Kai Havertz Has Started Slowly for Chelsea but He Will Come Good Soon

 Kai Havertz has only provided one goal and one assist in his six league games for Chelsea so far. Photograph: Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images
Kai Havertz has only provided one goal and one assist in his six league games for Chelsea so far. Photograph: Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images
TT

Kai Havertz Has Started Slowly for Chelsea but He Will Come Good Soon

 Kai Havertz has only provided one goal and one assist in his six league games for Chelsea so far. Photograph: Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images
Kai Havertz has only provided one goal and one assist in his six league games for Chelsea so far. Photograph: Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images

Languishing mid-table with only two wins from their opening six Premier League matches, Chelsea are yet to reach the dizzy heights expected of them following their stunning spending spree in the summer. Frank Lampard landed a major signing in almost every position, investing nearly a quarter of a billion pounds in the process. Yet Chelsea are below Crystal Palace and Southampton in the table, even though those clubs spent less between them than what Chelsea dropped on Kai Havertz alone.

Chelsea paid Bayer Leverkusen £70m for Havertz, just below the £71.6m they spent on Kepa Arrizabalaga two years ago. As the goalkeeper has shown, a high price does not guarantee success. Nevertheless, Havertz’s transfer was generally considered a coup for Chelsea. Bayern Munich and Real Madrid were among his suitors yet Lampard and Petr Cech wooed the 21-year-old. His performances in the Bundesliga skyrocketed at the end of last season – he had a direct hand in 15 goals in the second half of the campaign – but Chelsea have not been able to tap into that form yet.

With just one goal and one assist in his six league games so far, Havertz has endured a relatively underwhelming start to his Chelsea career and has spoken openly about his early struggles. “It was difficult for me, especially because the Premier League is a completely different league,” he told Chelsea’s official website earlier this month. “It’s more intense and I noticed that in the first few games. The intensity in the duels and the runs is much higher. It’s a completely different league and the games are very exhausting. The Bundesliga isn’t worse but I noticed differences. There aren’t any average or bad players here – everybody is at a very high level.”

Given the money invested in him and the buzz of excitement when he arrived, Chelsea supporters may feel disappointed. But, beyond cutting a young player some slack and giving him time to adjust to new surroundings, there is also another reason to be patient. Those familiar with Havertz’s career may even have predicted a slow beginning.

He was a notoriously slow starter in all four of his league campaigns at Bayer Leverkusen. Isolating the first half of each of those seasons – known in Germany as the hinrunde – Havertz returned a modest 18 goals or assists in 54 league appearances, having a direct hand in a goal every 225.4 minutes. Given his age, that is certainly not a terrible record, but it pales in comparison to his form thereafter.

The Havertz who emerged after the winterpause – into the period known as the rückrunde – was a completely different player. He had a direct hand in 40 goals in 64 league appearances in that time, managing a goal or an assist at a far more prolific rate of every 122.4 minutes. Having a player who comes on strong for the business stage of the season is not a bad ace to have up your sleeve, but Havertz will need to become more consistent at some point and he will not have the luxury of a winter break in England.

Havertz’s best game for Chelsea so far came in their League Cup thumping of Barnsley in September, when the young German scored a hat-trick on just his third appearance for the club. Havertz dovetailed perfectly with Tammy Abraham, arriving late in the box with penetrating runs to finish off smart attacks. Havertz had five touches in Barnsley’s box and scored with three of them, but in his other seven appearances he has averaged just 1.7 touches in the opposition box per game.

Clearly the caliber of opposition must be considered, but it also offers a glimpse into what can be changed to get Havertz back to his best. He is capable of producing goals as well as scoring them but during his time at Leverkusen his goals comfortably outweighed his assists in the Bundesliga (36 goals v 22 assists). It’s peculiar that Lampard, who made a career scoring goals by arriving late in the box, is holding Havertz back from doing the same, instructing him to focus on creating chances rather than finding the back of the net (he has only averaged 0.8 shots per game).

Not everything clicks right away, however, and Lampard is trying to work out how to get the most out of his new players. His six new signings have only been on the pitch together once, against Sevilla last week, and that lasted less than 30 minutes.

If Chelsea’s last two performances are anything to go by, supporters hoping for a dramatic turnaround will be disappointed. Lampard appears to have put the brakes on his forwards in a desperate attempt to finally plug their porous defense. Chelsea have conceded 63 goals in the Premier League since the beginning of last season – which ranks firmly in the bottom half of the table – so tightening the defense is not necessarily a bad step to take. Their stalemate with Sevilla last week was their first 0-0 draw under Lampard and he followed it up with another goalless draw at Old Trafford a few days later. Taking a more defensive approach comes at the cost of their attackers, though. Havertz, for example, did not manage a single shot in either game.

It has not been the start Havertz would have wanted but it would be foolish to make any hasty judgments about the youngster. “The hat-trick was good for me,” he said a few weeks ago. “The start was a little difficult because I only trained with the team for five or six days, then played the first game right away. It was also a very big step for me to leave my family and familiar surroundings. It takes time to get it right.” Unfortunately, it usually takes Havertz until the turn of the year to get it right, but he is certainly worth the wait.

The Guardian Sport



Iran Coach Says Team Ordered Out of US Right After World Cup Opener

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group G - Iran v New Zealand - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - June 15, 2026 Iran coach Amir Ghalenoei reacts during the match. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group G - Iran v New Zealand - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - June 15, 2026 Iran coach Amir Ghalenoei reacts during the match. (Reuters)
TT

Iran Coach Says Team Ordered Out of US Right After World Cup Opener

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group G - Iran v New Zealand - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - June 15, 2026 Iran coach Amir Ghalenoei reacts during the match. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group G - Iran v New Zealand - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - June 15, 2026 Iran coach Amir Ghalenoei reacts during the match. (Reuters)

The coach of Iran's World Cup team said it was ordered to leave the US and return to its training base in Mexico only a few hours after opening its politically charged tournament by playing to a 2-2 draw with New Zealand on Monday night.

Coach Amir Ghalenoei didn't say who ordered the Iranians to leave earlier than planned. The team had expected to spend the night in California to maximize the normal recovery process after its opening game, only to be told after the match that everyone must immediately get on a plane for the 140-mile trip back to Tijuana.

“They didn’t even give us time to recover,” Ghalenoei said through an interpreter. “After the game today, they said to us, ‘You have to leave immediately.’ It’s very important for us to have time for recovery, (but) we are asked to get on a plane and return to our camp in Tijuana, and we are really troubled by that.”

The Iranians’ World Cup cycle has been in upheaval since the US and Israel began a war against Iran on Feb. 28. Iran ultimately decided to compete even after FIFA rejected its request to move its three group-stage matches out of the US.

Iran captain Mehdi Taremi said the team endured five hours of travel and security checks during what's normally a very short trip from Tijuana to the Los Angeles area on Sunday.

“We don’t know why they are returning us, to be honest,” Ghalenoei said. “I think it’s very strange. It seems like others are doing the planning for us. The decision-making for us is being made elsewhere. We were supposed to come two nights before the game, and we were supposed to stay tonight to recover and return tomorrow at lunchtime. We have no idea why.

"I think our team is perhaps the most oppressed in the World Cup.”

Taremi and Ghalenoei both decried the team's lack of many important staff members, including the president of Iran's football federation, coaching support personnel and media officials, who were denied visas by the US, amplifying the team's difficult preparations.

“We have to leave Los Angeles right now, and it’s not good for us,” Taremi said about an hour after the match. “I think FIFA have to help us more than this. ... Everything is like a disaster, actually, for us.”

Ghalenoei said several players developed cramps during the game, which was played in mild conditions. He attributed the injury problems to the lack of proper preparation time caused by Iran's bureaucratic and diplomatic obstacles.

“Before the game, I said we haven’t had time to adjust because of the travel,” Ghalenoei said. “Many of our players, they had cramps, and that’s why we had to substitute them. So it wasn’t for technical reasons that we made substitutions. It was because of the injury and because of the cramp.”

“They will be examined (Tuesday) by our technical staff, but the fact they delayed our arrivals and they are forcing us to go back early without time for recovery, they are making the situation more difficult,” he added.

The Iranians’ remaining two games in group stage play are against Belgium in Inglewood on Sunday, followed by a trip to Seattle to face Egypt next week.

Iran opened its World Cup with a disappointing draw to a team ranked 65 places lower in FIFA's rankings. Yet the Iranians also overcame two deficits in an exciting match, getting the tying goal from Mohammad Mohebi in the 64th minute before a strongly pro-Iranian crowd at SoFi Stadium near Los Angeles, which has the world’s largest population of Iranians outside Iran.

The game was played in a crackling atmosphere created in part by a conflicted, diasporic fan base which remains furious with the current Iranian government, but is still largely supportive of Team Melli.

While several hundred Iranian Americans protested the government outside, many fans from the diaspora jeered and turned their backs on the field during the national anthem. Dozens of Lion and Sun emblems — the centerpiece of Iran’s official flag before 1979 — were displayed in the crowd despite FIFA’s attempts to keep them away, while dozens more fans wore the Lion and Sun emblems on T-shirts.

Yet the vast majority of the crowd vocally supported the Iranian players once the match kicked off.

“It was an incredible atmosphere in the game, all 90 minutes,” Taremi said. “It was like at home for us.”


‘Top-Quality’ Egypt Not at World Cup to Make Up the Numbers, Coach Says

Emam Ashour (R) of Egypt celebrates with teammate Mohamed Salah (L) after scoring the opening goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Belgium against Egypt, in Seattle, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)
Emam Ashour (R) of Egypt celebrates with teammate Mohamed Salah (L) after scoring the opening goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Belgium against Egypt, in Seattle, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)
TT

‘Top-Quality’ Egypt Not at World Cup to Make Up the Numbers, Coach Says

Emam Ashour (R) of Egypt celebrates with teammate Mohamed Salah (L) after scoring the opening goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Belgium against Egypt, in Seattle, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)
Emam Ashour (R) of Egypt celebrates with teammate Mohamed Salah (L) after scoring the opening goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Belgium against Egypt, in Seattle, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)

Egypt are not at the World Cup to make up the numbers and showed their potential and quality players in Monday's 1-1 draw with Belgium, coach Hossam Hassan said, after they came agonizingly close to their dream of a first win in the showpiece event.

The Pharaohs went ahead with a brilliant 20th-minute strike from Emam Ashour and were a handful for the Belgians, who levelled in the 66th minute when record scorer Romelu Lukaku, a little over 20 seconds after entering the game, forced an own goal from Mohamed Hany.

"I'm not the one ‌to talk ‌about Egypt's stature. The players are top quality, and we ‌have ⁠two of the ⁠best players in the world with us. They give us motivation," he said of captain Mohamed Salah and striker Omar Marmoush.

"We are definitely not here just to make up the numbers. The win was in our hands today."

Playing in their fourth World Cup, Egypt are chasing their best-ever showing and got their campaign off to an impressive start in Seattle, registering 14 goal attempts and going toe-to-toe with one ⁠of the top-ranked sides.

"This was our priority, our number one ‌focus. We were not thinking about anything else," ‌Hassan said.

"But the draw is a win actually, a draw against such a rival, ‌a big rival. They have big, big players."

SALAH, MARMOUSH 'FEROCIOUS' FOR PHARAOHS

Hassan defended his ‌decision to substitute captain and goal machine Salah when the scores were level and praised him and Marmoush for what he called excellent performances.

"We do not rely on a single player but on a collective 26," he said. "Salah, Marmoush, they give it their all, they ‌were really, really giving everything with their ferocious transitions."

Egypt's best run at the World Cup was in 1990, where ⁠they came away ⁠with two draws and a defeat, with coach Hassan himself in the side.

Egypt's participation in this World Cup went beyond the tournament, he said, and was part of a drive to reinvent the national team and make them believe they can be contenders in world football.

"We are 120 million people in Egypt so of course we need to have a strong squad, of course we have ambition, of course we need to represent all of these people," he said.

"I told them that we have to have a new national identity for our national squad ... we try to work on the mindset of the players, prepare our players and try to build their confidence that they are a strong team."

Egypt face New Zealand and Iran in their other Group G matches.


Iran Draw 2-2 with New Zealand in Politically Charged World Cup Clash in LA

Iran forward Mohammad Mohebi celebrates after scoring a goal in the second half during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Iran against New Zealand, in Los Angeles, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)
Iran forward Mohammad Mohebi celebrates after scoring a goal in the second half during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Iran against New Zealand, in Los Angeles, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)
TT

Iran Draw 2-2 with New Zealand in Politically Charged World Cup Clash in LA

Iran forward Mohammad Mohebi celebrates after scoring a goal in the second half during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Iran against New Zealand, in Los Angeles, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)
Iran forward Mohammad Mohebi celebrates after scoring a goal in the second half during the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage match Iran against New Zealand, in Los Angeles, USA, 15 June 2026. (EPA)

Iran twice came from behind to draw 2-2 with New Zealand in an exciting World Cup clash at Los Angeles Stadium on Monday, as protests against Tehran's government and a tentative agreement to end the US-Iran war formed a charged backdrop to the match.

New Zealand took an early lead when Elijah Just volleyed home from inside the box after being set up by Chris Wood.

The goal was celebrated by some fans critical of the Iranian government, many of whom carried Iran's pre-revolutionary Lion and Sun flag. Some also booed Iran's national anthem before kickoff.

But most of the crowd of more than 70,000 appeared ‌firmly behind Team ‌Melli, chanting "Ir-ran! Ir-ran!" and erupting when Ramin Rezaeian equalized shortly after ‌the ⁠half-hour mark.

Rezaeian, one ⁠of several Iran players who had not played club football since February after the domestic league was suspended amid US and Israeli airstrikes, reacted quickest to a shot blocked by a defender and poked the ball past the advancing goalkeeper.

Wood and Just combined again early in the second half, the New Zealand captain sliding a precise pass into the 26-year-old forward's path before Just hammered home to restore the All Whites' lead.

Iran responded 10 minutes later with a super goal from Mohammad Mohebbi, ⁠who headed Rezaeian's perfect cross in off the far post to make ‌it 2-2.

Iran created better chances leading up to the ‌final whistle but were unable to find a winner as the sun set over Southern California.

GROUP G ALL ‌SQUARE

The stalemate means all the teams in Group G have one point after Belgium drew ‌1-1 with Egypt earlier on Monday.

New Zealand, making their third appearance at the finals, remain without a win at a World Cup after seven matches. Iran are looking to reach the knockout round for the first time.

"We're disappointed to not win," New Zealand coach Darren Bazeley said.

"When you're leading twice in a game ‌you come away with that what if. We were probably as close as we've ever been to winning a game at the World ⁠Cup and we couldn't ⁠quite do that today.

"But we're in the World Cup, we didn't lose, we stayed in the game, scored goals and created chances, so it was a really strong performance I'm really proud of."

PROTESTERS CALL OUT IRANIAN GOVERNMENT

The match laid bare divisions among Iranian American fans, many of whom said they felt torn between pride at seeing Iran on the sport's biggest stage, anger over Tehran's crackdown on protesters and concern over Washington's bombing campaign.

Los Angeles is home to the world's largest Iranian diaspora and before kickoff, about 300 to 500 protesters gathered outside the stadium, waving anti-government signs and flags.

Some Iranian Americans said attending the match would imply support for Iran's government, while others said they wanted to set politics aside and support the players.

Iran, who moved their base camp from Tucson, Arizona, to Tijuana, Mexico, where they have been warmly received, will return to Los Angeles to face Belgium on Sunday when New Zealand take on Egypt in Vancouver.