
Graham Potter was appointed as Chelsea's new manager on a five-year contract on Thursday following the shock sacking of
Thomas Tuchel. The Englishman has left fellow Premier League club Brighton to move to Stamford Bridge, with Chelsea praising his "progressive football and innovative coaching."
The 47-year-old earned widespread admiration for his work at Brighton on England's south coast.
He led the Seagulls to a ninth-place finish last season and took it up to fourth in the standings this season while demanding entertaining and tactically astute performances from his players.
Potter's first game as Chelsea boss will be a derby at west London rival Fulham on Saturday.
"I am incredibly proud and excited to represent Chelsea FC, this fantastic football club," he said. "I am very excited to partner with Chelsea's new ownership group and look forward to meeting and working with the exciting group of players and to develop a team and culture that our amazing fans can be proud of."
Chelsea chairman
Todd Boehly, who fired Tuchel on Wednesday, just seven games into the new season, said he was "thrilled" to bring Potter to the club.
"He is a proven coach and an innovator in the Premier League who fits our vision for the club," Boehly said. "Not only is he extremely talented on the pitch, he has skills and capabilities that extend beyond the pitch which will make Chelsea a more successful club."
Potter was mooted as a candidate for the Manchester United job eventually filled by
Erik ten Hag after masterminding Brighton's highest-ever league finish last season despite operating on a limited budget. But when Chelsea came calling, Brighton was unable to stand in the his way as he had a release clause in his contract.
Potter's impressive work in three years with Brighton, and during his previous spells at Swansea and Swedish club Ostersunds FK, marked him out as a rising managerial star.
His success has come after a modest playing career that included eight Premier League appearances at Southampton, but was mostly spent in the lower leagues.
"I am very disappointed that Graham will be leaving us. He has done exceptionally well over the past three-and-a-bit seasons -- he is an exceptional head coach and an exceptional person," said Brighton chairman
Tony Bloom.
Despite all the plaudits, Chelsea will give Potter his first taste of dealing with the egos of superstar players, while coping with ultra-demanding U.S. owners.
Already tipped as a future England boss, Potter will face the sternest test of his career as he assesses a volatile situation at Stamford Bridge.
Tuchel's relationships with his players had reportedly deteriorated and there were tensions with the club hierarchy.
Chelsea's statement tellingly highlighted the "collaborative, forward-thinking approach" of Potter, who will take members of Brighton's backroom staff with him.
Tuchel, who replaced
Frank Lampard in January 2021, was axed hours after an embarrassing 1-0 defeat in Chelsea's Champions League opener against Dinamo Zagreb.
The club's owners made the dramatic move even though the German led the Blues to their second Champions League title in May 2021.
Last season Chelsea won the Club World Cup, reached two domestic cup finals and finished third in the Premier League.
But Tuchel departed with the club sitting a disappointing sixth in the Premier League after winning only three of its first six matches to sit five points behind leaders Arsenal.
Boehly's consortium paid a world-record 2.5 billion pounds ($3.2 billion) to buy Chelsea in May after
Roman Abramovich announced he was selling the club shortly after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Chelsea spent heavily in the summer transfer window, signing a clutch of stars including forward
Raheem Sterling from Manchester City and Napoli defender
Kalidou Koulibaly.
But so far the outlay has not paid dividends, with damaging defeats against Leeds and Southampton before the nightmare start to their Champions League campaign in Croatia.
smg/jw/ea
© Agence France-Presse
I hope this works out for Chelsea, but I suspect the American owners were nudged in the direction of an English manager despite his lack of a track record at that level of expectations. Is he really going to do better than Lampard or Tuchel? Connect the dots for me here; this seems more like wishful thinking.
Difficulty finding that first dot................................................