Why Ruben Amorim should turn down Liverpool for basket-case Chelsea
Having been told where to go by Xabi Alonso, Liverpool have made Sporting Lisbon boss Ruben Amorim their top choice to replace Jurgen Klopp at Anfield this summer, but another Premier League job could also be in the offing for a man in demand.
Reports claim Todd Boehly and Clearlake want to stick by Mauricio Pochettino despite Chelseaâs ludicrously mercurial results, but Amorim is a manager high on their succession planning shortlist, deemed the âidealâ replacement should they swing the axe on the incumbent.Â
Chelsea may well be too late as Liverpool have reportedly agreed a deal in principle, but the Portuguese boss could always turn them down, and weâve come up with five reasons why he should snub the Reds and wait for a job at the Premier Leagueâs basket-case football club.Â
Following Pochettino, not Klopp
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta is proof that itâs better to follow the follower, while weâre yet to find out how many followers down the line it will take to source the right replacement for Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United. Number five is yet to scratch that itch, and the odds are number six wonât either.
Xabi Alonso is smart enough not to be the next man up after Mr Liverpool, knowing â as we all do â that heâs very unlikely to top what Jurgen Klopp has achieved. We donât just mean the trophies, though five major gongs in a nine-year reign with Manchester City and Pep Guardiola for company shouldnât be sniffed at, but also the extraordinary bond heâs built with the players, staff, fans and (we can feel the tiniest bit of sick in the back of our throats here) the city.
Whether you believe This Means More or not heâs managed to hoodwink everyone with a stake in the club to believe that it actually does. He was the perfect manager for Liverpool; thereâs no one â not Guardiola, Ancelotti or anyone else â who could have done as good a job at Anfield. Following him is a foolâs errand.
Conversely, the only way is up at Chelsea. Currently ninth, with each passing draw against teams doomed for the drop casting further doubt as to whether there will be any European football for a second successive season, the fans have firmly taken against Mauricio Pochettino, and according to reports, so too have some of the players.
Itâs a difficult job, thereâs no doubt about that, but any manager worth their salt will look at that group of players and think they can get a better tune out of them than either Pochettino or Graham Potter.
READ MORE: Mourinho second favourite to replace Pochettino at Chelsea as viral video âsparks frenzyâ
Chelsea fans vs Todd Boehly
At some point, as was the case at Manchester United under the Glazers, a clubâs fans become convinced that the owners are to blame rather than the manager.
To some extent â thanks to Todd Boehlyâs multifarious mistakes in his short time at the helm â this has already happened at Chelsea, but in Pochettino they hired a manager the supporters were waiting to fail owing to his Tottenham links, who is also only the second permanent manager signed by the Clearlake consortium.
Itâs not just the quality of failing managers but the number of them that causes the fans to point the finger of blame elsewhere. Potter and Pochettino might both be rubbish, but Potter, Pochettino and Amorim? Surely not.
The growing feeling â which is already causing the less trigger-happy fans to suggest Poch shouldnât be sacked â that eventually some manager or other has to be given time to put their stamp on things also plays into the hands of Amorim, who will get further credit having hailed from Portugal â home of Chelseaâs greatest ever manager â from fans who have successfully scrubbed Andre Villas-Boas from their memories.
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Replacing Van Dijk and Salah
Both are out of contract at the end of the 2025 season, meaning theyâll likely either sign extensions this summer or be sold. In any case, at some stage â assuming Amorim lasts long enough â he will have to find replacements for Liverpoolâs best centre-back and best goalscorer in the Premier League era.
The good news for Amorim is the man who signed them â Michael Edwards â is back at Liverpool. The bad news is, and we know neither Van Dijk nor Salah were considered to be world-beaters when they joined, we canât imagine CEO of football Edwards or sporting director Richard Hughes sourcing players anywhere near their level for the sort of sums theyâre likely to be able to spend, if indeed those players even exist.
An added difficulty in the transfer market will be the inevitable reduced allure at a football club in transition and without Klopp, who is consistently cited by new recruits as key to them joining, whereas Chelsea signings â to a man â have been convinced by âthe projectâ, even after a first season under the new owners that saw them finish 12th in the Premier League and with no European football.
Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah are going to be very difficult to replace at Liverpool.
Easy transfer fixes at Chelsea
After a ÂŁ1bn spend, Pochettinoâs comments on the back of Chelseaâs 2-2 draw with Sheffield United on Sunday drew short shrift from some.
âAlways when the end of the season arrives,â he said. âWe need to analyse the squad and what we are missing to try to add people with the capacity to provide what we are seeing today, to improve in the next seasons.â
You can think he should be getting more out of his current players without dismissing what should be obvious to everyone watching Chelsea games: incredibly, they do need more players.
A goalkeeper and a centre-back for sure, probably another centre-back, a left-back, a guaranteed goalscorer and another winger. Thatâs before you consider replacements for the stomach-churning pure profit sales theyâll likely be forced into to comply with FFP.
Itâs a mess, but arguably quite an appealing one for Amorim, who hopefully wouldnât need to convince the owners after this season that some experience might be of benefit, and can supplement a squad that has significant, as yet unrealised, potential.
READ MORE: Chelsea stars reassigned after FFP âexpulsionâ: Mudryk to Arsenal as Liverpool land trio
Cole Palmer
A shining light in the darkness at Stamford Bridge, any manager would love to work with a 21-year-old whoâs proven he can carry the entire creative burden of a team on his shoulders. Hopefully he wouldnât have to be under Amorim, but Palmer has been a cheat code for Chelsea this season, winning games and turning them around on his own.
Weâre not going to pretend that Amorim will look at the respective squads and think â even given the age profiles â that he would prefer to work with Chelseaâs than Liverpoolâs. But Liverpool donât have Cole Palmer.
READ MORE: Palmer behind Arsenal man in top 10 Premier League signings of the season but Tottenham dominate
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