Own Man Frank Lampard Ready to Prove Chelsea Doubters Wrong

 David Luiz moved to Arsenal on deadline day. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images
David Luiz moved to Arsenal on deadline day. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images
TT

Own Man Frank Lampard Ready to Prove Chelsea Doubters Wrong

 David Luiz moved to Arsenal on deadline day. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images
David Luiz moved to Arsenal on deadline day. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images

Frank Lampard is under no illusions about the size of the task facing Chelsea. The youngest manager in the Premier League has lost Eden Hazard to Real Madrid, David Luiz joined Arsenal on deadline day and Lampard has not been able to strengthen his squad after arriving at a club operating under a transfer embargo.

Gone are the days of heavy spending under Roman Abramovich. Uncertainty clouds the picture at Stamford Bridge and Lampard accepts that it will be difficult for his side to close the gap on Manchester City and Liverpool.

Chelsea finished 26 points behind City and 25 behind Liverpool last season and their inability to enter the market has made it hard for them to deal with the weaknesses that frustrated Maurizio Sarri. In different circumstances Lampard might have demanded a replacement before deciding to sell David Luiz, especially as Antonio Rüdiger’s knee injury means Andreas Christensen and Kurt Zouma are likely to form a slightly unconvincing partnership in central defence against Manchester United on Sunday afternoon, and there are also doubts over whether there will be enough creativity now that Hazard wears the white of Real Madrid.

Yet Lampard is not bothered by people writing off his side. The 41-year-old has dealt with criticism from a young age and the former Chelsea midfielder grinned and pretended to make for the exit when one of his interrogators began a question by suggesting that he was regarded as inferior to Joe Cole and Rio Ferdinand when they were in West Ham’s academy all those years ago.

“At the top it is tough and you have to prove people wrong,” Lampard said. “Even more in the modern day, with social media where everyone has a comment, really strong opinions. It certainly feels sweeter if you do manage to prove someone wrong or just get to where you want to be.

“I use it as motivation. I’m not stupid. We have a transfer ban. There were two teams very clear out in front last time. The Premier League is more competitive at the top end than it’s ever been. It shouldn’t be and won’t be ‘Chelsea are clear favourites to win the league this year’. I don’t think that’s the case for anybody going forward. Even Manchester City, who are a fantastic team, Liverpool pushed them to the wire.

“You should be aware of these things. They make me determined to do the job as well as I can. And I don’t mind it. I like to be considered maybe not quite a favourite.”

An obvious comparison to make is with Sir Alex Ferguson winning the Double with Manchester United after selling Andrei Kanchelskis, Paul Ince and Mark Hughes in 1995. Although Lampard has mirrored Ferguson by showing faith in young players, he insists that he did not think about how the former United manager would have handled the David Luiz situation.

“I’ve gone out of my way not to make any parallels with anyone else’s era,” he said. “I certainly don’t go out to make marks. I go out to make decisions that will help the club. You can’t get them all right. At a big club you have to make them. I’m trying to grow a group here that have a good spirit, focus and dedication to where we want to go and who are a really good team.”

Lampard plans to be his own man – he has not asked José Mourinho for advice since being appointed by Chelsea – and has spoken about wanting a team capable of playing fast, aggressive football in and out of possession. Callum Hudson‑Odoi, who is close to signing a new five-year deal, will improve the attack once he has recovered from an achilles injury and there is excitement about Christian Pulisic. The 20-year-old American winger joined in January for £58m from Borussia Dortmund before the transfer ban hit and should make his debut at Old Trafford.

“He has good ability,” Lampard said. “He can beat a man, run with the ball, has a nice touch. He scored a couple of goals in pre-season where he ran behind defences, which is what I want from my wingers or attacking players. But we must also give him time. This is the most competitive league in the world.”

Yet this is an imperfect squad. Pulisic does not possess Hazard’s technique, Willian and Pedro are solid but unspectacular options on the flanks and Lampard does not have a Didier Drogba or Diego Costa to lead the line. Judging by pre‑season Tammy Abraham will get the nod over Olivier Giroud and Michy Batshuayi against United, with the 20-year-old midfielder Mason Mount stationed behind a striker whose 25 goals helped Aston Villa win promotion last season.

Abraham is unproven at this level and there are issues for Lampard to resolve in defence. Allowing David Luiz to leave feels risky. Christensen needs to improve his concentration, Zouma spent last season on loan at Everton and Fikayo Tomori, another youngster in talks over a new deal, lacks experience.

United will expect Marcus Rashford and Anthony Martial to trouble Christensen and Zouma, while Ole Gunnar Solskjær is bound to have noticed that Chelsea conceded 22 shots during last week’s friendly draw with Borussia Mönchengladbach. Lampard is yet to find the right balance between defence and attack.

The Guardian Sport



Indian Football Club Banned, Fined for Refusing to Play in Iran

Baluch Iranian youths ride on a motorcycle in Zahedan, in the southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan bordering Afghanistan on December 18, 2025. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP)
Baluch Iranian youths ride on a motorcycle in Zahedan, in the southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan bordering Afghanistan on December 18, 2025. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP)
TT

Indian Football Club Banned, Fined for Refusing to Play in Iran

Baluch Iranian youths ride on a motorcycle in Zahedan, in the southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan bordering Afghanistan on December 18, 2025. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP)
Baluch Iranian youths ride on a motorcycle in Zahedan, in the southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchistan bordering Afghanistan on December 18, 2025. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP)

The Asian Football Confederation banned Indian club Mohun Bagan Super Giant from all its competitions and fined it more than $100,000 for refusing to play a match in Iran.

Mohun Bagan did not travel for an Asian Champions League Two group match against Sepahan in Iran in September, citing lack of security assurances and medical insurance coverage.

The AFC disciplinary and ethics committee banned Mohun Bagan from the next edition of the continental second-tier tournament, up to the 2027-28 season, it said in a statement on Wednesday.

One of the oldest football clubs in Asia, Mohun Bagan were also handed a $50,000 fine and told to pay $50,729 for damages and losses incurred by the AFC and Sepahan.

Mohun Bagan were withdrawn from the competition after their no-show and their matches were declared null and void by the AFC.

The club had earlier asked the Court Arbitration for Sport to move the match to a neutral venue, but the request was rejected, AFP reported.

The club also did not travel to Iran last year for a match against Tractor SC, a day after Iran launched missiles towards Israel.


Henry Says Nancy Can Turn Things Around at Celtic

Soccer Football - Scottish League Cup Final - St Mirren v Celtic - Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain - December 14, 2025 Celtic manager Wilfried Nancy reacts Action Images via Reuters/Craig Brough
Soccer Football - Scottish League Cup Final - St Mirren v Celtic - Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain - December 14, 2025 Celtic manager Wilfried Nancy reacts Action Images via Reuters/Craig Brough
TT

Henry Says Nancy Can Turn Things Around at Celtic

Soccer Football - Scottish League Cup Final - St Mirren v Celtic - Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain - December 14, 2025 Celtic manager Wilfried Nancy reacts Action Images via Reuters/Craig Brough
Soccer Football - Scottish League Cup Final - St Mirren v Celtic - Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain - December 14, 2025 Celtic manager Wilfried Nancy reacts Action Images via Reuters/Craig Brough

Wilfried Nancy has endured the worst start of any manager at Celtic after losing his first four games but former Arsenal forward Thierry Henry has called for patience and said he is confident his fellow Frenchman can turn things around.

Celtic's 2-1 defeat by Dundee United on Wednesday marked their longest losing run since the 1977-78 season and ‌the Glasgow ‌side, who have won ‌13 ⁠of the ‌last 14 league titles, are second in the current campaign, six points behind leaders Hearts, though with a game in hand.

Their defeat by St Mirren in last week's League Cup final prompted calls for Nancy's dismissal ⁠but Henry, who had Nancy as his assistant ‌at CF Montreal, told the ‍BBC it was ‍difficult to impose a philosophy and ‍an identity on a club quickly.

"Right now it's too early, and I do think he can turn it around. He is a great guy and has a great mind," Reuters quoted him as saying on Thursday.

"It's not working ⁠at the moment and obviously it doesn't look great. But he's a friend of mine, so I am going to be biased.

"You don't want any coach to lose their job that early. It doesn't make sense to me."

On Wednesday, the club's chairman Peter Lawwell said he was leaving by the end of the month, blaming ‌abuse and threats during a tough season.


Morocco Beat Jordan 3-2 after Extra Time to Clinch Arab Cup

Morocco's players celebrate with the winner trophy after defeating Jordan in the FIFA Arab Cup final soccer match in Lusail, Qatar, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Hussein Sayed)
Morocco's players celebrate with the winner trophy after defeating Jordan in the FIFA Arab Cup final soccer match in Lusail, Qatar, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Hussein Sayed)
TT

Morocco Beat Jordan 3-2 after Extra Time to Clinch Arab Cup

Morocco's players celebrate with the winner trophy after defeating Jordan in the FIFA Arab Cup final soccer match in Lusail, Qatar, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Hussein Sayed)
Morocco's players celebrate with the winner trophy after defeating Jordan in the FIFA Arab Cup final soccer match in Lusail, Qatar, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Hussein Sayed)

Morocco defeated Jordan 3-2 after extra time to claim the Arab Cup on Thursday thanks to two goals from Abderrazzaq Hamed Allah following a stunning long-range strike from Oussama Tannane.

Morocco opened the scoring after four minutes when Tannane's audacious shot from the center circle caught advancing goalkeeper Yazeed Abulaila off guard, Reuters reported.

Jordan, set to make their World Cup debut in 2026, hit back with a second-half double from Ali Olwan's header and penalty in the 48th and 68th minutes respectively.

But Hamed Allah scored three minutes from the end to force extra time before grabbing the winner from close range.

Morocco enjoyed another success despite missing several Europe-based players ahead of the Africa Cup of Nations.

They became the first African and Arab nation to reach the semi-finals of a World Cup – also in Qatar three years ago - eliminating Spain and Portugal before falling to France.

Morocco were crowned Under-20 world champions in October when they beat Argentina 2-0 in the final to become the first Arab nation to lift the trophy.

The under-17 side reached the World Cup quarter-finals, while the under-23 team won the Africa Cup of Nations and a place at the Paris 2024 Olympics, where they took bronze.

Morocco is set to host AFCON from December 21 to January 18.