
Gary
Neville believes Chelsea performances so far this season represent more than
an early-season blip, and that their first-half performance at Newcastle was
"ridiculous".
The current Premier League champions are sitting in 15th place having gained
just eight points from their opening seven games, their worst start to a
season in the Roman Abramovich era (since 2003).
And after then-leaders Manchester City had lost 4-1 at Tottenham on
Saturday, Chelsea still found themselves 2-0 down at half-time on Saturday
Night Football at Newcastle, before eventually earning a 2-2 draw.
Speaking on
Monday Night Football, Neville believes the City result
should have spurred Chelsea on in the first-half at St James' Park, and that
the players need to wake up.
"They had a massive opportunity on Saturday, absolutely massive," he said.
"City had been beaten earlier in the day, and they'll still be looking at
City and thinking 'They're the ones we have to catch', I know United went
top of the table, but they'll be thinking how City were beaten earlier in
the day.
"The boost that should have given that Chelsea team to fly out of the blocks
in the first half, and to give the performance they did in that first-half
is ridiculous.
"This is not a blip now, this is dragging on, and they need to come out of
it. I'm not sure where that's coming from but they need to get out of it
pretty quickly."
No side has successfully retained the Premier League title since Neville's
former Manchester United side won three in a row between 2007 and 2009.
And the
Sky Sports pundit believes it is up to Mourinho to get his
message across to his squad, who have lost as many games at this point as
they did in the entire 2014/15 Premier League season.
"I remember times when you win the league, and it is quite normal the next
season that you have a little dip at the start of the season.
"But I remember the manager would regularly come in after winning the league
and say: 'Right, you're bored now, aren't you? But you have got to get
yourselves going.'
"Chelsea are in that position now, where Mourinho somehow has to get his
message over to the players, or they have to wake up themselves and
recognise it is not good enough. It is nowhere near good enough."