Liam Rosenior’s reign as Chelsea head coach officially gets underway on Saturday night when the Blues travel across London to face Championship side Charlton Athletic at The Valley in the FA Cup third round.
It will be the first competitive meeting between the two clubs since February 2007, when Frank Lampard scored the only goal in a narrow 1-0 Premier League victory for Chelsea away from home.
For Rosenior, this is about far more than progression in the cup — it is the first opportunity to set a tone.
A Club in Decline, A Fresh Start Needed
Not long ago, Chelsea were being spoken about as potential Premier League title contenders. Enzo Maresca was collecting November’s Manager of the Month award and optimism briefly returned to Stamford Bridge.
Four weeks later, Maresca is gone.
A run of just one win in nine league games has seen Chelsea slide to eighth in the table, now four points adrift of the top four and a staggering 18 points behind leaders Arsenal. Interim boss Calum McFarlane steadied the ship with a 1-1 draw at Manchester City last weekend, but Wednesday night’s 2-1 defeat at Fulham — played largely with 10 men — underlined the scale of the task facing the new manager.
Rosenior, who watched that match from the directors’ box alongside co-owner Behdad Eghbali, has described his appointment on a six-year contract as “one of the proudest moments of my life.” Now comes the hard part.
FA Cup Pedigree Favors the Blues
Chelsea will be looking to use the FA Cup as both a confidence-builder and a potential route to silverware. The Blues are aiming to lift the trophy for the ninth time in their history, and for the first time since 2018.
History is firmly on their side:
- Chelsea have progressed from 61 of their last 63 FA Cup ties against lower-league opposition
- They have won their last 22 such ties in a row
- They have beaten Charlton in both previous FA Cup meetings (1962–63 and 1994–95), both by 3-0 scorelines
Rosenior arrives with a respectable 49.2% win rate from his 63 matches at Strasbourg and will be keen to make a statement quickly.
Charlton’s Struggles and Slim Hope of a Shock
Chelsea face a Charlton side currently enduring a difficult period. Nathan Jones’s team sit 19th in the Championship, having won just two of their last 14 league games since late October.
Only bottom club Sheffield Wednesday have picked up fewer points in that timeframe. Once playoff contenders, the Addicks now hover just five points above the relegation zone.
Recent results show flashes of resistance — narrow defeats to Norwich and Portsmouth, a 1-1 draw with Coventry managed by Frank Lampard, and a 2-2 draw with Blackburn — but confidence remains fragile.
Charlton have also been eliminated in each of their last five FA Cup third-round appearances, last reaching the fourth round in 2013–14.
Team News
Charlton Athletic
- Out injured: Kayne Ramsay, Onel Hernandez (hamstrings), Josh Edwards (ankle), Matty Godden (knee)
- Nathan Jones is expected to stick with a back-three system
- Sonny Carey (five goals this season) could start in midfield
- Miles Leaburn and Charlie Kelman are likely to lead the line
Possible XI:
Kaminski; Gillesphey, Jones, Bell; Bree, Docherty, Coventry, Carey, Campbell; Leaburn, Kelman
Chelsea
- Suspended: Marc Cucurella
- Injured: Levi Colwill, Romeo Lavia, Dario Essugo
- Unavailable: Mykhaylo Mudryk
Rosenior is expected to rotate, with Filip Jorgensen likely to replace Robert Sanchez in goal. Jorrel Hato could deputise at left-back, while the midfield balance between Reece James, Moises Caicedo and Andrey Santos remains one of the key selection calls.
João Pedro, who has seven goal contributions in his last four FA Cup starts, could lead the line ahead of Liam Delap.
Possible XI:
Jorgensen; Acheampong, Fofana, Badiashile, Hato; Caicedo, Santos; Gittens, Estevao, Garnacho; Pedro
Prediction
Both sides arrive in inconsistent form, and The Valley will be lively under the lights. Charlton have enough attacking intent to cause moments of concern, particularly if Chelsea’s defensive fragility resurfaces.
However, Chelsea should still have too much quality.
Prediction: Charlton Athletic 0–2 Chelsea
(Some models suggest a tighter 1–0, but Chelsea remain firm favourites)
Rosenior’s first match will not solve Chelsea’s deeper problems — but progress, composure and control are non-negotiable. Anything less will only amplify the pressure already surrounding Stamford Bridge.
Predictions




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