
Chelsea qualified for the Champions League, won the Conference League and became Club World Cup champions in Enzo Maresca’s first season in charge.
Can they now launch a Premier League title challenge?
Maresca-ball has landed
Chelsea fans turned against Maresca at half-time of their fixture at Fulham in April.
Having won only once in their previous four games, their Champions League hopes were fading until Tyrique George and Pedro Neto produced a dramatic late turnaround. It proved to be the turning point of their season.
Chelsea won 13 of their final 15 matches with Maresca tweaking his system and also experimenting at the Club World Cup by using every outfield player.
Reece James has played alongside Moises Caicedo in midfield, allowing Enzo Fernandez to thrive further forward.
Full-backs Marc Cucurella and Malo Gusto stayed wide at the Club World Cup rather than coming into the middle and Cole Palmer shone playing on the right wing rather than behind the striker.
It was also noticeable how often Chelsea played longer against PSG, bypassing their trademark press, and using their pace and power to get up the pitch.
Maresca’s possession style has turned exciting.
Pedro, Delap, Jackson guarantee goals but also a headache
Chelsea came unstuck when Nicolas Jackson injured his hamstring midway through last season. Christopher Nkunku was unable to fill the void and winger Pedro Neto had to play as a striker. Palmer’s drastic drop in form coincided with their sticky run too.
They won’t have the same forward issues next season. The additions of Joao Pedro and Liam Delap have shown a statement of intent that the club wants to compete on all fronts. They can also call upon youngsters Marc Guiu and George.
The trio scored 32 goals between them in the Premier League last season. The bigger issue will be keeping them all happy with regular playing time. Rumours of an exit for Jackson have already started.
Can Sanchez continue his CWC form?
Robert Sanchez was jeered by Chelsea fans at times last season when he had the ball at his feet. His five errors leading to goals, the joint-most in the Premier League, didn’t cost Chelsea a Champions League spot but left most thinking he needed to be replaced.
“I can’t see someone winning the Premier League with that goalkeeper and without a standout centre-back,” said Jamie Carragher in December. He followed it up a month later by saying Sanchez is a goalkeeper for a “bottom-half” club.
Chelsea walked away from signing AC Milan goalkeeper Mike Maignan before the Club World Cup, which appeared to lift Sanchez ahead of the tournament.
The 27-year-old kept four clean sheets, shining in the final with six saves to earn the Golden Glove and his accurate long kicking troubled PSG on the counter-attack. This could be a turning point in his Chelsea career – it has to be if they want to challenge for the title.
‘Billion-pound bottle jobs’ showing resolve
Todd Boehly now has something to show for his £1.5bn spending at Chelsea.
A Champions League place, a Conference League trophy and a Club World Cup triumph have laid Gary Neville’s iconic line to rest.
Chelsea are looking the real deal with a young squad that has quickly inherited the club’s trophy-winning mentality.
The estimated £111m in Club World Cup prize money will help to balance the books too.
Fast start possible but CWC hangover?
The fixture computer has handed Chelsea a favourable start to the season, beginning at home to Crystal Palace on August 17, live on Sky Sports.
West Ham, Fulham and Brentford follow before they head out of London for the first time when they visit Manchester United.
Chelsea also have the second-best set of fixtures following mid-week European matches of the nine Premier League sides involved.
They’ll play away from home just twice, against Manchester United and Crystal Palace, travelling only 341 miles after playing in the Champions League.
But how will they recover from a 64-game season that finally ended in July? There are just 25 days between the Club World Cup final and their first pre-season game against Bayer Leverkusen on August 8 followed by AC Milan two days later.
Sky Sports to show 215 live Premier League games from next season
From next season, Sky Sports’ Premier League coverage will increase from 128 matches to at least 215 games exclusively live.
And 80 per cent of all televised Premier League games next season are on Sky Sports.