Mauricio Pochettino has faced an uphill battle trying to win over the Chelsea faithful ever since he put pen-to-paper on his two-year contract at Stamford Bridge.
He arrived at the club as a modern legend of rivals Tottenham Hotspur, the architect behind one of the most memorable periods of their history. Fans over in north London even chanted his name in the hopes of bringing him back months before signing on for the Blues.
The Argentine hasn't made his life any easier with some of his actions so far in his tenure. Prior to November's meeting with Spurs, he did little to show an undying loyalty to his current club.
«It's really special [to return] because coming back after four years to a place we have amazing memories and created amazing memories together, I think it is special. I cannot lie,» Pochettino said at the time, before admitting he did not feel the same kind of love with Chelsea fans yet.
That particularly has been a sticking point throughout the season. Stamford Bridge has been a place of angst and mutiny, which is understandable given the near two-decades of trophy-laden success which preceded the muddled and frenzied BlueCo era under Todd Boehly.
Chelsea's 4-3 win against Manchester United on Thursday summed up the status of the current project rather neatly. The Blues again contrived to blow a two-goal lead, required some excellence from Cole Palmer as well as further composure from 12 yards, opened the game up needlessly with their youthful endeavour, and at the end of it all achieved their pre-match aim of simply breaking back into the Premier League's top half.
After 20 minutes, Chelsea should have taken the game out of sight. They should have added a third, a fourth, a fifth. United were there for the
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