Rosenior plots long Chelsea stay as Arsenal loom
The linesman tells Chelsea's English head coach Liam Rosenior to stay in his technical area during the English FA Cup third round football match between Charlton Athletic and Chelsea at The Valley in London on January 10, 2026. (Photo by Ben STANSALL / AFP)
Audio By Vocalize
New Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior said Monday he would love to
be at the club for six years or longer as he prepares for a blockbuster League
Cup semi-final against Arsenal.
The Englishman, who swapped Strasbourg for Stamford Bridge
last week, took charge of his first game on Saturday -- a 5-1 FA Cup win at
Charlton.
But on Wednesday he faces a challenge of a different order
when he comes up against Premier League leaders Arsenal in the first leg of the
League Cup semi-final.
Rosenior last week replaced Enzo Maresca, who became the
fourth permanent manager to leave Chelsea since the American-backed BlueCo
consortium took control in May 2022.
The Italian won the UEFA Conference League and Club World
Cup in his only full season in charge.
Rosenior, who has signed a six-and-a-half year deal with the
London club, told his pre-match press conference that he would like to be given
time, as Mikel Arteta has been been at Arsenal.
But the 41-year-old knows he he must hit the ground running
at a club that has become renowned for hiring and firing its managers.
"I'd love to be here for six years and longer,"
said. "I'd be here as long as possible. But I'm aware in order for that to
happen, I need to win. It's as simple as that.
"I understand every club has a different project. This
word project comes out a lot now in football. But the idea in any project is
that every game you play, you're trying to win it."
Rosenior said he believed Chelsea were strong enough to make
an impact this season.
"I've got ideas about what I want the team to look like
in a year's time, two years, three years' time," he said.
"But I think I've got enough resources and enough tools
with me now... I've made that clear to the players. We're going to give it our
best shot on Wednesday."
Rosenior was questioned whether the clash at Stamford Bridge
would be one of the biggest games of his brief managerial career, which
included a spell at English second-tier club Hull before his time at
Strasbourg.
"I don't see it that way," he said. "I think
every session that I take, every meeting that I take, every game that we play
is the most important thing.
"I live in the now. So it is the most important game
because it's the next one. I mean that.
"If you start to prioritise games or think something's
more important than the other, then you're not focused."
Newcastle take on Manchester City in the other League Cup
semi-final, with the final taking place at Wembley on March 22.


Leave a Comment