The 2025/26 season is slipping away from Chelsea at alarming speed. Since the decision to sack Enzo Maresca, the Blues have taken just one point from two matches, and the Champions League places are beginning to feel increasingly out of reach.
Unless Liam Rosenior can engineer a dramatic turnaround, this campaign risks becoming yet another entry on a growing list of post-takeover disappointments.
Unfortunately for Chelsea supporters, this storyline has become all too familiar since the Clearlake-Boehly ownership took control. Fan frustration is boiling over, patience is wearing thin, and the club’s transfer strategy continues to attract heavy criticism. Unless there is a genuine shift in approach, it is hard to see how anything truly changes.
A Brutal Task for an Inexperienced Manager
Rosenior has walked into one of the most unforgiving environments in European football. Results are poor, confidence is fragile, and the fanbase is openly hostile towards the ownership.
Given his lack of top-level managerial experience, it is fair to question whether Rosenior has been set up to succeed — or whether he is simply the next name on BlueCo’s growing list of discarded head coaches.
If this appointment is to work long-term, Chelsea must back the manager properly. Standing still in January would all but confirm another lost season.
Encouragingly, it appears Rosenior has already identified a major weakness in the squad.
Rosenior Targets Defensive Reinforcement
According to Fichajes, Rosenior has made strengthening the defence a priority and believes Chelsea should move for Bayern Munich centre-back Kim Min-Jae.
The South Korean international is reportedly valued at around €30 million, a figure considered reasonable in the current market. While Kim does feature for Bayern, he is not an undisputed starter, and at 29 years old, a change of scenery could appeal to both player and club.
Kim’s pedigree is not in doubt. He was named Serie A Defender of the Year in 2023 after a dominant season with Napoli, where he played a crucial role in their title-winning campaign. His move to Bayern was meant to cement his place among Europe’s elite defenders — but it has not fully worked out.
Would Kim Min-Jae Make Sense for Chelsea?
On paper, yes.
Chelsea lack leadership, physical authority, and consistency at centre-back. Kim would bring:
- Experience at the highest level
- Tactical discipline
- A commanding presence in the box
Just as importantly, his signing would represent a shift away from Chelsea’s recent obsession with raw, unfinished profiles. It would be a rare example of the ownership adapting rather than stubbornly sticking to a failing model.
That said, history suggests caution. The idea of Chelsea suddenly pivoting toward pragmatic, experience-led recruitment feels optimistic at best.
The Bigger Picture
Kim Min-Jae may or may not be the right signing — but the intent would matter more than the individual player.
If Chelsea genuinely want Rosenior to succeed, they cannot leave him exposed with an unbalanced squad and unrealistic expectations. Without reinforcements, this risks becoming another doomed managerial cycle.
For now, don’t hold your breath. Chelsea fans have learned the hard way that logic and long-term planning do not always guide decisions at Stamford Bridge.
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