Chelsea Confirm Antonio Conte As New Head Coach From The Summer

Chelsea Football club have confirmed that the current Italy boss, Antonio Conte, will become their new manager in the summer.

The former Juventus manager has agreed a three-year contract with the West London club and will take up his post after Italy’s involvement in the 2016 European Championship in France this summer. He said, “I am proud to be the coach of the national team of my country and only a role as attractive as manager of Chelsea could follow that”.

The Blues have been searching for a new permanent manager after the club’s owner, Roman Abramovich, decided to sack Jose Mourinho last December. The self-proclaimed ‘Special One’ won the title with the club during his second spell in charge but led the defending Premier League champions to their worst start to a league campaign since the 1960s.

Abramovich asked Guus Hiddink to replace the Portuguese boss on an interim basis, much as he did after sacking Luis Felipe Scolari back in 2009. Then the Dutchman won the FA Cup with the Blues but there has been no such success this time around. Hiddink will remain in charge of the club until the end of the season.

Conte will become the fifth Italian to manage the London club and is arguably the most successful after Carlo Ancelotti. He won the Serie A title every year of his three years at the Italian club. Gianluca Vialli won the League Cup, the UEFA Super Cup and the FA Cup during his spell in charge of Chelsea, whilst Ancelotti won a Premier League and FA Cup double. Roberto Di Matteo, meanwhile, won Abramovich his ultimate prize when he oversaw the Blues’ 2012 Champion’s League win. Claudio Ranieri is the only Italian manager the club have had so far who did not win anything with them, though he is on course to win the Premier League with Leicester City this season.

Chelsea director Marina Granovskaia said, “We are very pleased to have recruited one of the most highly regarded managers in world football. We are equally pleased to do so before the end of the current season. This aids our future planning”.

Conte will be tasked with rebuilding a team that won the Premier League at a canter last season before completely imploding at the start of this campaign. Chelsea will not boast Champion’s League football next season and, sitting in 10th with just seven games still to play, are unlikely to qualify for Europa League football either.

The current Italy boss was also a talented midfielder, playing for his country and making over 400 appearances for Juventus, winning the Champions League and five Serie A titles as a player. He was part of the Italy team that lost to France in the 2000 European Championships final.

His previous managerial career includes spells at Arezzo, Bari, Atlanta and Siena. Having starred for Juventus as a player he returned to the club as manager in 2011 and won the title at the first time of asking, with his side going the entire season without losing a game.

His career has not been without controversy, however. The Italian was banned for ten months after failing to report attempted match-fixing when he was the coach of Siena. He pleaded innocence but was found guilty regardless, though his suspension was later reduced from ten months to a four-month touchline ban.

The 46-year-old manager has been linked with the Chelsea job for some time, admitting that he misses the day-to-day work of club management. The Italian national team President, Carlo Tavecchio, thanked Conte for his ‘commitment and sacrifice’ during his Azzurri tenure but also admitted that he ‘misses the smell of the grass’.

Former Chelsea Midfielder Ian Britton Dies, Aged 61

Ian Britton, a midfielder who played for Chelsea and Burnley during his football career, has passed away at the age of 61.

Britton played for the London club 289 times and scored 34 goals during a 10-year stretch at Stamford Bridge that spanned from 1972 until 1982. He went on to play for Dundee United and Arbroath briefly spending three years at Blackpool. He then moved to Division Four and plied his trade with struggling Burnley.

His time with Burnley was a somewhat successful one, helping to save the club from relegation when he scored the winning goal against Leyton Orient, stopping the Lancashire side from slipping into the Football Conference. 1987 was the first season when teams could be promoted from the Conference into Division Four, meaning that the goal saved Burnley from becoming the first ever club to get relegated out of the Football League.

His spell at Chelsea also had some good moments, with a highlight being his appearance in a Blues side that beat the reigning European champions Liverpool by four goals to two in an FA Cup third round tie in 1978.

Costa Ban Extended And Player Fined £20,000

The Football Association have confirmed that Diego Costa will serve a further one-match ban and have to pay a £20,000 fine after the Chelsea player admitted improper conduct charges.

Costa, who was born in Brazil but plays international football for Spain because he was granted citizenship there, was charged by the FA for his reaction to his sending off in Chelsea’s FA Cup quarter-final match against Everton at Goodison Park on March the 12th. Costa was sent off for a second bookable offence and then had a run-in with Everton’s Gareth Barry.

Costa appeared to bite Barry, though the former England international later made clear that no contact had been made between the two players. Costa was given a two match ban initially but that has now been extended to three matches after an FA investigation into the matter.

The first match that the 27-year-old missed was the 2-2 draw with West Ham that was played before the international break, with the second scheduled to be Saturday’s game against Aston Villa at Villa Park. He will not also miss Chelsea’s game against Swansea on April the 9th.

Costa was sent off in the 84th minute of the FA Cup match after receiving two yellow cards, earning himself the first on-pitch red card of his Chelsea career. He has been punished retrospectively by the FA on a number of occasions. He was given a three-match retrospective ban after altercations with Laurent Koscielny and Gabriel when Chelsea played Arsenal in September, for example.

Costa was instrumental in Chelsea’s title win of last season before the goals dried up at the start of this campaign, with some Blues’ fans partially blaming the striker for the club’s dreadful start to the season that resulted in the sacking of former manager Jose Mourinho. The self-proclaimed ‘Special One’ was sacked last year after over-seeing Chelsea’s worst start to a league campaign since the 1960s.

Guus Hiddink replaced the Portuguese boss on an interim basis and Costa has so far scored eleven goals in the last sixteen games under the Dutchman. With the Blues’ still in the bottom half of the Premier League and without the Brazilian-born Spanish international for at least the next two matches, Hiddink has said that he’s prepared to ‘experiment’ with his squad for the remainder of the season.

Conte Refuses To Be Drawn Over Future

Antonio Conte, the current manager of the Italian national side, has refused to be drawn into discussions over his future after strong links to the Chelsea job.

The 46-year-old confirmed last week that he will leave the Italian national set-up in the summer after the end of the 2016 European Championships. That has led to many suspecting a deal is already in place for him to become Chelsea’s next permanent manager, with most bookmakers having him odds-on favourite for the position.

Chelsea are looking for a permanent manager after the club’s owner, Roman Abramovich, made the decision to sack Jose Mourinho for the second time last December. The self-proclaimed ‘Special One’ led Chelsea to their worst start to a top-flight campaign since the 1960s just months after leading them to their third Premier League win under his management.

Guus Hiddink was brought in as an interim replacement for the Portuguese boss, much as he was in 2009 when he replaced the sacked Luis Felipe Scolari. He won the FA Cup with Chelsea that year, though they were knocked out of that trophy this season after a 2-0 loss to Everton.

With Hiddink leaving Chelsea at the end of the season the speculation surrounding their next boss has reached fever pitch, though Conte will not confirm whether or not he’ll return to club management in the summer. He said, “At this moment, nothing interests me. I’m the coach of the national team and it’s an experience which has taught me so much”.

Conte became Italy manager in August of 2014 and his contract is due to expire after the 2016 Euros, a tournament that will be held in France this summer. His decision to not renew his contract with the Italian national side came after he was asked to clarify his situation by the president of the Italian Football Federation, Carlo Tavecchio.

Conte said, “I have thought about it and weighed up my decision and when I had no more doubts, I informed the president – the one who chose me and wanted me here. I feel a great desire to work. I’m excited about the competition in June, I am raring to go”.

The former Juventus manager also made clear his pride at having managed the national side of his country of birth, saying, “It’s been a fantastic, extraordinary experience and I’ve always envied coaches who have taken part at a World Cup or a European Championship…These are experiences that happen once in a lifetime and I feel a great responsibility”.

Diego Costa Omitted From Spain Squad

Chelsea’s controversial forward Diego Costa has been left out of the Spain squad for the country’s upcoming friendly matches, it has been revealed.

Vincente Del Bosque has announced his squad for the forthcoming friendlies against Italy and Romania and the Blues’ hitman’s name is not amongst that of his adopted countrymen. Athletic Bilbao’s Aritz Aduriz, who has scored 17 goals in 28 La Liga appearances so far this season, has been brought in to replace him, despite his advancing age of 35.

Costa elected to play for Spain instead of Brazil, where he was born, as he felt he had more chance of success with the country he qualified to play for after being granted Spanish citizenship in 2013. He also believed that his style of football would better suit the one-time World & European champions as they look to defend their European Championship crown in better style than they did the World Cup in 2014.

Costa has recently been charged for his behaviour during his side’s 2-0 loss to Everton in the quarter-final of the FA Cup at Goodison Park. Costa was sent off for a second bookable offence towards the end of the match and appeared to bite Gareth Barry, the Everton midfielder, as the two players had a coming together. Both players denied that a bite occurred.

Chelsea’s interim manager, Guus Hiddink, said on Friday that Costa has a slight injury to a tendon in his hip muscle that would have made him unavailable for the international matches anyway, though it is not believed to be the reason that Del Bosque decided not to call him up for the friendlies.

Six Premier League players feature in the Spanish squad, with Manchester United’s David De Gea earning a cap after his brilliant displays in recent weeks. His team-mate Juan Mata has also been called up, as has Manchester City’s David Silva. There are also three Chelsea players in the squad, with Costa’s club team-mates Cesar Azpilicueta, Cesc Fabregas and Pedro, the former Barcelona winger, all gaining international caps.

Spain will Italy in Udine on March 24th and will then face Romania in the city of Cluj on March 27th, though they will do so without the assistance of Chelsea’s 27-year-old top-scorer.

Costa Avoids Punishment For Gesture To Fans

Diego Costa will avoid punishment for a gesture he made towards Everton fans during the defending Premier League champion’s 2-0 loss to the Merseyside club in the FA Cup last weekend.

The Brazilian born Spanish international appeared to make a rude gesture towards Everton’s fans as he left the bitch at the half-time interval and the Football Association asked him to explain himself. After hearing what he had to say they have no decided that he will face no further action over that incident.

He is not quite out of the woods yet, however, with the FA still to decide on what punishment he’ll face for improper conduct after they charged him for his behaviour in the aftermath of his sending off in the game. He clashed with Everton midfielder Gareth Barry and appeared to bite him during the melee.

Both players denied that a bite took place, though the video footage certainly seemed to suggest otherwise. Costa had until 6pm on Thursday the 17th of March to respond to the charge and he’ll be hoping that Barry’s denial of a bite helps him in his answers to the charge. Luis Suarez was banned for ten games after biting Chelsea’s Branislav Ivanovic back in 2013.

Diego Costa Charged With Improper Conduct

Chelsea’s combustible forward Diego Costa has been charged with improper conduct by the Football Association following his sending off during the London club’s 2-0 loss to Everton on Saturday.

The Brazilian-born Spanish international was sent off for a second bookable offence after a clash with Gareth Barry in the 84th minute of the FA Cup quarter-final at the weekend. A melee ensued during which time it appeared as if Costa tried to bite the Everton midfielder. Both players have since denied the that the 27-year-old did indeed bite Barry, though the video footage seems to counter that.

The Football Association have charged Costa with improper conduct for the period of time after he was shown the red card but before he left the pitch. They said, “It is alleged his behaviour, after being shown a second yellow card in the game, amounted to improper conduct”. Costa has until 6pm on Thursday the 17th of March to respond to the charge made.

Though the focus of the press’ attention regarding the incident was around the alleged bite, former Premier League referee Howard Webb believes that it is Costa’s refusal to leave the pitch in the wake of the incident that has seen the FA decide to charge the forward. He said, “I’ll be amazed if Costa is not punished for his reaction after the second yellow card. He fails to leave the field of play, he is aggressive again to Michael Oliver and referees are always told to report that situation. That can lead to another match ban”.

Webb doubts that the FA’s decision is anything to do with the attempted bite. He said, “There is no way Michael Oliver can see what happens then with the neck – if it is a bite or not. He couldn’t see it anyway as he is looking at the other side of Gareth Barry…The only time you could be sent off for attempting to bite is if you make the action to bite and the other player pulls away. But it looks like he has thought about it but not gone through with it. From what I’ve seen of the footage, it is not sufficient to support a charge for violent conduct retrospectively”.

Costa will be hoping that Webb is correct, especially owing to the fact that former Liverpool player Luis Suarez was banned for ten matches by the FA when he was found guilty of biting Branislav Ivanovic during a match between Liverpool and Chelsea in 2013.

The player himself has denied that he attempted to bite Barry. A Chelsea spokesperson released a statement on his behalf saying, “Diego spoke to club officials and expressed regret over his reaction to the challenge from Barry that led to his red card. But Diego was also very clear that he did not bite him at any point during that altercation”.

Chelsea’s interim manager Guus Hiddink felt that Costa was provoked throughout the match and that Michael Oliver, the match referee, should have done more to protect the forward, though he claimed he did not see the incident. He said, “He was chased a bit in the game by Everton. They went after him. They knew it. It is within the rules. As a referee you have to protect the situation, but knowing and feeling this atmosphere. I try to be fair in my judgement and it is difficult for me to say yes or no so I don’t want to give judgement on this [bite]”.

Everton manager Roberto Martinez, meanwhile, felt that the referee handled the incident correctly, as well as the later sending off of Barry himself, whilst downplaying any possible bite. He said, “My interpretation is I don’t think it was a key moment. It was an emotional game and rightly so. Diego Costa has a fighting spirit and I would like to praise the referee. The sending off of Diego Costa was right as I thought it was a second yellow card and the sending off of Gareth Barry was right. After we have won a game like this and got to Wembley, which our fans deserve so much, the last thing I am going to do is see if an opposing player has bit my player. Gareth Barry has said it is nothing to worry about. He is just disappointed he got a second yellow card”.

Despite having a fiery reputation the sending off was Costa’s first since moving to West London. He has twice been banned retrospectively during his Chelsea career, however. In January of 2015 he received a retrospective three-match ban for a stamp on Liverpool midfielder Emre Can during the League Cup semi-final at Stamford Bridge. Then in September of last year he was again banned for three-matches retrospectively after a clash with Arsenal defender Laurent Koscielny during a Premier League game at Chelsea’s home ground.

When Hiddink was asked whether he had considered seeking out an anger management course for the striker he joked, “There are movies about that, aren’t there? Wasn’t Jack Nicholson in a film called Anger Management? Maybe we can go and watch it together”.

Costa also has until Wednesday to talk to the FA about a gesture he was alleged to have made towards the Everton fans as he went off the pitch at half-time.

Barry: Costa Did Not Bite Me

Gareth Barry, the Everton midfielder that Diego Costa had a run-in with during Chelsea’s defeat to the Blues on Saturday, has denied that the striker bit him during a melee towards the end of the FA Cup quarter-final.

The pair came together in a clash, with the Brazilian born Spanish striker nudging Barry with his head before appearing to bite him. Both players were shown a yellow card by Michael Oliver, the match referee, with Costa being forced to leave the field of play as it was his second yellow card offence of the match.

The Football Association are awaiting the referee’s official match report before deciding whether they should take action against Chelsea’s main striker. The notoriously combustible player was a target for Everton’s players, according to his manager Guus Hiddink. He said, “Costa was chased a bit in the game, they tried to provoke him”.

Former Premier League referee Howard Webb, who notoriously missed a number of violent incidents when he refereed the World Cup final between Spain and Holland in 2010, told BBC Radio 5 live that he felt certain Costa would receive a reprimand from the FA, though not for the supposed ‘bite’. He said, “I’ll be amazed if Costa is not punished for his reaction after the second yellow card. He fails to leave the field of play, he is aggressive again to Michael Oliver and referees are always told to report that situation. That can lead to another match ban. From what I’ve seen of the footage [of the bite], it is not sufficient to support a charge for violent conduct retrospectively”.

Everton midfielder Barry, who was himself later sent off for a second yellow card offence after a tackle on Cesc Fabregas, backed up the view that Costa hadn’t done anything out of the ordinary. He told BBC Radio 5 live’s Sportsweek, “It’s difficult to get too self-righteous when you’re in my position, but what we have to remember is nobody has died. It’s a game of football. You have had two grown men basically square up, no punches have been thrown, nothing serious has happened, both have gone home to their families, one team has lost, one team has won. We have to be careful not to get too carried away. We have to remember what makes football football. It’s that kind of thing, it’s goals, it’s playing on the edge, it’s high intensity, it’s high passion. That’s why we do what we do, that’s why we love watching football”.

Former Liverpool player Luis Suarez was banned for ten matches after he was found guilty of biting Branislav Ivanovic in April of 2013. The Uruguayan was also banned for four months in August 2014 after biting Giorgio Chiellini during the World Cup, so many believe that Costa will be fortunate to escape without a lengthy ban given that the video footage appears to show him attempt to bite Barry during the coming-together of the two players.

The sending of was the first time that Costa has been shown a red card during his Chelsea career, despite receiving a number of retrospective bans from the FA for violent conduct during his time so far at Stamford Bridge.

Chelsea Are In Transition, Says Hiddink

Chelsea’s interim manager Guus Hiddink has declared that the club are in a state of ‘transition’, having crashed out of the Champions League a few days before taking on Everton in the FA Cup.

Chelsea suffered a 4-2 aggregate loss in the last sixteen tie of the Champions League, exiting the competition at the hands of Paris St-Germain for the second season in succession. The defeat means that the Blues will likely not be in Europe’s Elite competition for the first time during the ownership of Russian Billionaire Roman Abramovich, given that they are ten points away from the top four in 10th spot in the Premier League.

It is a far-cry from the situation they found themselves in this time last year, when their exit from the Champions League was somewhat tempered by the fact that they were top of the Premier League having garnered 63 points from 27 games on their way to a third title under the management of Jose Mourinho. The self-proclaimed ‘Special One’ was fired by Abramovich in December of last year, however, having led the club to their worst start to a top-flight campaign since the 1960s.

Chelsea are an incredible 23 points worse off than they were on the same date last year, despite the fact they have played two more games this time around. The result in the Champions League as well as the forthcoming match against Everton in the FA Cup led Hiddink to say, “Chelsea must consider their short-term future”.

He continued, “Chelsea are now in a transitional period and they now have to see how to go on to try to regain the lost terrain where they used to be. It is difficult to get into fourth in the Premier League, but we knew that and we tried to do our first job, which was to get out of the relegation zone”.

The Dutchman, who will leave the club in the summer having arrived on a temporary basis to replace Mourinho, much as he did in 2009 when he replaced Brazilian Luis Felipe Scolari after his sacking by Abramovich, also said that he understood why some fans were less than impressed with the contribution of Eden Hazard. Some Chelsea supporters believed that last year’s PFA Player Of The Year was instrumental in the sacking of Mourinho, having not performed to the same level this campaign.

Hazard limped off towards the end of the game and is a major doubt for the FA Cup quarter-final match against Everton on Saturday. Hiddink said, “The fans have the right to express their feelings. Hazard was also having a problem with his hip”. He is likely to join Chelsea striker Diego Costa on the treatment table, with the manager refusing to be too critical of the Belgian’s decision to swap shirts with Angel Di Maria at half-time in Wednesday’s game. He said, “I’m aware of it. In some countries they do it and I don’t want to see a bad thought about that or overvalue it. It’s not a big thing for me. I’m sure knowing those two players there was no bad intention there”.

Former Chelsea Doctor Wants Public Apology

Chelsea’s former club doctor, Eva Carneiro, has made clear that any settlement she receives in her employment case against the club should include an apology from the club’s former manger Jose Mourinho.

The Gibraltar born medical professional is suing her former club for constructive dismissal, whilst also launching a separate legal action against Mourinho regarding the same incident that resulted in her departure from the London club. Her suit against the self-proclaimed ‘Special One’, who was sacked by Chelsea in December after a series of poor results, is for victimisation and discrimination.

Mary O’Rourke QC, Carneiro’s barrister, refused to say much after she left the London South Employment Tribunal on Monday afternoon, stating that proceedings were ‘confidential’. She did, however, make clear that a resolution was unlikely. She said, “The two sides are so far apart financially. And we want Mr Mourinho to make a public apology”.

The fact that the two sides are so far apart on any possible agreement means that the case is likely to go to a full employment tribunal, with a date of June 6th currently pencilled in to hear the case. Bruce Buck, Chelsea’s chairman, and board member Marina Granovskaia were both in attendance at the private mediation hearing but neither were able to help the case come to a mutually acceptable conclusion.

The incident stems from how Carneiro felt she was treated by Mourinho during the club’s match against Swansea on the opening day of the season. Chelsea were already down to ten men after Thibaut Courtois was sent off for a late tackle on Swans striker Bafetimbi Gomis. Towards the end of the game Eden Hazard, the Blues’ winger, went down with an injury and the medical team were called onto the pitch several times by the referee.

Carneiro and Jon Fearn, the club’s physio, ran on to the pitch to give Hazard treatment, meaning that he had to go off and leave the team with just nine players for a period of the game. After the match the Portuguese manager called his medical team ‘impulsive and naive’ for going on to the pitch at such a late stage in the game. He later decided to demote Carneiro from first-team duties.

Those in positions of power at the defending Premier League champions have consistently refused to comment on the ongoing trial, stating that they won’t comment on an internal staffing matter. If the case goes to a full tribunal, however, then the whole thing will be played out in public. Statements, emails, text messages and documents could all be made available for the trial and the match referee as well as members of Chelsea’s staff will be called as witnesses.

Mourinho wasn’t represented at yesterday’s hearing, with the club continuing to defend him despite having ended his association with the West Londoners at the end of last year. The Portuguese manager has been consistently linked with a move to Manchester United, should the Red Devils choose to part company with Louis Van Gaal this summer. He was cleared of using discriminatory language by the Football Association after the investigated footage appearing to show him aim the Portuguese words for ‘son of a bitch’ at Carneiro during the game last August.