Chelsea parted ways with manager Enzo Maresca on New Year's Day 2026 after 18 months, following a winless run and deteriorating relations with owners Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital. The Italian, who won the UEFA Conference League and FIFA Club World Cup in his debut season, is replaced on an interim basis by Under-21s coach Calum McFarlane ahead of the Manchester City clash. Strasbourg's Liam Rosenior emerges as the frontrunner to succeed him.
Enzo Maresca's tenure at Chelsea ended abruptly on January 1, 2026, marking the fifth managerial change since the American consortium's takeover in May 2022. The 45-year-old Italian joined from Leicester in summer 2024, delivering a strong first full season with fourth place in the Premier League, Conference League glory, and a 3-0 Club World Cup final win over Paris Saint-Germain in July 2025. However, this season's form collapsed, with just one win in seven Premier League games, a slip to fifth on 30 points from 19 matches, and a 2-2 draw against Bournemouth on December 31 capping a nine-game winless streak across competitions.
Tensions boiled over after Maresca's December 13 press conference, where he described his 'worst' 48 hours at the club due to perceived lack of support. Disagreements over tactics, squad selection—including frequent backline changes (his seventh Premier League defense this season)—and off-field issues strained ties with the hierarchy. Defensive vulnerabilities, set-piece errors, and injuries to players like Levi Colwill undermined sophisticated attacking play from talents such as Cole Palmer, Enzo Fernandez, and Estevao.
Chelsea's statement highlighted the need to refocus on four competitions: League Cup semifinals against Arsenal, an FA Cup tie at Charlton on January 10, Premier League survival, and Champions League qualification from 13th place (two points off automatic spots), despite trailing leaders Arsenal by 15 points.
Interim head coach Calum McFarlane, the 40-year-old with no senior experience, takes charge for Sunday's trip to second-placed Manchester City. 'The last 24 hours have been crazy and a whirlwind, but the lads were brilliant today—it fills you with confidence we're all in it together,' he said, praising the ownership and recent results against top teams while insisting focus remains sharp.
Liam Rosenior, head coach of BlueCo-owned Strasbourg (seventh in Ligue 1, Conference League last 16), is the leading candidate. 'In life, there are zero guarantees. You never know what tomorrow will bring,' he commented ahead of a Ligue 1 game against Nice. Other names linked include Andoni Iraola, Oliver Glasner, and Xavi Hernandez.
Chelsea legend John Terry expressed shock: 'I am completely shocked. I did not see it coming—there are always two sides to the story.' Maresca's assistant Willy Caballero handled post-Bournemouth media duties, citing illness, though speculation swirled about his future contemplation.