“I’m loving that partnership” – Former Chelsea assistant insists that recent team change can be for the best | OneFootball

“I’m loving that partnership” – Former Chelsea assistant insists that recent team change can be for the best | OneFootball

Icon: the Chelsea News

the Chelsea News

·14 November 2024

“I’m loving that partnership” – Former Chelsea assistant insists that recent team change can be for the best

Article image:“I’m loving that partnership” – Former Chelsea assistant insists that recent team change can be for the best

With the international break in full swing, there’s a chance for Chelsea fans to get a little deeper into some of the debates that get lost during the hectic calendar of the season.

One big debate that’s coming to a head now is the question of who should play with the outstanding Moises Caicedo in midfield. There was a lot of enthusiasm to see Romeo Lavia with him, but since that move happened and Enzo Fernandez was dropped for the Belgian, there’s been a bit of a backlash and some pressure to get Enzo back in, with the logic being that the Argentine offers more creativity to the team.


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On TalkSport’s Inside Chelsea they debated just this, with former Chelsea assistant Jody Morris putting himself firmly in the pro-Lavia/Caicedo camp.

You can see them speaking in the clip embedded here, with this quote coming after 18 minutes:

Morris backs more solid option in the middle

As Morris points out, while Enzo offers great passing, that’s not the only way this team should be able to create:

“I’m not sure [that a Caicedo-Lavia duo lacks creativity], I think it’s pretty early days to judge it as a partnership, as a whole, throughout the season. I certainly liked the earlier signs of those two together. I feel that Lavia offers a bit of steeliness… and there’s different ways of creating,” Morris explained.

“He carries it really well, a lot better than Enzo can. You maybe look at Enzo and think he can pick a pass, but there’s different ways in which you can break down presses and open up teams. At times against Liverpool, Lavia was carrying the ball past 3 or 4 players, and that’s another way of creating… I’m loving that partnership.”

We agree that it’s too soon and too simple to just say that a Lavia – Caicedo duo won’t offer enough in attack. If it creates a more solid platform for attacking players, that should be enough.

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