The Independent
·25 febbraio 2025
Chelsea’s easy win can’t hide deeper issues that threaten the fabric of modern football

The Independent
·25 febbraio 2025
Enzo Maresca, for now, has his Chelsea back at least. Whether it will quieten down supporter protest in the medium term remains to be seen. This is about more than whether Chelsea can be a Champions League club again, even as this 4-0 win over Southampton temporarily put them back into the top four.
That in turn undid the effects of the Aston Villa defeat at the weekend, in the way that seems to keep happening in this season’s wide-ranging race for the top four. No one can seize the moment, so Chelsea aren’t alone there. The greater question is whether it will undo bigger concerns about Maresca’s team over the past few weeks, not to mention more profound questions over identity.
That’s the thing about a win over Southampton right now. A fixture against them is almost one of those thankless games in that victory is expected, but dropped points would lead to utter excoriation. Almost. It wasn’t quite that mundane for Chelsea because they so badly needed a win, with this only their third in 11 Premier League games.
There was a bit of vim to their attack again, too, but how couldn’t there be against Ivan Juric’s sorry side? We are into the territory of talking about one of the worst Premier League sides ever, since the Saints still need three points to beat Derby County’s 2007-08 record of 11. That’s where they’re at.
Then again, Chelsea are at a strange moment in their own history, given how this game was preceded by supporter protest against the Clearlake owners.
It’s been a theme. It is certainly worth noting that this is only the latest supporter protest in the Premier League, following on from neighbours Tottenham Hotspur two weeks ago.
open image in gallery
The match was preceded by protests from Chelsea fans against the club’s owners (EPA)
And while such demonstrations are always linked to results in some way, it would be wrong to not acknowledge there is obviously something much deeper going on.
You only have to listen to the most common complaint among Chelsea fans, that they feel they have lost that “connection” to their club. Responses to the protests on social media saw some rival fans outright mock this, pointing to how the same fans were singing “we’ve got our Chelsea back” just a few months ago, and wondering how many would welcome the return of the sanctioned Roman Abramovich.
That is partly understandable given the nature of club rivalry – not to mention the actual sentiments of some Chelsea fans – but it’s also one of the problems with English football. There is nothing like the kind of cross-club solidarity seen in Germany or Sweden. Rivalry even seems to cut across genuine collective supporter issues when it shouldn’t.
That the Chelsea protest happened in the same week in which Manchester United announced more lay-offs only illustrates the point. This is all linked.
Chelsea fans complaining about connection may be specific to circumstances, but it is also in keeping with a general feeling right across elite football. How couldn’t it be when so many clubs are bought and sold with minimal input from the fans? When so many unpopular decisions are made that they have no control over? When ticket prices go up and season-ticket holders worry whether they are being priced out of the game so expensive one-off passes can be sold to a new strand of consumer fan?
open image in gallery
Protests about the Chelsea owners are due a number of issues (EPA)
These are all concerns from the neoliberal model the game has chosen, that the Premier League has taken to extremes, and football is beginning to reach another reductio ad absurdum.
The centre can no longer quite hold. Cracks are appearing.
As a private equity group who have investment from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, albeit not in their stake in the club, Chelsea’s owners represent the extreme of this. Clearlake were even the first of that type of ownership to buy a major European football name. And the club’s name, or really the sense of identity, is really what this is ultimately about.
Ownerships like private equity groups don’t ultimately see football clubs as football clubs, in the truest sense. Sure, the aims might obviously align in that they want the team to win, but they’re ultimately looking at a vehicle that offers a return on investment – like any part of their portfolio.
It should never be forgotten that this isn’t what football clubs are actually for. They don’t exist to make a profit. They exist to play football as representatives of their area, and only need to be self-sufficient for that.
Modern ownerships can allow that, of course, but only as part of something else. And ambitions will ultimately diverge. A tension will always arrive. You only have to look at the number of apologies “good” owners like Liverpool’s have had to make over the last decade.
open image in gallery
The owners feel that Chelsea’s expensive squad suits their model of recruitment (Chelsea FC via Getty Images)
As to what this Chelsea actually are right now, it depends on your perspective. The current owners see a squad designed to a specific model of recruitment, that they believe can eventually hit 100 points in an individual season with the right development. They would acknowledge flaws, sure, but feel results and performances this season broadly indicate progress.
Critics, and many club supporters, see an ownership essentially trying a capitalist experiment on a club that has known more football success than most. The protests show many aren’t sold on the idea. The very model of recruitment arguably even feeds into this question about “connection”, given the suspicion that many players outside of Cole Palmer could easily be moved on. It makes it all the more conspicuous that he keeps missing chances right now, although not many as glaring as the three in this game.
It did at least feel an important moment that Christopher Nkunku scored his third league goal of the season, displaying a vintage striker’s opportunism after a Southampton mix-up. Pedro Neto then emphasised his own immense potential with a satisfyingly thunderous strike from relatively close range, before Levi Colwill sealed the win before half-time with a header.
It was perhaps advantageous to the owners that Marc Cucurella rounded things off, given his own status as a cult figure. In other words, someone you can connect to.
open image in gallery
Cult hero Marc Cucurella rounded off the scoring for Chelsea (PA Wire)
Southampton fans might of course look at all this and laugh a little sourly. They’ve had their own club issues, and don’t have the benefit of a squad put together with over a billion pounds in transfer fees.
Many other fans and media now see their plight as something of a joke, a punchline to the season. That’s again understandable but it shouldn’t go too far. It’s another cause for some solidarity, especially when this is a theme that keeps recurring at the bottom end of the Premier League. For a second straight season, it appears the three clubs that came up from the Championship will go straight back down.
Such contrasts being so prevalent probably aren’t England’s top flight as we’d want it, let alone what we want from our clubs.