That result marked the Blues’ fifth loss in their last eight matches, with pressure now building on Lampard as he toils to bring the best out of a squad brimming with top-class talent.
Editors’ Picks
- ‘There is still more to learn’ – Ndidi revels in Leicester City win over Chelsea
- Arsenal target Buendia happy to wait as Gunners focus on January loan options
- Leicester City’s Ndidi ends 15-month Premier League goal drought against Chelsea
- Bruno needs a break: It’s time for Man Utd boss Solskjaer to entrust Van de Beek with the No.10 role
A club legend spent over £200 million ($274m) on new recruits in the summer transfer window after delivering an impressive fourth-place finish in 2019-20, but the likes of Werner, Kai Havertz, and Hakim Ziyech have so far failed to live up to their hefty price tags.
“It never goes down well when you spend loads of money on signings who don’t work out or are not playing well,” the former Blues striker told talkSPORT. “Upstairs will go, ‘we’ll give him more money and spend again’, but they get a little bit nervous and edgy about doing that. “He knows the job at Chelsea is full of criticism and it doesn’t take a lot for that owner to make a change.
“He’s got three home games now back-to-back, one in the FA Cup against Luton and two league games. “He has to win them. He might make the end of the season, but if he’s going to make the end of the season he has to go on a run of winning games now. “He can’t go through getting knocked out of the cup or getting a horrendous result against Burnley or Wolves at Stamford Bridge.
“I don’t quite get it because he started well. He got goals in the early part of the season,” said Cascarino. “I think Frank has shuffled way too much; he’s been spinning plates in defensive areas, midfield, the forward line. “But yes, he hasn’t played well. I’ve seen a lot of Timo Werner from his days in Germany and playing international football, and I know he can’t play up front on his own.
“He’s not the best left-sided player so you are going to have to play as you did in the second half with the two [in the attack]. “He’s always played with a big man; that’s when he’s played his best football. “I referred this before to Michael Owen; Michael Owen would never have been the player he was, and he’d admit this, without Emile Heskey. And that’s what Timo Werner needs to be in that position. “Frank is going to have to rethink his team and his formation slightly to get the best out of Timo Werner.”
Lampard has no tactics