Chelsea boss Rosenior warns players over discipline
Chelsea's English head coach Liam Rosenior reacts during the English Premier League football match between Arsenal and Chelsea at the Emirates Stadium in London on March 1, 2026. (Photo by Adrian Dennis / AFP)
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Liam Rosenior
has demanded an improvement in discipline from his Chelsea players after Pedro
Neto became their ninth player to be sent off this season, threatening to drop
players who do not show greater control.
Sunday's 2-1
loss to Premier League leaders Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium means Chelsea
have won just two of their past six matches in all competitions.
They are sixth
in the Premier League table ahead of Wednesday's match at fourth-placed Aston
Villa, three points behind Liverpool in the battle for Champions League
football next season.
Ill-discipline
has been costly for Chelsea this season, with Neto the seventh Stamford Bridge
player to be shown a red card in the Premier League.
Chelsea boss
Rosenior, who replaced Enzo Maresca in the hot seat in January, said Neto had
apologised to his teammates after he was dismissed in the 70th minute.
"My job is
to create a culture of accountability, where if you make a mistake, it's OK,
you hold your hands up and you make sure it doesn't happen again," said
the English manager.
"But you
have to hold your hands up to the original mistake. If I make the wrong team
selection, or I get something wrong, my job is to be accountable, and it's the
same for my players in that moment."
Rosenior said
Portugal winger Pedro, who will miss this week's match at Villa Park, had
apologised to his teammates.
"I just
need to see an improvement in the behaviour now," he said.
"And it's
not just Pedro. We've had bookings. People speak about dissent. We've had
needless bookings in terms of fouls. If we are to improve and get to where we
want to be, we have to make a conscious step now to make sure it doesn't happen
again."
The Chelsea boss
said there were different approaches to tackling the issue.
"Sometimes
it's not a stick, it's showing what the value of not having a red card
is," he said. "If you look at our stats, when we have 11 men on the
pitch, before my job here and after my job here, our percentage chance of
winning goes through the roof.
"So that
needs to be motivation in itself, to make sure we stay disciplined in key
moments, reacting to setbacks. Sometimes a setback is giving the ball away,
sometimes a setback is a referee making a decision you disagree with.
"In that
moment you have to react positively and you have to think of the next thing.
Those are the things we have to go after in order for our discipline to
improve."
Rosenior added:
"You pick players who are showing that improvement. I can't afford to go
through a season every two games or every three games with a red card, it's
just not possible.
"So I need
to see improvement in that and I need to adjust my team selection based on
who's showing those capabilities."


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