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Chelsea’s Bid To Bring Back Zola

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  • Chelsea’s Bid To Bring Back Zola



    ZOLA: Legend at Chelsea


    Tuesday October 2,2007

    By Tony Banks


    Have your say(0)

    CHELSEA are considering a bold plan to bring Stamford Bridge hero Gianfranco Zola back to the club alongside World Cup-winning coach Marcello Lippi in a desperate bid to rescue their season.

    Though Chelsea’s players have been told the beleaguered Avram Grant is in charge for the time being, the Israeli is not popular with the squad and is almost certain to be ousted if Chelsea are beaten in the Champions League at Valencia tomorrow and do not win at Bolton next weekend.

    But with other coaching options proving problematic, owner Roman Abramovich wants to bring back Zola, now helping to run Italy’s Under-21 team, as a coach to rescue a season that is rapidly disintegrating.

    Zola, like Grant, does not have a UEFA Pro licence, but is working towards it with the Italian FA. Chelsea want to tempt him back to his beloved Bridge with an established international name alongside him – and World Cup winner Lippi is the man.

    Zola, 41, has always said he would like to return to Chelsea one day. He became a legend at the club in his seven years at Stamford Bridge, where he scored 59 goals in 229 appearances before leaving in 2003.

    Zola departed the club only a week before Abramovich bought it that summer, and the Russian spent several days frantically trying to agree a new deal for him to return. But Zola had already agreed a contract with Cagliari and would not go back on his word.

    Abramovich then even tried unsuccessfully to buy the Italian club, so desperate was he to get Zola back.

    Certain elements in the Chelsea hierarchy see the plan to pair Zola with Lippi as the only way to win back the fans following the disastrous events of the last fortnight, which saw Jose Mourinho forced out and supporters up in arms about the chaos that followed.

    Chelsea face Valencia in Spain tomorrow night in their second Champions League Group B game knowing defeat will almost certainly mean an early exit from the competition, after they could only draw their opening match against Rosenborg.

    Lippi has always been high on the list of candidates who have been looked at as possible successors to Mourinho.

    The former Juventus coach, 59, has been regarded as too old to leap into the hurly burly of Premier League football, especially with a club like Chelsea. But with a younger man alongside him to help, the pairing might just work.

    Lippi has twice managed Juventus and also Inter in a glittering career that has seen five Serie A titles and one European Cup come his way.

    His crowning glory, though, was leading an initially unfancied Italy to success in last year’s World Cup.
    "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

  • #2
    This team is going to finish in the bottom half this season, and Roman is a perfect example of an egotistic owner who wants to run the football operations, but is clueless.
    Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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    • #3
      zola escaped it by the skin of his teeth.....

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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      • #4
        Zola Power....Bring it back !!!
        "Stand in love, don't fall in love" Stephen Marley

        Comment


        • #5
          if zola values what he has done for chelsea he should avoid roman at all costs....as lovindeer so eloquently puts it "this kind of fuss mek christian cuss".....

          roman should just tek a leave of absence from the boardroom and manage the side himself!!

          Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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