How Thomas Tuchel Turned Things Around at Chelsea
When Thomas Tuchel arrived at Chelsea on January 26, he took charge of a club lacking direction, having lost 5 of their last 8 Premier League games under Frank Lampard and sitting 10th on the table, the general perception was that this season was already written off.
Nobody expected the German tactician to have such an instant impact, his influence has been obvious since his first game in charge against Wolves, after only just landing in London 24 hours to the game and one training session with his new charges.
Despite all that, Tuchel’s Chelsea looked very different to Lampard’s Chelsea, they dominated the game from start to finish with 79% possession and never looked like conceding but lacked an attacking cutting edge as the game ended goalless.
In the 10 games Tuchel has overseen since then, Chelsea remained unbeaten in all competitions and have only conceded 2 goals, one of which was an own goal by Antonio Rüdiger against Sheffield United.
Tuchel took Chelsea from a mid-table team to 4th in the league and top of the form table since he arrived, and here’s how he did it. The first step Tuchel took was to shore up the previously fragile defensive, switching from Frank Lampard’s 4-3-3 to 3-5-2, guaranteeing more bodies defensively and giving the team a solid shape when they are without the ball.
Tactical Analysis: The First Weeks of Thomas Tuchel’s Chelsea
Players that had been previously condemned or written off as not good enough to play for Chelsea are now thriving. Rüdiger, Andreas Christensen, Marcos Alonso, Callum Hudson-Odoi are examples of those who have been favoured by the change in coach.
Another reason Chelsea don’t concede goals often is the relentless style of pressing Tuchel has introduced. As soon as the ball is turned over, every player around the ball does their best to win it back. The idea is to stop the opposition from even creating a chance or getting off a meaningful shot on goal, this approach has led to them conceding fewer shots on target.
In the 11 games under Tuchel, Chelsea have conceded 20 shots on target with only 1 of those shots leading to a goal, having played against opponents like Tottenham, Atletico Madrid, Manchester United and Liverpool, all of whom failed to even score and combined for 7 shots on target against Chelsea.
For context, the same squad of players faced 21 shots on target in Frank Lampard’s last 5 games before he was fired, proving that pressing after losing the ball works better than getting back into shape.
Going forward, Tuchel’s Chelsea have mastered the art of dominating possession, having won the possession battle in all but one of the 10 games, the win against Liverpool being the only exception. Of the games in which they had the majority of the ball, only against Tottenham, Atlético Madrid and Manchester United did they have less than 60%, surpassing the 70% possession mark on 4 occasions.
The one downside to Tuchel’s Chelsea is how frustrating they can sometimes be in attack, they’ve shown the inability to break down their opponents multiple times so far, and it seems as though the forward players need a little more time to adapt, unlike their defensive teammates who caught on immediately. Chelsea have scored 13 goals in the last 11 games, averaging just over one per game, and they’ve scored more than once in a game on just 3 occasions, against Burnley, Sheffield United and Newcastle.
They’ve never scored 3 times in a match under Tuchel and only 1 of the 11 games has seen more than 2 goals in total, the 2-1 win away at Sheffield United was the most amount of goals a match involving Chelsea under Tuchel has produced. These kinds of numbers have been effective so far, but they’ve also made Chelsea games a dull affair, and it won’t be too long before the Chelsea fans start asking for more going forward.
Thomas Tuchel: The Making of Paris Saint-Germain’s Great Hope
They don’t seem to mind it for now, most of the fans are just happy to see Chelsea become a competitive club once more, the feeling that had been missing from Stamford Bridge before Thomas Tuchel came along.
The German looks like someone who knows exactly what he’s doing, what he wants to achieve with Chelsea and how he plans to do so, pretty much everything Frank Lampard was not.
By: @tunde_young
Featured Image: @GabFoligno / Clive Rose – Pool/AFP via Getty Images