Liam Rosenior reacts to Chelsea’s PSG Champions League nightmare and the Blues’ head coach is not hiding from it. Chelsea suffered a brutal 5-2 first-leg defeat at the Parc des Princes on March 11, 2026, in the UEFA Champions League Round of 16, leaving them needing a near-impossible four-goal turnaround at Stamford Bridge to stay in Europe’s elite competition.
How It All Fell Apart: The Match Breakdown
For much of the evening in Paris, Chelsea were competitive. Bradley Barcola opened the scoring in the 10th minute, but Malo Gusto levelled quickly. Ousmane Dembele restored PSG’s lead before halftime, only for Enzo Fernandez to equalise again in the second half. At 2-2 deep into the match, Chelsea looked set to snatch a valuable draw then everything collapsed in the space of 15 extraordinary minutes.
The turning point came in the 74th minute when goalkeeper Filip Jorgensen gave away possession cheaply. Barcola intercepted and teed up substitute Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, who set up Vitinha for a composed chip over the stranded keeper. PSG 3-2. From there, it was carnage Kvaratskhelia added two late goals, and the night ended 5-2. Remarkably, those five goals came from an expected goals (xG) of just 0.87, making it the second-highest overperformance in a Champions League knockout match in 15 years.
Rosenior Reacts: “The Last 15 Minutes Were Crazy and That’s on Me”
Speaking at his post-match press conference, a visibly frustrated Rosenior took direct responsibility for the collapse rather than deflecting onto his players. He acknowledged that the performance had been largely encouraging right up until the final quarter of the game.
“Very disappointing result. For much of the game I’m really happy with our performance. The last 20 minutes are crazy that’s on me,” the Chelsea boss said. “Mistakes happen, you have to stay calm, me included, but we didn’t and we were punished.”
He added: “We’ve shot ourselves in the foot and made this tie very difficult. Even at 4-2 we were still right in it. The fifth goal that’s the painful one. It’s something I really have to solve.”
Jorgensen Defended But Questions Remain
One of the most debated decisions of the night was Rosenior’s choice to start Filip Jorgensen in goal over usual first-choice Robert Sanchez. When Jorgensen’s costly error directly led to PSG’s decisive third goal, the dressing room visibly fractured Enzo Fernandez was seen throwing the ball at the keeper in frustration, while Moises Caicedo also confronted him on the pitch.
Rosenior refused to throw his goalkeeper under the bus. “Players make mistakes. Filip isn’t the first to make a mistake, that’s part of football. Credit to him he held his hands up in the dressing room. Everyone makes mistakes; sometimes they’re more costly than other times, and this is one of those moments,” he said.
On the goalkeeper selection debate itself, Rosenior was clear: “Sanchez or Jorgensen? They have different qualities. Rob is outstanding from crosses and an outstanding shot-stopper.” He stopped short of confirming who would start the second leg.
The Ball Boy Incident: Pedro Neto Apologises
As if a 5-2 scoreline was not damaging enough, the night also produced an ugly sideshow. Winger Pedro Neto was caught on camera shoving a ball boy in the dying stages as frustrations boiled over. The Portuguese winger quickly issued a public apology, saying he had already spoken personally to the ball boy and gifted him his shirt after the final whistle.
Rosenior also addressed it: “If there was anything from our side that was wrong or out of order, I apologise on behalf of the club.” He used the moment to flag what has been a recurring discipline issue with his squad this season, noting it was something the team needed to urgently resolve.
Can Chelsea Turn It Around at Stamford Bridge?
The task ahead is enormous. Chelsea need to win by at least four goals in the second leg on March 17 to advance. Rosenior, however, refused to wave the white flag insisting his side are capable of a historic comeback and pointing to the fact that Chelsea accumulated 1.53 xG to PSG’s 0.87 on the night, evidence that they created and wasted real chances.
“We are very close to being an outstanding team,” he said. “I need us to maintain our calm when we have setbacks. I’m not pointing the finger at the players if we don’t overcome this hurdle, we won’t reach our potential, and it’s my job to find the solution.”
Before that second leg, Chelsea face Newcastle United at Stamford Bridge in the Premier League this weekend a chance to rebuild confidence before the biggest game of their European season. PSG, meanwhile, remain heavy favourites to progress to the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals and defend their crown.
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