Chelsea's BlueCo Disaster hits new low in embarrassing surrender to Everton.

Ax hangs on Rosenior's head but every Chelsea fan wants the executioners bought to justice.

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One imagines it must have been near impossible to repeat the debacle under Graham Potter. BlueCo though, are never one to back down from a challenge.

In the last game against PSG, a majority of Chelsea fans walked out of the Bridge at half-time. The showing against Everton felt like the game where even the ones that stayed that night gave up too. What should have been a chance at redemption, of capitalizing on Liverpool and United dropping points, ended in another pathetic, limp, surrender. This is a side that feels like it has completely dissociated from its manager, its goals for the season and its sense of responsibility towards the fans.

There are issues Rosenior, perhaps, cannot solve. Enzo Fernandez was playing his 117th game in all competitions since the start of last season. It was Cucurella’s 113th, and Caicedo’s 108th. 32 games into the season, and Chelsea have been outrun by every team they’ve faced in the league this season. This is a side that has been through one of the most punishing schedules in European football history. Having to inherit, mid-season, borders on the cruel.

Whether the side’s lack of tactical coherence in and out of possession is down to this alone is dubious. Picking a half-fit Romeo Lavia over a fully-fit Andrey Santos is his choice (unless there is a specific brief to play him by a particular Sporting Director.) Why play Wesley Fofana, captured smirking on the bench against PSG after failing to track his man on a critical sequence in his previous game? Unsurprisingly his mistakes featured prominently in two Everton goals.

Rosenior has also shown none of his well-heralded tactical flexibility at Strasbourg. Instead his efforts to force his dilapidated, confidence-starved side into performing high-risk daredevilry has seen them land on their neck. Robert Sanchez, for one, seems to have regressed a full season during his time in charge. 3 cleansheets in 19 games is a damning statistic. Rosenior is not the problem, but he is definitely a problem.

And that might be why the wheels fall off Chelsea’s season. Their best players have, for two seasons, been overworked without any reprieve from able deputies. Their new signings are far too raw to make any real impact - opposition sides seem to be more relieved than nervous when they see Delap, Gittens, Guiu or Garnacho come on. The wizards, Palmer and Estevao, have spent a sizable time looking like muggles due to injury issues.

None of those issues has a short term fix. Each and every one of them though, has been a conscious, deluded thought-experiment from a singular source that has turned out to be a cataclysmic failure. A hierarchy that once proclaimed that Chelsea were ‘poorly run on the sporting side’ have turned Europe’s perennial winners into a laughing stock within and beyond the Premier League.

Football was, is, and always will be, a results-first business. With every loss that takes Chelsea away from the Champions League, Rosenior will look increasingly hapless in post-match conferences, having to defend decisions he did not make, explaining crises that preceded him. All this while the real villains prop up the next scapegoat to take the blame even as the current one is being roasted alive.

Just how bad is BlueCo, you ask? Four major Strasbourg supporter groups in France have pledged to join the protest planned in Manchester against the ownership. Let us remember that English and France were at war for 116 years. Fans in two countries on either side of an ocean and a sea are unanimous in the belief that this ownership is a wound which will only fester if not cauterized immediately. One hopes this one will make a difference.