Chelsea slumped to a humiliating 3-0 defeat against Brighton on Tuesday, leaving their Champions League qualification hopes in ruins as pressure intensifies on manager Liam Rosenior.
Rosenior’s side produced one of their worst displays of a torrid season. Ferdi Kadioglu put Brighton ahead before half-time, with Jack Hinshelwood and Danny Welbeck adding further goals after the break.
It marks the first time Chelsea have lost five consecutive league matches without scoring since 1912—the same year the Titanic sank.
Beaten in seven of their last eight games across all competitions, the Blues have managed just one victory in their past nine league outings.
Chelsea languish in seventh place, seven points adrift of fifth-placed Liverpool in the race for a top-five finish, which guarantees Champions League football. Rosenior’s side now risk missing out on European competition entirely unless they can halt their alarming slide.
They face Leeds in the FA Cup semi-finals on Sunday, and defeat at Wembley could push Rosenior to the brink of the sack—barely months after he arrived from Strasbourg to replace Enzo Maresca in January.
Rosenior claimed this week that Chelsea’s owners have been “magnificent” in their backing despite the team’s collapse. Co-owner Behdad Eghbali has expressed optimism about long-term success under the manager, yet the atmosphere around the club is turning increasingly toxic.
Boos greeted the full-time whistle following Saturday’s 1-0 home defeat to Manchester United, after supporters staged a protest against owners BlueCo ahead of kick-off. More jeers rained down on Rosenior and his players from furious Chelsea fans at Brighton, who climbed above the Blues into sixth place.
‘We want our Chelsea back’
Rosenior switched to a back five in an attempt to make Chelsea harder to break down, but the plan backfired within seconds. Kaoru Mitoma met Pascal Gross’s cross with a fierce strike that forced a fine save from Robert Sanchez in the opening moments.
Chelsea failed to heed the warning. Brighton took the lead in the third minute when Gross’s corner was flicked towards Kadioglu. The home side’s slow response allowed the defender to lash past Sanchez for his first goal in 17 months.
That goal triggered chants against Chelsea’s owners from the Blues supporters packed into one end of the Amex Stadium.
Gross tormented Chelsea with his pinpoint deliveries, and Jan Paul van Hecke went close from another of the German’s crosses, leaping to meet a header that Sanchez tipped over.
Chelsea were in disarray. Sanchez nearly gifted Brighton a goal when he miscued a pass straight to Carlos Baleba, who teed up Hinshelwood for a shot cleared off the line by Trevoh Chalobah.
For the first time in a league match this season, Chelsea failed to register a single shot in the opening 30 minutes. They finally managed one five minutes before half-time, but Chalobah’s tame effort only drew derision as furious fans chanted: “We want our Chelsea back.”
When Romeo Lavia drilled wide after the interval, Rosenior was subjected to abuse from the travelling supporters.
The opprobrium grew louder in the 56th minute. Chelsea claimed they should have been awarded a free-kick when the ball appeared to strike Yankuba Minteh’s arm. But play continued, and Brighton launched a devastating counter-attack. Georginio Rutter sprinted clear before picking out Hinshelwood, who finished with composure.
Chelsea had no response. Rosenior stood bereft of ideas on the touchline as Brighton delivered one final blow in stoppage time. Maxim De Cuyper cut the ball back to Welbeck inside the area, and he fired into the roof of the net as Rosenior shook his head in disbelief.








