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
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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



Leeds Win Championship Title on Goal Difference, Luton Relegated

Football - Championship - Plymouth Argyle v Leeds United - Home Park, Plymouth, Britain - May 3, 2025 Leeds United's Ethan Ampadu lifts the trophy as he celebrates with his teammates after winning the Championship. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - Championship - Plymouth Argyle v Leeds United - Home Park, Plymouth, Britain - May 3, 2025 Leeds United's Ethan Ampadu lifts the trophy as he celebrates with his teammates after winning the Championship. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Leeds Win Championship Title on Goal Difference, Luton Relegated

Football - Championship - Plymouth Argyle v Leeds United - Home Park, Plymouth, Britain - May 3, 2025 Leeds United's Ethan Ampadu lifts the trophy as he celebrates with his teammates after winning the Championship. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - Championship - Plymouth Argyle v Leeds United - Home Park, Plymouth, Britain - May 3, 2025 Leeds United's Ethan Ampadu lifts the trophy as he celebrates with his teammates after winning the Championship. (Action Images via Reuters)

Leeds United edged out Burnley to win the second-tier Championship title on goal difference after both teams finished the season with 100 points as Luton Town suffered a second straight relegation on Saturday.

On a frantic final day, Daniel Farke's Leeds trailed at Plymouth Argyle early in the game through a Sam Byram own goal but Wilfried Gnonto levelled eight minutes into the second half.

With Burnley leading Millwall, Leeds desperately needed a winner and it was Tottenham Hotspur loanee Manor Solomon who popped up with a goal in added time to give Leeds a 2-1 victory that also relegated Plymouth.

Burnley beat Millwall 3-1 but lost out on the title due to Leeds' superior goal difference.

"I can't put into words what I'm feeling right now. It is a dream come true to score the winning goal and take this Championship," Solomon told BBC Radio.

"Throughout the season we've shown we deserve this trophy and to finish in the first spot... We all knew what was happening at Burnley and we knew we needed to score. It paid off and the ball went into the net."

Both Leeds and Burnley had sealed promotion to the Premier League last month with a guaranteed top-two finish.

COVENTRY MAKE PLAYOFFS

Sheffield United finished third with 90 points after a 1-1 draw with Blackburn Rovers, who ended seventh and missed out on the last playoff spot by two points.

In the playoffs, Sheffield United will take on Bristol City, who finished sixth with 68 points while fourth-placed Sunderland (76 points) take on Frank Lampard's Coventry City (fifth with 69 points), who beat Middlesbrough 2-0 to secure a playoff spot.

It was redemption for Lampard who had aimed to prove his doubters wrong when he took over in November with Coventry 17th in the Championship.

"I loved it, it's so tense for everyone involved," Lampard told Sky Sports.

"The players deserve so much credit for getting over the line after where we've come from. We got what we deserved."

The two-legged playoffs will be held between May 8-13 and the final is on May 24.

LUTON RELEGATED

At the bottom of the table, Luton became only the fourth club in history to suffer back-to-back relegations from the Premier League.

They were playing in the top flight only a year ago but will start next season in League One, with their fans chanting "You're not fit to wear the shirt" at the players after Luton lost 5-3 to West Bromwich Albion in the final game.

"You've got to face the music. Ultimately, we've put ourselves in this situation and we need to take accountability," Luton captain Carlton Morris said.

"It's tough to put into words. I feel sorry for the fans and also for the lads with the effort they've put in recently. We gave ourselves too much of a mountain to climb."

Luton will be joined in the third tier by Cardiff City, who finished bottom after a 4-2 defeat by Norwich City.

Norwich and Cardiff were being managed by former Arsenal team mates Jack Wilshere and Aaron Ramsey after both took interim charge of their respective clubs last month.