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Chelsea legend lands first managerial job in five years after leaving Blues role and hires Champions League winner

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CHELSEA legend Claude Makelele has agreed to become the new manager of Greek side Asteras Tripolis.

The 51-year-old has been out of work since leaving his coaching role at Stamford Bridge a year ago.

Getty
Chelsea legend and former technical mentor Claude Makelele has agreed to become manager of Asteras Tripolis[/caption]

Makelele was a technical mentor during his time at Chelsea, advising players on how to improve.

But he is now returning to management for the first time in five years.

The France legend has accepted a managerial job offer from Asteras Tripolis.

The Greek side recently sacked Milan Rastavac despite sitting fifth in the Super League after three games.

Robbie Keane was allegedly in advanced talks over the role and even flew to Greece to meet club chiefs.

However, Tripolis have instead decided to appoint Makelele.

The ex-midfielder has previously managed French club Bastia and Belgian side Eupen.

He has also coached at Paris Saint-Germain and Swansea City.

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Former Swansea and Reading boss Paul Clement will join Makelele in Greece as his assistant.

Clement has previously worked at some of the biggest clubs in Europe as an assistant manager, including Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and PSG.

He won the Champions League with Real Madrid back in 2014 alongside Carlo Ancelotti.

Clement also has a Premier League title and two FA Cups among his accolades.

Chelsea will lose their soul by leaving Stamford Bridge

By Matt Penn

JUST what London needs – another £1billion bowl-shaped, soulless football stadium.

No offence to Spurs, because theirs looks great, but it’s not like they had years of title-winning history to celebrate at White Hart Lane.

Arsenal moved on from Highbury a couple of years after their last Premier League title win in 2004, and to no avail, they’ve been chasing that glory ever since.

And the less said about West Ham‘s move from Upton Park, the better. The Olympic Stadium pales in significance to Upton Park, where binoculars weren’t needed to see the pitch from Row Z.

It’s no secret Chelsea fans have become disillusioned with the club since Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali took over from Roman Abramovich two years ago.

The sacking of two full-time managers in that time, a 12th-place finish in the league, no European football, billions spent on Brazilian teenagers you’ve never heard of and civil war between the owners have turned the club into a laughing stock.

Seems like the perfect time to revamp plans to leave Stamford Bridge, doesn’t it?

According to The Guardian, Chelsea are in talks to move to a new 60,000-seater site in Earl’s Court, something they’ve attempted before.

Chelsea are said to have made plans for the Lillie Bridge depot site as an area that could be developed in a move that could cost hundreds of millions.

Forget that so much else still needs fixing on the pitch, that the results are still not going the way they should, that players still can’t seem to click on a consistent basis.

The owners, who are said to be looking to buy each other out already, might not think it, and the seats might be a little rusty, but fans do value tradition.

The Bridge has been a place supporters can call home every other Saturday. It’s raw, the stands are close to the pitch, it has four sides, and most importantly, it’s owned by the fans.

For any deal to go through, Chelsea Pitch Owners (CPO), a group made up of over 14,000 fans, have to approve a move away from the 42,000-seater stadium.

On the other hand, redvelopment of Stamford Bridge would see the team move away from the stadium for a number of years, likely double the three years Tottenham spent at Wembley.

But why not overhaul each stand one-by-one? Both Liverpool and Fulham had stands refurbished and they were able to stay put. There are also plans for Crystal Palace to do the same.

If Boehly and Eghbali are so desperate to put money at the forefront of their decision-making, then go about it in a way which will appease fans.

Sadly, football isn’t really about fans anymore, and it’d be easy to say Chelsea will lose their soul if they leave Stamford Bridge.

But you fear they already have.