Liam Rosenior will have been hoping — and probably praying — for the perfect start to life as Chelsea head coach on Saturday night, and he will be delighted that his side safely avoided what could have been a classic FA Cup banana skin away at Charlton Athletic.
Having opted not to take charge of Wednesday night’s defeat at Fulham, Rosenior finally took his place in the dugout at The Valley for the first time. It marked the beginning of a brutal run of fixtures, with six matches in just 18 days awaiting the new Chelsea boss.
Thankfully for Rosenior, his first step was a confident one.
Eight Changes, Same Authority
Rosenior rang the changes, making eight alterations from the side that lost at Fulham. Only Tosin Adarabioyo, Moisés Caicedo, and Andrey Santos retained their places in the starting XI.
Despite the heavy rotation, Chelsea looked in control for large spells. Charlton set up in a compact low block and frustrated the Blues for much of the first half, but patience eventually paid off.
The breakthrough came courtesy of Jorrel Hato, whose stunning strike finally cracked the resistance and shifted the momentum decisively in Chelsea’s favour.

Goals Flow After the Break
Once the deadlock was broken, Chelsea never looked back. The second half was one-way traffic as the quality gap became increasingly obvious.
- Tosin Adarabioyo added a goal from defence
- Marc Guiu continued his impressive form
- Pedro Neto got in on the act
- Enzo Fernández capped off a dominant display
It was exactly the kind of performance Rosenior would have wanted: professional, controlled, and ruthless when the opportunity arose.
Joe Cole: “Continuity Helped Chelsea”
Given Rosenior has had less than a week with the squad — and even less time on the training ground — it was never realistic to expect sweeping tactical changes.
That view was echoed by Joe Cole, speaking on TNT Sports after the match. The former Chelsea winger admitted he didn’t notice dramatic differences between Rosenior’s approach and that of his predecessor, Enzo Maresca.
“His personality is different,” Cole explained.
“The style of play — of course, there are going to be similarities. They had a different manager three days ago.”
Cole suggested that continuity was actually a positive given the circumstances.
“The style of play was similar, it helped the continuity,” he added.
A Foundation, Not a Finish Line
For Rosenior, ripping up existing plans this early would have been foolish. Instead, Chelsea delivered a composed, effective performance that laid down a solid foundation ahead of a demanding run of fixtures.
The real tests are still to come — but as first impressions go, this was exactly what Chelsea needed.
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