An intriguing clash awaits at Stamford Bridge on Saturday as pressure mounts on Chelsea boss Pochettino following three straight defeats. Bournemouth will aim to capitalize under impressive interim manager O'Neil.
The match will take place on Saturday, 16th September, 2023, at Vitality Stadium, in Kings Park, Boscombe, a suburb of Bournemouth, Dorset, England.
Chelsea endured a frustrating afternoon as they fell to a shock 1-0 home defeat against Nottingham Forest.
The Blues dominated possession but lacked guile and ruthlessness in the final third as Forest executed a perfect smash and grab.
New boss Mauricio Pochettino was left with plenty to ponder after seeing his expensively assembled side come unstuck.
Chelsea monopolized the ball in the first half but struggled to carve out clear openings against Forest's stern backline.
Too often, promising attacks broke down due to a lack of precision in the final pass around the box.
Big-money summer arrivals like Mykhailo Mudryk and Enzo Fernandez flickered only briefly without impacting the game.
Makeshift forward Raheem Sterling found himself regularly crowded out whenever he received the ball in dangerous areas.
Chelsea's only first-half chances came from optimistic long-range efforts. But Forest keeper Henderson was rarely tested.
After the break, Pochettino turned to his bench to inject impetus, throwing on debutant Cole Palmer.
But within minutes, slack play in midfield had allowed Forest to pounce on the counterattack.
Elanga clinically punished Thiago Silva's error to slot past Kepa and stun the home crowd.
Shellshocked Chelsea reacted by bombarding the Forest box with crosses to no avail. The composure to unpick the locks was sorely lacking.
As anxiety set in, the Blues became increasingly wayward in the final third. Sterling and substitute Jackson spurned gilt-edged chances to equalize.
On a deeply frustrating afternoon, Chelsea ran out of ideas against Forest's stoic defending.
For all their costly individual talent, Pochettino's side lacked leadership and cohesion when faced with adversity.
The Argentine manager still has plenty of work ahead to mold Chelsea into genuine title challengers based on this evidence.
Bournemouth were left rueing a late equalizer as they had to settle for a 2-2 draw away to Brentford in a pulsating Premier League clash.
The Cherries looked on course for a smash and grab victory after substitute David Brooks put them ahead with a composed finish.
But Bryan Mbeumo struck deep in stoppage time to salvage a point for Brentford and maintain their unbeaten start.
It was a gut-wrenching finale for interim boss Gary O'Neil after his tactical game plan had worked superbly for large stretches.
O'Neil set his side up to contain Brentford before hitting them quickly on the counterattack through the pace of new boys Kluivert and Christie.
The early signs were promising as Bournemouth competed in midfield and denied Brentford space in behind.
Neto in the Cherries goal was rarely tested, although he needed his reflexes to deny a goalbound Kevin Schade effort.
Bournemouth's endeavor was rewarded in 27 minutes when Solanke timed his run to perfection before lashing an emphatic finish beyond Brentford keeper Raya.
The goal capped a flowing move involving Christie, Kluivert and Senesi as the Cherries sliced through Brentford with speed and precision.
Buoyed by the breakthrough, Bournemouth grew in confidence and began to dominate proceedings.
Brentford were restricted to half chances as the visitors' back four of Smith, Mepham, Kelly, and Fredericks defended stoutly.
In midfield, Lerma and Cook provided the platform for Bournemouth's pacy attackers to counter with menace.
Just before the break, Christie embarked on a mazy dribble past two defenders but just failed to tee up Solanke for a second.
After the interval, Brentford unsurprisingly piled on the pressure in search of an equalizer on home soil.
But Bournemouth initially stood firm, with skipper Kelly and keeper Neto making vital interceptions and saves.
The Cherries remained a threat on the break despite seeing less of the ball in the second period.
As Brentford committed bodies forward, gaps appeared for Bournemouth to exploit. This space was nearly punished when Solanke raced clear but shot tamely at Raya.
Bournemouth finally made the tie safe when Brooks, only recently back from cancer treatment, latched onto Tavernier's pass before rounding Raya to slot home.
It was no less than O'Neil's organized and energetic side deserved after executing the perfect smash and grab away performance.
But there was late heartbreak when Mbeumo struck in the 93rd minute to rescue a point for the rampant hosts.
The Cherries were ultimately undone by tiring legs as Brentford laid seige to their box in the dying moments.
But manager O'Neil will be proud of his players for showing the grit and determination to compete with one of the Premier League's toughest teams.
If Bournemouth can build on disciplined displays like this, survival is not beyond their reach despite a difficult start.
The late equalizer should not mask the positives around the battling performance both individually and collectively.
Solanke highlighted his evolution into a clinical finisher, while new boys Kluivert and Christie injected pace and urgency.
Defensively, the back four were immense against Brentford's waves of pressure. And in midfield, Cook and Lerma set the tone with their work rate and aggression.
There is a togetherness growing at Bournemouth under O'Neil's leadership. More performances brimming with desire and organization will be key if they are to defy the odds and avoid the drop this season.
Chelsea: Sanchez; Gusto, Disasi, Silva, Colwill; Caicedo, Gallagher, Enzo; Sterling, Chilwell, Jackson.
Bournemouth: Boruc; Clyne, Cook, Ake, Smith; Fraser, Lerma, Gosling, Brooks; Wilson, King
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