The dramatic and chaotic sacking of Liam Rosenior after a paltry 106 days in charge has sent Chelsea. �s hierarchy scrambling back to the drawing boar...
The dramatic and chaotic sacking of Liam Rosenior after a paltry 106 days in charge has sent Chelsea. �s hierarchy scrambling back to the drawing board. The powers that be at Stamford Bridge are now locked in a fierce tug of war to find a permanent saviour, with interim handler Calum McFarlane currently holding the fort and, remarkably, guiding the Blues to the FA Cup final. In the scheme of things, McFarlane. �s resilience has bought the board time, but the search for a true leader has taken a fresh twist. According to exclusive information gathered by GoalZaza, a highly rated tactician who has previously indicated openness to the Manchester United job has now become the leading candidate to take over the reins at Chelsea. This development will send ripples through the Super Eagles camp, especially with Nigerian internationals such as Victor Osimhen and Victor Boniface frequently linked with moves to either club. At the end of the day, the Stamford Bridge faithful will demand a manager who can give a good account of themselves in the Premier League and restore the club to its former glory. The lion. �s share of the credit for Chelsea. �s recent FA Cup run goes to McFarlane, but the board appears determined to secure a more experienced figurehead. GoalZaza understands that the manager in question has a formidable reputation for developing young talent, a quality that would resonate well with the club. �s current squad composition. The coming weeks promise a deluge of speculation, but for now, the path to the Chelsea dugout seems to run through a man who once had his eyes fixed firmly on the Theatre of Dreams. If this move materialises, expect fireworks as the new man will need to command immediate respect from a dressing room that has seen its fair share of turmoil. Over in Lagos, at the popular Viewing Centre in Surulere, fans will surely be arguing into the night about whether this is the right call. Some will pound their fists on plastic chairs, shouting that Chelsea need a winner, not a man who was already planning his next step before even taking the job. Others, particularly those who admire the tactical discipline of the Nigerian internationals in the squad, will argue that any manager who can handle the pressure of Old Trafford links is tough enough for the Bridge. The garri and groundnut will flow freely as debates rage on, a true testament to the passion that only the Nigerian football community can generate.