Walk into any football memorabilia shop in west London and you’ll find the blue shirts stacked high — names on the back, numbers on the front. But there’s one number the savvier Chelsea supporters will tell you to avoid: nine. Not because it’s unlucky in the abstract, superstitious sense. Because the evidence, assembled over two decades, has become impossible to dismiss.
It started, in the modern telling, with a relatively obscure figure. Mateja Kezman arrived from PSV Eindhoven in the summer of 2004 trailing a reputation as a prolific scorer — 105 goals in four Eredivisie seasons. At Chelsea, handed the nine and the expectation that came with it, he managed four league goals before quietly disappearing. José Mourinho’s side went on to win the title regardless, which almost made it worse: the shirt became invisible in its own triumph.
“The jersey has chewed up players who, by any reasonable measure, should have thrived at Stamford Bridge.”
What followed over the next two decades reads less like a series of coincidences and more like a pattern someone designed to make a point. Fernando Torres, signed in January 2011 for what was then a British transfer record of £50 million, is the name most fans reach for first — and fairly so. The Spaniard had been one of the most electric strikers on the planet at Liverpool. At Chelsea, he turned into something else: a man visibly haunted by his own shadow, never quite hitting his stride, scoring 20 league goals in three and a half seasons. For £50 million, that wasn’t a career; it was a cautionary tale.
Fernando Torres of Chelsea looks dejected during the Barclays Premier League match
Fernando Torres (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)
Álvaro Morata came next, arriving in 2017 with a decent pedigree from Real Madrid and Juventus. He scored nine league goals in his debut campaign, which doesn’t sound catastrophic until you recall that Chelsea paid £58 million for him and shipped him out on loan less than two years later. Gonzalo Higuaín, one of the most naturally gifted finishers of his generation, followed on a short-term loan in January 2019. Six months, five goals, gone.
“Whether you believe in curses or not, the shirt’s history demands at least a raised eyebrow.”
More recently, the succession has continued with the same grim reliability. Romelu Lukaku’s second stint at the club — a world-record £97.5 million deal in 2021 — became one of the more spectacular misfires in Premier League history. He gave a television interview questioning the manager’s tactics before Christmas, played largely out of position, and was loaned back to Inter Milan by the following summer. The number nine had done it again.
There are rational explanations available, of course. Chelsea’s system has frequently prioritised wide attackers and creative midfielders over a traditional central striker. The club has changed managers with near-annual frequency for much of this period. Expectations attached to big fees distort perception. All of that is true. And yet the jersey has chewed up players who, by any reasonable measure, should have thrived at Stamford Bridge — players who went on to prove their quality elsewhere, sometimes immediately after leaving. The pattern has become so consistent that Premier League betting markets now routinely factor Chelsea striker form into their odds calculations, with bookmakers quietly adjusting their lines whenever a new name is linked to the role.
Whether you believe in curses or not, the shirt’s history demands at least a raised eyebrow. For Chelsea’s next number nine, whoever that turns out to be, the weight on their shoulders will be considerable — and not just because of the price tag. Some numbers carry history. At Chelsea, this one carries something heavier.