Chelsea’s inconsistency was laid bare once again as they were beaten 2-1 by Fulham at Craven Cottage, with new head coach Liam Rosenior watching on as familiar flaws resurfaced.
Rosenior had not yet taken charge but was present in the stands to witness a performance that offered both brief encouragement and a sobering reminder of the problems he inherits.
Chelsea began brightly and moved the ball with confidence in the early stages, suggesting the attacking quality within the squad remains intact.
Fulham, however, were comfortable absorbing pressure and looked dangerous whenever Chelsea lost their shape or concentration.
The tone of the afternoon shifted sharply midway through the first half when Marc Cucurella was sent off for hauling down Harry Wilson as the winger raced through on goal.
Reduced to ten men, Chelsea’s task became significantly harder, and their struggles with discipline again came into focus.
Fulham grew in authority after the dismissal and began to exploit the spaces left by Chelsea’s reshuffled back line.
The hosts took the lead shortly after the break when Raul Jimenez powered a header beyond Robert Sanchez from a well-delivered cross.
Chelsea attempted to respond by sitting deeper and waiting for moments to break, but their decision-making in key moments remained erratic.
Despite their numerical disadvantage, they managed to force their way back into the contest through sheer persistence.
Liam Delap brought them level when he reacted quickest to a loose ball from a corner, bundling home after Fulham failed to clear their lines.
The equaliser briefly quietened the home crowd and offered hope that Chelsea might escape with a point.
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That hope proved short-lived as Fulham continued to press with greater conviction and sharper intent.
Wilson, who had troubled Chelsea throughout the match, restored Fulham’s lead with a composed finish after latching onto a loose ball inside the penalty area.
Chelsea retreated again after falling behind, lacking both the control and clarity required to mount a sustained response.
Frustration spilled over in the away end, with chants directed towards the ownership reflecting wider dissatisfaction with the club’s direction.
From his vantage point, Rosenior was given an unfiltered view of a side prone to lapses in discipline and momentum swings.
Fulham, by contrast, looked organised, confident and increasingly comfortable against higher-profile opposition.
Their victory lifts them level on points with Chelsea and underlines the steady progress being made under Marco Silva.
For Chelsea, the defeat extends a troubling run of results and reinforces the scale of the task facing their new manager.
Rosenior leaves Craven Cottage with clarity on the issues he must address quickly if Chelsea are to find stability and consistency.