Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti looks on before their
English Premier League match against Everton at Goodison
Park, Liverpool. (AP Photo/Tim Hales)
Carlo Ancelotti has been fired as Chelsea manager
following a trophyless season, leaving a year after he led the
club to the Premier League and FA Cup titles.
Despite accepting publicly in recent months that his job was
under threat, the Italian's departure was only announced
shortly after Chelsea lost 1-0 at Everton in the last match
of a miserable season.
Chelsea bluntly said the 51-year-old Ancelotti had "parted
company" with the London club.
For owner Roman Abramovich, finishing second behind
Manchester United was not deemed acceptable for Chelsea,
which won the league and FA Cup for the first time in a
single season last May.
"This season's performances have fallen short of expectations
and the club feels the time is right to make this change
ahead of next season's preparations," Chelsea said in a
statement. "Chelsea's long-term football objectives and
ambitions remain unchanged and we will now be concentrating
all our efforts on identifying a new manager."
Ancelotti's replacement will be the seventh Chelsea manager
since Abramovich bought the club eight years ago. The club
has won every major honor won in that time apart from the one
that Abramovich cherishes so much: the Champions League.
The Champions League campaign was ended this season by Man
United in the quarterfinals.
Ancelotti, who won the Champions League twice at AC Milan
before joining Chelsea, had another year remaining on his
contract.
"The owner and board would like to thank Carlo for his
contribution and achievements since taking over as manager in
July 2009, which included winning the double for the first
time in the club's history," the Chelsea statement said.
After that feat, Chelsea had begun the new season with five
successive wins and was being hailed as an unstoppable force.
But the decision to allow five senior players, including
Michael Ballack, Joe Cole and Ricardo Carvalho, to leave in
the off-season appeared to backfire when injuries struck the
spine of the team.
That coincided with the sudden and unexplained departure in
November of assistant manager Ray Wilkins, which was
immediately followed by the club's worst run in the league
for almost 15 years.
Even the 70 million pound outlay on striker Fernando Torres
and defender David Luiz in January to try and revive the
team's fortunes backfired, with suggestions the arrival of
Torres had a destabilising effect.
"I am now on holiday, but I am not sure how long my holiday
will be!" Ancelotti quipped at Everton shortly before being
fired.
FC Porto's Andre Villas-Boas - a former scout at Chelsea -
has been installed as the 2-1 favourite to replace Ancelotti
by British bookmaker William Will.
The 33-year-old Villas-Boas last week became the youngest
coach to win a UEFA club competition, the Europa League title
coming in a season in which he also won the the Portuguese
Cup, the domestic league and the season-opening Portuguese
Supercup.
At 7-2 are Mourinho, the Real Madrid coach, and Turkey
manager Guus Hiddink, who have both worked under Abramovich
at Chelsea.
Abramovich inherited Claudio Ranieri in the dugout in 2003,
but the Italian left in May 2004 having failed to mark the
start of the owner's regime with a trophy.
Mourinho replaced Ranieri, but back-to-back league titles
weren't enough to save the self-appointed "Special One" when
Manchester United beat Chelsea to the title in 2007.
The Portuguese manager left a month into the following
season. His replacement, Avram Grant, was dumped after only
one campaign. The Israeli left after losing the Champions
League final on penalties to Man United.
Luiz Felipe Scolari, Brazil's 2002 World Cup-winning coach,
had even fewer games in charge than Grant before departing in
February 2009.
Hiddink was a temporary appointment and couldn't be persuaded
to stay despite winning the FA Cup before Ancelotti was hired
in June 2009.
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