Rafael Benitez replaces Roberto Di Matteo as Chelsea manager
AFRIK UPDATE
SPORTS
By BBC
Chelsea have appointed former Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez as interim manager until the end of the season.
Rafael Benitez
SPORTS
By BBC
Chelsea have appointed former Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez as interim manager until the end of the season.
Rafael Benitez
He replaces Roberto Di Matteo, who was sacked on Wednesday following a 3-0 Champions League defeat by Juventus.
Benitez, 52, becomes Chelsea's ninth manager since Roman Abramovich became owner in 2003.
But his short-term appointment could pave the way for Abramovich to make a summer approach for ex-Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola.
"The owner and the board believe that in Benitez we have a manager
with significant experience at the highest level of football, who can come in
and immediately help deliver our objectives.
"The two-time Uefa Manager of the Year comes with outstanding
pedigree."
Benitez joined Liverpool from Valencia in 2004 and won the Champions
League in 2005, as well as reaching the final in 2007, before leaving Anfield
by mutual consent in 2010.
He has been out of work since he was sacked by Inter Milan in December 2010.He
spent just six months in charge of the Serie A club despite winning two titles
- the Club World Cup and Italian Super Cup.
The Spaniard is due to meet the Chelsea players at the club's training
ground in Cobham on Thursday. His first match in charge is Sunday's visit of
Premier League leaders and reigning champions Manchester City.
Before his appointment was confirmed, Benitez admitted his interest in
the job to Abu Dhabi-based website Sport 360.
"I am looking for a club that can challenge for trophies and
Chelsea is one of these clubs," he said.
When he was asked about the prospect of managing on a short-term basis,
he added: "I am just trying to go to a team that can win. So we will find
ways to have a challenge like this."
Former Chelsea midfielder Nigel Spackman suggested Benitez's appointment
would be unpopular with Blues fans.
"Benitez has got a great CV and a good record, but the only way he
will win the Stamford Bridge crowd over is getting the results. Now he had to
focus on trying to win the Premier League.
"He is the interim manager but if he does a good job maybe he will
get it for longer."
David Johnstone, spokesman for Chelsea fanzine cfcuk, told BBC Sport
that fans would be unhappy with Benitez as their new boss.
"Rafa Benitez is not a Chelsea manager," he said. "Some
people are born to play for or manage certain clubs and for us, Benitez isn't
what we want.
"When he was Liverpool manager and Jose Mourinho was Chelsea boss
there was a bit of 'beef' between them.
"He was very dismissive of Chelsea, very rude towards us, and my
impression of him was that whenever anything went wrong it was always somebody
else's fault, not his."
Former Liverpool and Germany midfielder Dietmar Hamann, a Champions
League winner under Benitez at Anfield, believes the Spaniard will improve Chelsea.
"He is a very talented and outstanding manager," he said.
"He's a very meticulous worker and he puts a lot of emphasis on tactical
exercises."
Chelsea's declaration that Benitez is only manager until the end fo the
season indicates Abramovich is still interested in landing Guardiola once the
former Barcelona manager decides to return to the game.
Guardiola, 41, is midway through a 12-month sabbatical after leaving
Barcelona at the end of last season. He won 14 trophies in four years at Barca,
including three titles and the Champions League twice.
Di Matteo, 42, won the Champions League and FA Cup as caretaker manager
last season and was given a two-year deal in June.
The Italian spoke of his "deep and unreserved passion" for Chelsea despite
being sacked as manager after just eight months in charge.
His dismissal came hours after defeat to Juventus, leaving the Blues
on the brink of a Champions League exit.
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