João Pedro didn't hold back after Chelsea's latest setback—a painful 3-1 defeat that stretched their Premier League losing streak to six matches. The Brazilian striker finally ended the club's nearly ten-hour goal drought with a stunning stoppage-time bicycle kick, but by then, the damage was already done.
"It was my turn to apologize to the fans," Pedro admitted, reflecting on a performance that left supporters frustrated once again. His spectacular consolation goal offered a fleeting moment of brilliance in an otherwise grim afternoon.
Interim head coach Calum McFarlane didn't sugarcoat the situation. He pointed to a familiar pattern: poor starts and an inability to recover from early setbacks. "The first 15 minutes were not acceptable," McFarlane said. "We conceded on a play we specifically prepared for—a 3-v-1 at the back post. We knew their No.9 likes to peel to the back post, and we should have defended that moment better."
Within ten minutes of that opening goal, Chelsea found themselves two down. McFarlane noted the cruel twists of fortune that followed—Enzo hitting the post, Cole missing a penalty, João's disallowed offside goal—but insisted those moments only matter if you've given yourself a foundation to build on.
While fans are quick to point fingers at ownership, sporting directors, and the revolving door of coaches, Pedro's message cuts deeper. The players, he suggests, must start looking in the mirror. "We need to take responsibility," he said. "Playing for this badge means something. It's time we showed it on the pitch."
For a club with Chelsea's pedigree, this slide is more than a rough patch—it's a crisis of accountability. And as Pedro's words echo through the dressing room, the question remains: will his teammates answer the call before it's too late?
