need time to familiarize on each positioning or so, once all are blended, I believe that the amount of goals converted would be increased in time.
We do also produce much lesser passes completed, which seems justifiable with the counter-attack football we do want to implemented. As we can see, 93% of those passes are done from backline, which means that any proper build-up or sudden counter from the backline are dominantly being done by our backline, including Vesga as I do see in the match also that Vesga do regularly dropping near the backline to give pathways for Sancet to move forward to receive passes near zone 14.
Take a look on the positioning here. Where's Vega? He's tucking through the backline perfectly protecting the backline!!! Sancet? In front of Vivian just to get ready to pounce forward for counter attack where Guruzeta, Berenguer at his left, Inaki Williams and Nico Williams on the far side.
Take a look as well how much space Betis do left for us to pounce. Already wide acres of space guys!
After a few seconds when Vesga pressing Isco, take look on how much acres of spacing can Williams brothers can exploit along with Berenguer on the other side?
Supposedly Ez Abde may need to drop off to cover Nico Williams instead of attacking De Marcos in my opinion here.
Another crucial moment here which Sancet already tackle the ball from Bellerin, Vesga standby at the back of him just in case if Sancet fails to get the ball. Take note on the position of Berenguer, Nico Williams, Guruzeta and Inaki Williams. Multiple angles of counter attack can be executed here.
While Isco, Eze Abde, Cucho and Avila firmly being helded by our strong backlines here.
Sancet passes to Berenguer, and clearly pass to Guruzeta for Inaki Williams to exploit far acres of space in front of him.
The first goal for us here. Inaki drifting wide to left wide space, with Sancet lately arriving into the penalty box, Guruzeta ready to pounce on-air ball if crosses reach to him, on far right Nico using his pace to run into the box lately as well on the far spaces.
Once Inaki passes to Sancet, with Guruzeta get ready and Nico also has arrive at the far side with Berenguer get ready to pounce on loose ball at zone 14 behind Sancet.
And BOOOOMM!! Sancet scores, Betis 0 - 1 Bilbao
The second goal below;
Ollabarrieta got the ball, Guruzeta, Unai Gomez, Inaki, Zarraga and Yuri already standby for counter-attacking. Why Yuri?
After Zarraga has recovered the second ball, Yuri is already beside him, Inaki and Unai Gomez already got their run to outpace Diego Llorente and Bellerin at one shot.
Two blindside runs on Natan, Unai Gomez and Guruzeta. Ollabarrieta also do the counter attacking on the far side. So Yuri's positioning is crucial on the second goal so that's he's worth mentioning above just now, as he's executing the crucial pass to Inaki Williams
Suddenly Inaki make the final cross for Olla (short for Ollabarrieta) to catch in the box, while Unai Gomez and Guruzeta are pouncing in-behind Natan here.
Olla pouncing the ball and make the low cross to Guruzeta and Guruzeta scores. Betis 0 - 2 Bilbao.
Next, for Real Madrid game here.
Same motive here. Importance of off-the-ball movements, focusing on direct counter attacks.
Moment of crucial counter-attack ;
As usual, Vesga protecting the backline. Yuri launching the counter attack. Williams, Sancet and Guruzeta at the same time making blind-side runs behind Rudiger, Militao, and Alaba. Camavinga can't approach due to not sufficient enough and long distance to cover between him and Guruzeta.
Yuri to Inaki, Sancet already arrive facing acres of space behind Militao due to Militao and Rudiger are marking Inaki. Sancet receives the pass while Guruzeta and Nico Williams both doing the blindside runs. Here, Guruzeta unable to grab due to Alaba already positioning himself to defend the ball and clear the ball forward.
Crucial moment before 1st goal;
Yuri to Berenguer, making runs behind Rudiger, Williams as usual making blindside runs behind Militao, Guruzeta behind Alaba, Nico Williams behind Camavinga
Being blocked, Modric clear again, and got into Vesga's leg
Vesga receive the ball, Nico make curved runs while receiving the pass, Guruzeta and Inaki in the penalty box.
And here, Nico got fouled.
Yuri take the freekick, and suddenly make sudden pass to Berenguer, then to Inaki.
Inaki scores. Bilbao 1 - 0 Real Madrid.
Second goal;
As usual, Yeray pressures Mbappe, Vesga standby to get the loose ball.
From Yeray to Berenguer to Inaki. Guruzeta ready to pounce the ball, Williams make blindside runs to the acres of space left behind by Camavinga
Inaki drop deep and passes to Berenguer again, left again acres of space for Guruzeta and Berenguer to exploit easily. Nico on the far side making blindside runs
Berenguer passes to Guruzeta and go wide to drag along Alaba to provide space for Nico to exploit.
With the tiniest space available for Guruzeta, he directly shoots and goal
Bilbao 2 - 0 Real Madrid
Third goal ;
This is much sweeter. Berenguer dragging wide and passes back to Yuri. There's so large gap for Sancet to exploit. And suddenly Yuri pump the ball forward. Guess who exploits it?
Berenguer.
Sweet crosses to Guruzeta's head and he headed to the goal.
Bilbao 3 - 0 Real Madrid
So from these two games we do realize how the current instructions are working….FOR NOW. But those movements made are very crucial to convert those chances into important goals.
For the next 3 games, we shall see on the next part.
See ya!!!