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Liam Rosenior's first Premier League game in charge of Chelsea ended
victoriously as his side held on to beat Brentford 2-0 at Stamford Bridge.
A vicious strike from Joao Pedro and a penalty from Cole Palmer was enough to
separate the two teams, but Keith Andrews' men will be left wondering how they
squandered the number of chances they created to take something from the game.
Chelsea fans had protested the club's board before the game, but the result left
those in blue smiling as their new head coach made the ideal start to his
Premier League tenure.
The visitors started the better of the two sides, and would've been ahead via a
Tosin Adarabioyo own goal had it not been for a remarkable save from Robert
Sanchez to keep the ball out.
Just minutes later came the first Premier League goal of Rosenior's reign. After
multiple moves breaking down on the edge of the Brentford box, Chelsea finally
found some luck as the ball deflected into the path of Joao Pedro, who smashed
his effort into the roof of the net.
The goal was initially ruled out for offside, only for VAR to overturn the
decision, with Chelsea beginning to succumb to Brentford pressure.
The goal opened up the game, with both sides spurning glorious opportunities
after. Mathias Jensen watched his volley from inside the area bounce off the
woodwork, while Alejandro Garnacho somehow missed with the goal gaping from
within the six-yard box soon after.
Sanchez continued to silence his critics as he kept out Kevin Schade with a
brilliant save with his feet early in the second half, before Igor Thiago
watched his header whistle agonisingly wide.
Brentford were made to rue their missed chances as Nathan Collins left Caoimhin
Kelleher in trouble with an awful back pass, which saw Liam Delap nip in after a
poor touch from the goalkeeper to win a penalty, which was coolly tucked away by
the returning Palmer.
The result means that Chelsea leapfrog Brentford in the Premier League table,
moving up to sixth as the Bees drop down to seventh.
Player ratings:
Chelsea: Sanchez (9), James (8), Chalobah (7), Tosin (7),
Cucurella (6); Caicedo (6), Fernandez (7); Neto (6), Palmer (7), Garnacho (8);
Joao Pedro (8).
Subs: Santos (6), Fofana (6), Delap (7), Hato (5), Acheampong
(5).
Brentford: Kelleher (4); Kayode (5), Ajer (6), Collins (4),
Henry (6); Jensen (7), Yarmoliuk (6), Janelt (7); Damsgaard (7), Thiago (6),
Schade (8).
Subs: Ouattara (5), Hickey (6), Lewis-Potter (5), Donovan
(N/A).
Player of the Match: Robert Sanchez.
Rosenior: Illness meant Chelsea weren't at
their free-flowing best
Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior speaking post-match:
"We didn't play the free-flowing football that I want us to in the end, but we
got the job done and that's a really, really pleasing result for the players.
"There were a couple of players playing today who were complaining about their
chests and they've put in a magnificent effort. I felt that's why we weren't
good with the ball.
"Honestly, I'm just working day-to-day. For example, the night of the Arsenal
game, Liam [Delap] was ill. Late yesterday we found out Estevao had a
temperature and a fever.
"We just have to be really adaptable and adjust the way that we work."
Andrews: Sometimes football isn't fair
Brentford boss Keith Andrews speaking post-match:
"Sometimes the game isn't fair, but ultimately you've got to take the chances
you create and control certain elements of the game a bit better.
"Overall, though, when you look at the performance level today, it was very
high."
On the differences between the valuation of the squads:
"I don't think spending money automatically means you get better players - I
really don't.
"As a new head coach, sometimes you come in thinking about what you can buy
rather than what you already have in the building. I'm really happy with the
players we've got.
"[Igor] Thiago was signed for around £30m 18 months ago. There are players in
this league who've cost significantly more and haven't performed as well. I
don't think there's a direct correlation."
Rosenior gets the result but work to be done
Sky Sports' Callum Bishop:
As far as Liam Rosenior will be concerned, it's a job done. First Premier League
game in the books, three points on the board against spirited opposition, but
much work to be done.
Chelsea had moments where you could see intensity, especially when Enzo
Fernandez got his head up and Alejandro Garnacho got himself one-on-one with
defenders, but aside from that, it was a far from a vintage display.
The fact Brentford will be sat there scratching their heads wondering as to how
they came away with nothing paints the picture. Chelsea were vulnerable, and on
a different day, the scoreline likely would've reflected that.
Rosenior will know that. His analysts will tell him that. His fans could even
tell him that. But, at such an early stage, victories are what matters most.
So long as Chelsea build on this, then this can be seen as the stepping stone.
However, it is vital that over time, they do put in more complete performances
if they want to appease the unrest that surrounds Stamford Bridge at this very
moment.
Teams
Chelsea Sanchez; James (c) (Acheampong 85), Chalobah, Tosin
(Fofana 57), Cucurella; Caicedo, Fernandez (Hato 85); Neto, Palmer, Garnacho
(Santos 57); Joao Pedro (Delap 74)
Subs Not Used Jorgensen, Badiashile, George, Guiu
Booked Cucrella, Fofana, Palmer
Goals Joao Pedro 26, Palmer 77 (pen)
Brentford Kelleher, Henry (Hickey 82), Collins (c), Ajer,
Kayode, Janelt, Yarmoliuk (Donovan 90+4), Schade (Lewis-Potter 82), Damsgaard
(Quattara 77), Jensen, Thiago
Subs Not Used Valdimarsson, Pinnock, van den Berg, Furo, Nelson
Booked Schade, Janelt
Goals
Attendance 39,704
Referee John Brooks
VAR Stuart Attwell