2017–18 Chelsea F.C. season

The 2017–18 season was Chelsea's 104th competitive season, 29th consecutive season in the top flight of English football, 26th consecutive season in the Premier League and 112th year in existence as a football club.[1] The season covered the period from 1 July 2017 to 30 June 2018.

Chelsea
2017–18 season
Chelsea players lining up for the Champions League game against Qarabag
OwnerRoman Abramovich
ChairmanBruce Buck
ManagerAntonio Conte
StadiumStamford Bridge
Premier League5th
FA CupWinners
EFL CupSemi-finals
FA Community ShieldRunners-up
UEFA Champions LeagueRound of 16
Top goalscorerLeague:
Eden Hazard (12)

All:
Eden Hazard (17)
Highest home attendance41,616 (vs Burnley, 12 August 2017, Premier League)
Lowest home attendance37,741 (vs Barcelona, 20 February 2018, Champions League)

The season was the first without club legend John Terry after he departed on a free transfer following 22 years with the club. Chelsea returned to the UEFA Champions League after a single season's absence and entered the Premier League season as defending champions. The season was also Chelsea's first under the new kit deal with Nike, the most lucrative commercial deal in the history of the club.[2]

Month by month review

May

On 22 May 2017, it was announced Juan Cuadrado would join Juventus on a permanent deal for a preset transfer fee of £17.3 million after a clause in his loan contract became triggered. He subsequently signed a contract with the Serie A champions until 2020.[3]

On 24 May, newly promoted Premier League club Newcastle United activated the option-to-purchase clause in Christian Atsu's loan contract from the 2016–17 season, purchasing the player for a reported £6.2 million.[4][5]

On 30 May 2017, Asmir Begović signed for Premier League club AFC Bournemouth on a long-term contract after Bournemouth purchased the player for an undisclosed transfer fee rumoured to be close to £10 million.[6]

June

While on international duty with Belgium, Eden Hazard fractured his right ankle and was consequently ruled out of action for three months, meaning he will likely miss the start of the 2017–18 season.[7]

On 26 June, Burkina Faso international Bertrand Traoré joined French club Lyon for an initial £8.8 million transfer fee, plus potential add-ons.[8][9] Traoré subsequently signed a five-year contract with Lyon, with reports suggesting buy-back and sell-on clauses had been included in the contract.[10]

On 30 June, academy product and Netherlands international defender Nathan Aké signed for AFC Bournemouth, who broke their transfer record after paying a reported £20 million transfer fee. Aké spent the first half of the 2016–17 season on loan with Bournemouth before being recalled prematurely to Chelsea in January.[11][12]

July

After reaching an agreement with Rangers, youth player Billy Gilmour joined Chelsea on 1 July for a reported £500,000 transfer fee.[13] Daishawn Redan, a youth striker at Ajax, became the second high-profile youth signing of the season, and Ethan Ampadu of Exeter City also linked up with the academy upon the opening of the summer transfer window.[14]

On 1 July, Chelsea and Nike unveiled the club's new kits for the 2017–18 season, to be sold in the refurbished "megastore".[15] Also on 1 July, Chelsea announced the signing of Argentine goalkeeper Willy Caballero on a free transfer from Manchester City.[16]

On 3 July, after an illustrious career with the club spanning 22 years, former Chelsea captain John Terry signed for Championship club Aston Villa.[17] Also on 3 July, young English midfielder Kasey Palmer signed a new contract with Chelsea, keeping him at Stamford Bridge until the end of the 2021–22 season. Palmer also completed a season-long loan deal with newly promoted Premier League club Huddersfield Town, returning to the club after helping them to gain promotion the previous season.[18]

On 4 July, academy product Tammy Abraham signed a new five-year contract with Chelsea, keeping him at Stamford Bridge until the end of the 2021–22 season. On the same day, Abraham completed a season-long loan move to Premier League club Swansea City.[19]

On 9 July, Chelsea completed the signing of German international defender Antonio Rüdiger from Roma for a £29 million transfer fee. Upon joining the Blues, Rüdiger was assigned the number 2 shirt, formerly occupied by Branislav Ivanović.[20][21]

On 10 July, it was announced that newly signed goalkeeper Willy Caballero would be assigned the number 1 shirt for the forthcoming campaign. The number 1 shirt had previously been worn by Asmir Begović before his transfer to AFC Bournemouth. On the same day, it was revealed that academy product Charly Musonda's new shirt number would be number 17. The Premier League also granted Chelsea permission for his shirt name to be "Musonda Jr.".[22]

On 11 July, English international defender and academy product Ola Aina completed a season-long loan move to Championship club Hull City.[23]

On 12 July, English midfielder and academy product Ruben Loftus-Cheek completed a season-long loan move to Crystal Palace.[24]

On 13 July, English midfielder and academy product Nathaniel Chalobah completed a transfer to Premier League club Watford for an undisclosed transfer fee reported to be approximately £5.5 million. Buy-back and sell-on clauses were reported to have been included in the contract.[25][26]

On 14 July, Brazilian winger Lucas Piazon signed a two-year contract extension at Chelsea, simultaneously completing a season-long loan move to London neighbours Fulham, where he had previously been on loan in the 2016–17 season.[27] Also on 14 July, academy defender Jake Clarke-Salter signed a new four-year contract with Chelsea.[28]

On 15 July, Chelsea announced the signing of French international midfielder Tiémoué Bakayoko from Monaco for an initial transfer fee of £40 million. He was assigned the number 14 shirt at the club, with the previous occupant, Ruben Loftus-Cheek, having left Chelsea on loan for the season. [29][30]

On 18 July, first-team manager Antonio Conte was rewarded for his successful first season at Chelsea with a new two-year contract, serving to replace the previous contract and offer improved terms to the Italian. After signing, Conte said, "I am very happy to have signed a new contract with Chelsea. We worked extremely hard in our first year to achieve something amazing, which I am very proud of. Now we must work even harder to stay at the top. The Chelsea fans have given me so much support since I arrived here one year ago and it is important we continue to succeed together." Along with the new contract, two new members of Conte's backroom team were announced: Paolo Vanoli and Davide Mazzotta. Vanoli will serve as first-team assistant while Mazzotta will serve as both an assistant and a player analyst.[31]

On 19 July, Chelsea announced a transfer fee had been agreed to with Real Madrid for the transfer of striker Álvaro Morata, subject to Morata agreeing to personal terms and passing a medical with Chelsea. The Spanish international forward helped Real Madrid defend their UEFA Champions League title in 2016–17, scoring 20 goals in all competitions across the 2016–17 season. The initial transfer fee was reported to be around £58 million, which could increase to £70 million with add-ons, which would make him Chelsea's new record-high signing, surpassing the £50 million transfer fee paid for Fernando Torres in January 2011.[32][33] The signing was officially announced two days later on 21 July, with Morata signing a five-year contract with the Premier League champions. He joined the Chelsea squad on their pre-season tour in Asia.[34]

Also on 21 July, French international defender Kurt Zouma signed a new six-year contract with Chelsea, keeping him at Stamford Bridge until the end of the 2022–23 season. Simultaneously, Zouma completed a season-long loan move to Premier League club Stoke City.[35] Academy product Jay Dasilva also signed a new contract with Chelsea through to 2021, simultaneously completing a season-long loan move to Charlton Athletic, where he had previously been loaned to during the latter half of the 2016–17 season.[36]

On 27 July, goalkeeper Jamal Blackman signed a contract extension at Chelsea through to 2021, simultaneously completing a season-long loan move to Championship club Sheffield United.[37] Also on 27 July, Jamaican defender Michael Hector completed a season-long loan move to Hull City,[38] and Czech defender Tomáš Kalas signed a new four-year contact at Chelsea, simultaneously completing a season-long loan move to Fulham, where he had been on loan during the previous season.[39]

On 31 July, Serbian international midfielder Nemanja Matić signed for Manchester United, ending his three-and-a-half-year second spell with Chelsea.[40]

Chelsea take to the pitch at Stamford Bridge for the first home game of the 2017–18 season, August 2017

August

On 2 August, Mario Pašalić signed a four-year contract extension and joined Russian champions Spartak Moscow on a season-long loan.

On 6 August, Chelsea lost the Community Shield 4–1 on penalties to Arsenal after drawing 1–1 in normal time.[41]

On 11 August, young English midfielder Lewis Baker signed a new five-year contract with Chelsea, simultaneously completing a season-long loan move to Championship club Middlesbrough.[42]

On 12 August, Chelsea suffered a nightmare start to their Premier League title defence, losing 3–2 at home to Burnley, who had only won once away from home in the previous season. Chelsea's performance was marred by two of their players receiving red cards, the first being captain Gary Cahill in the early stages of the game, and the second being Cesc Fàbregas towards the closing stages of the match. The Blues fought back from 3–0 down with goals from debutant Álvaro Morata and David Luiz, but ultimately lost the match.[43] Such defeat was the second ever for a Premier League holder. The first was Leicester City's defeat against Hull City the previous season, which was an away match for Leicester.

On 20 August, Chelsea bounced back from their disappointing defeat with a 2–1 away victory over Tottenham Hotspur at their temporary home, Wembley Stadium. Marcos Alonso scored a double, his first goal being a free-kick and his second a strike late in the match, while Spurs scored through an own goal from Michy Batshuayi. The win for Chelsea condemned Tottenham to defeat in their first home match of the season and their first at Wembley in the Premier League.[44]

On 25 August, Nigerian defender Kenneth Omeruo signed a new three-year contract with Chelsea, simultaneously completing a season-long loan move to Turkish club Kasımpaşa, where he had previously been on loan at in the 2015–16 campaign.[45]

On 27 August, Chelsea won their first Premier League home match of the 2017–18 season after defeating Everton 2–0 in a dominant display that the Blues could have won by more goals. Fàbregas opened the scoring in the 27th minute, coolly clipping into the bottom corner and past goalkeeper Jordan Pickford with the help of Morata, who claimed his second assist of the season. Morata would later add to Chelsea's goal tally with a header in the 40th minute, scoring his second league goal of the season. The Blues had many opportunities throughout the match to extend their lead, but ultimately won comfortably in a convincing performance that lifted them to sixth in the table after three matches.[46]

On 28 August, young Ivorian attacker Jérémie Boga signed a new three-year contract with Chelsea, and also joined Championship club Birmingham City on a season-long loan.[47]

Club Honors. On 26 September 2014 local Chelsea Supporter Mark Carroll was awarded with the Golden football for his dedication to the club over the past ten years. Following this he was paraded through Fulham Broadway to show off his well earned prize. BBC spokesman James Shelby spoke to Mark. From speaking to Mark he is very pleased with his achievement quoting I love this club Well done Mark from all at Chelsea Football Club.

Deadline day (31 August)

Davide Zappacosta and Danny Drinkwater were Chelsea's arrivals on deadline day of the 2017 summer transfer window.

Chelsea signed two players on transfer deadline day: Italian right-back Davide Zappacosta from Torino, who joined for a reported £23 million transfer fee;[48] and Leicester City midfielder Danny Drinkwater, who arrived for an undisclosed fee and signed a five-year contract with the Blues.[49]

In spite of several signings arriving at the club, it was a turbulent deadline day for the Blues, in that several of their transfer targets were missed. The most notable of these was Chelsea's attempt to sign Everton midfielder Ross Barkley, agreeing a fee with Everton only for Barkley to reject the move.[50] (Barkley would later join Chelsea in the January transfer window.[51]) Another English transfer target, Arsenal midfielder Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, also rejected a move to Chelsea after a fee had been agreed between the two clubs, with Oxlade-Chamberlain instead choosing a move to Liverpool on deadline day.[52][53] The Blues had also reportedly been close to signing Swansea City striker Fernando Llorente at one point throughout deadline day, only to miss out on signing him to their rivals Tottenham.[54]

Position at the end of August
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
6 Chelsea 3 2 0 1 6 4 +2 6
Source:

September

On 1 September, Loïc Rémy left the club to sign for La Liga club Las Palmas on a two-year contract for a reported free transfer.[55]

On 9 September, Chelsea earned a 2–1 away victory at Leicester City, making it a third Premier League victory in a row. N'Golo Kanté scored the second goal for the Blues against his former club. Davide Zappacosta made his debut for Chelsea while Eden Hazard returned from injury, coming on as a substitute.[56]

On 12 September, Chelsea marked their return to the UEFA Champions League with a 6–0 thrashing of Azerbaijani champions Qarabağ, who made their first ever appearance in Europe's elite competition. Goals from Pedro, César Azpilicueta, Tiémoué Bakayoko, Michy Batshuayi, as well as a goal from Zappacosta on his first start for Chelsea and an own goal by Qarabağ player Maksim Medvedev, sent the Blues to the top of their group after the first round of fixtures.[57]

On 17 September, Chelsea hosted rivals Arsenal at Stamford Bridge, who managed to emerge with a point by drawing 0–0 with the Blues. It was a frustrating match for Chelsea, who created several opportunities to score but could not find a cutting edge against a well-drilled Arsenal side. The game was also marred by David Luiz receiving a red card in the second half for a high tackle on Sead Kolašinac, with the defender set to miss Chelsea's next three matches as a result. His red card amounts to Chelsea's third red card of the season. The result sees the Blues remaining in third place, three points behind joint leaders Manchester United and Manchester City.[58]

On 20 September, Chelsea hosted Nottingham Forest in the third round of the EFL Cup, defeating the Championship club 5–1 to advance to the next round. Amongst the goalscorers was Batshuayi, who completed a hat-trick with a goal in the first half and two further goals in the second half. Kenedy and Charly Musonda also got on the scoresheet and youngster Ethan Ampadu made his first senior Chelsea appearance as a second-half substitute.[59]

On 21 September, the long-protracted transfer saga surrounding exiled striker Diego Costa came to an end as Chelsea agreed a fee with Atlético Madrid for his transfer, to be completed in January after the expiry of the Spanish club's transfer ban.[60] He left Chelsea having scored 58 goals in 120 appearances for the Blues, including 20 in the Premier League last season as Chelsea won the title.[61]

On 23 September, Chelsea earned a fourth Premier League victory in five matches after thrashing Stoke City 4–0 away. Álvaro Morata opened the scoring for the Blues, with Pedro adding a second before half-time. Morata completed a hat-trick in the second half, Chelsea's first Premier League hat-trick since 2014, to keep the Blues in third position and within three points of the two Manchester clubs at the top of the table.[62]

On 27 September, Chelsea beat Atlético Madrid 2–1 away in a Champions League group stage match, making history in the process by becoming the first ever English club to defeat Atlético away from home in a European competition. Chelsea fell behind late in the first half after David Luiz conceded a penalty, which Antoine Griezmann converted. Morata leveled proceedings early in the second half with a header. The match looked to be finishing as a draw until Batshuayi snatched a winner for Chelsea at the death. The result sees the Blues go top of Group C, four points ahead of Atlético and Roma after two matches.[63]

On 30 September, three days after their Champions League heroics, Chelsea lost 1–0 at Stamford Bridge to league leaders Manchester City in a very poor performance that culminated in Chelsea only having two shots on target in the entire match. The defeat saw the gap between the two sides widen to six points, with Chelsea slipping into fourth.[64]

Position at the end of September
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
3 Chelsea 6 4 1 1 12 5 +7 13
Source:

October

Defenders Antonio Rüdiger and Gary Cahill survey the scene in the 3–3 draw with Roma.

On 14 October, in their first league match after the international break, Chelsea fell to a very poor 2–1 away defeat against bottom Premier League side Crystal Palace. The home side scored their first goals and earned their first points of the season after losing their opening seven fixtures without scoring. An own goal from César Azpilicueta opened the scoring early in the first half before Tiémoué Bakayoko leveled proceedings shortly after. Palace would go on to win the match with a goal from the returning Wilfried Zaha. Chelsea were without key players N'Golo Kanté and Álvaro Morata, with Kanté picking up a hamstring injury during the international break and Morata suffering the same injury against Manchester City. Chelsea lost back-to-back league fixtures for the first time in a year, when they lost to Liverpool and Arsenal.[65]

On 18 October, Chelsea drew 3–3 at home against Roma in the UEFA Champions League. Chelsea, having led 2–0 following goals from David Luiz and Eden Hazard, caved in to Roma's Edin Džeko and Aleksandar Kolarov, who between them scored three goals. With a late goal from Hazard to equalise for the home side, Chelsea dropped their first points in the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League group stage.[66]

Pre-match handshakes before the EFL Cup clash with Everton.

On 21 October, Chelsea enjoyed a 4–2 come-from-behind victory over Watford. Following a Pedro goal, Watford found themselves 2–1 up through goals from Abdoulaye Doucouré and Roberto Pereyra. However, Michy Batshuayi came off the bench to score a brace on either side of a César Azpilicueta winner. The win snapped a four-game winless streak in all competitions for Chelsea.[67]

On 25 October, Chelsea progressed past the round of 16 in the EFL Cup by defeating Everton 2–1 in the first match for Everton interim manager David Unsworth. Goals from Willian and Rüdiger rendered a late Dominic Calvert-Lewin goal a mere consolation.[68]

On 28 October, in the Premier League, Chelsea narrowly defeated AFC Bournemouth 1–0 away from home. A goal from Eden Hazard sealed the points in a tight encounter.[69]

On 31 October, in their final October fixture, Chelsea fell to a poor 3–0 away defeat to Roma in the Champions League and became the first English team to lose a Champions League fixture in 2017–18 as a result. The Blues fell behind after 39 seconds from a goal by Stephan El Shaarawy, and they never looked like recovering after he scored a second in the 36th minute. Chelsea had more shots throughout the match, but a third Roma goal scored by Diego Perotti in the second half sealed the contest. Results elsewhere kept Chelsea in the top two of their group, with Atlético Madrid drawing with Qarabağ.[70]

Position at the end of October
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
4 Chelsea 10 6 1 3 18 10 +8 19
Source:

November

On 5 November, Chelsea got the month off to a good start as they defeated long-time competitive rivals Manchester United 1–0 at Stamford Bridge, courtesy of a header from Álvaro Morata, scoring his first goal for the club since September. It was former Blues manager José Mourinho's third-straight loss at Stamford Bridge since he became United manager. The victory lifted Chelsea into fourth place and within one point of Manchester United in second.[71]

On 18 November, in Chelsea's first match after the international break, they dispatched West Bromwich Albion 4–0 away from home in the Premier League in a commanding performance that saw opposite number Tony Pulis sacked just days after the match. Álvaro Morata put Chelsea in front on 17 minutes, his eighth league goal of the season, while an Eden Hazard double either side of half-time and a first half goal from Marcos Alonso sealed a comfortable win for Chelsea. The victory was Chelsea's fourth successive league win, while West Brom remained without a win in all competitions since 22 August, a run of 11 matches. Chelsea moved up to third, one point behind Manchester United.[72]

On 22 November, Chelsea sealed their progression to the knockout stage of the Champions League after defeating Qarabağ 4–0 away in a 5,000-mile trip to Azerbaijan. Two goals from Willian, as well as spot-kicks from Eden Hazard and Cesc Fàbregas, confirmed the Blues will finish in the top two of Group C with a match to spare.[73]

On 25 November, just three days after travelling to Azerbaijan, Chelsea earned a 1–1 league draw at Anfield against Liverpool. Former Chelsea player Mohamed Salah opened the scoring for Liverpool with a close-range finish just after the hour mark, while Willian, continuing his good run of form, struck in the 85th minute through what appeared to be a cross looping over goalkeeper Simon Mignolet and into the far corner. The result was a repeat scoreline of last season's 1–1 draw at Anfield, ensuring Chelsea remained unbeaten in their past seven visits to Anfield, a run stretching back to 2013. However, the draw left Chelsea three points behind Manchester United in second and eight points behind league leaders Manchester City.[74]

On 27 November, former Chelsea academy manager Dermot Drummy died aged 56. Drummy won the 2010 FA Youth Cup whilst working at the club and later served as reserve team manager before taking the role of international head coach in June 2014. Former Chelsea youth players that had been coached under him paid tribute to Drummy, including Nathan Aké, Nathaniel Chalobah, Patrick Bamford and Ruben Loftus-Cheek.[75][76]

On 29 November, Chelsea capped off the month of November with a hard-fought 1–0 league victory against struggling Swansea City. Chelsea dominated the game but had to wait until the 55th minute for the breakthrough, with defender Antonio Rüdiger heading in his first Premier League goal after N'Golo Kanté's shot was deflected into his path. The match was marred by an incident involving manager Antonio Conte and match official Neil Swarbrick, with the Italian spending the whole of the second half watching from a television feed in the dressing room after disputing Swarbrick's decision not to award a corner when the match was goalless. Conte later apologised for his conduct, saying, "I was frustrated. For sure I made a mistake. During the game I suffer. With my players I suffer. It's a pity." Chelsea remained third in the table, three points behind Manchester United in second and 11 points behind runaway leaders Manchester City.[77]

Position at the end of November
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
3 Chelsea 14 9 2 3 25 11 +14 29
Source:

December

Inside the London Stadium during the London derby defeat with West Ham United.

On 2 December, Chelsea defeated newly-promoted Newcastle United 3–1 at Stamford Bridge. Dwight Gayle put the visitors in front after 12 minutes, but Newcastle's lead was short lived as Eden Hazard and Álvaro Morata struck in the first half to send the Blues 2–1 up at the break. Hazard scored his second goal of the game in the second half, a chipped penalty after Matt Ritchie fouled Victor Moses in the area. The result kept Chelsea in touch with the two Manchester clubs after they had both won in the same gameweek, with the Blues remaining third, but now three points ahead of Liverpool in fourth.[78]

On 5 December, Chelsea drew 1–1 against Atlético Madrid on the final matchday of the Champions League. Saúl's header opened the scoring in the 56th minute before a Stefan Savić own goal leveled the scoreline. The result saw Roma surpass Chelsea for the top spot of Group C via the head-to-head tiebreaker. The draw also caused Atlético to fail to progress to the knockout stages of the Champions League for the first time since they failed to qualify outright, in 2012–13.[79]

On 9 December, Chelsea's unbeaten league run since October came to an end after they lost 1–0 to West Ham United at the London Stadium. Marko Arnautović scored for West Ham early in the first half, and Chelsea struggled to get a foothold in the game as they gifted David Moyes his first league win in charge of West Ham. Following the match, Antonio Conte admitted defeat in Chelsea's attempt to retain their Premier League crown, saying, "When you tell the truth, this is the truth. Now we have 11 points less than Manchester City [who had a game in hand]. In 16 games they won 15 and drew one. In 17 games we lost four. When you have a competitor like City and every game they are winning, it is very difficult to think you can fight for the title."[80][81]

On 12 December, Chelsea returned to winning ways in the Premier League in a dominant 3–1 away win against newly-promoted Huddersfield Town. Goals from Tiémoué Bakayoko, Willian and Pedro rendered a late Laurent Depoitre strike mere consolation.[81]

On 16 December, Chelsea defeated Southampton 1–0 at Stamford Bridge, courtesy of a Marcos Alonso free-kick, somewhat controversially occurring 30 seconds past the two allotted minutes of added time in the first half. In an otherwise extremely tight affair, Charlie Austin had the best chance for the away side with his first touch of the ball after he came on as a substitute. However, one goal proved to be enough for the Blues to secure all three points.[82]

On 20 December, Chelsea defeated AFC Bournemouth 2–1 in the EFL Cup quarter-finals. Conte rotated the team heavily, making eight changes from the side that beat Huddersfield. Ethan Ampadu was named man of the match after an admirable performance at centre-back, despite an early tackle that injured Bournemouth striker Jermain Defoe. Chelsea took the lead through Willian, with Cesc Fàbregas and Kenedy heavily involved in the build-up. Chelsea dominated the majority of the first half, but Bournemouth were reinvigorated following the half-time break. Their efforts finally paid off in the 90th minute when Dan Gosling curled in from outside of the 18-yard box. The match looked certain to go into extra time but following the kick-off, substitute Álvaro Morata almost immediately scored the winner. Following the match, Chelsea were drawn against Arsenal in the semi-finals. In the other match, high-flying Manchester City were drawn against Bristol City, who shockingly defeated their next opponent's city rivals, Manchester United.[83][84]

On 23 December, Chelsea visited Goodison Park and drew 0–0 against Everton. With striker Álvaro Morata suspended due to yellow card accumulation, Chelsea played Eden Hazard as a false nine. However, Chelsea lacked many scoring opportunities and ultimately were made to pay as Everton won a point in their final home match of the year.[85]

On 26 December, Chelsea took on Brighton & Hove Albion at Stamford Bridge. Following a quiet first half in which the only clear-cut chance came from Tiémoué Bakayoko, Chelsea scored 53 seconds after the break, courtesy of an Álvaro Morata goal, assisted by César Azpilicueta. It was the sixth time that the Spaniards linked up during the season to score. Later on, Marcos Alonso headed in from a corner as the Blues comfortably won 2–0 to extend their unbeaten run on Boxing Day to 14 matches.[86]

On 30 December, Chelsea played their final match of 2017 against Stoke City, winning with ease 5–0. Due to fixture congestion in the festive period, Chelsea rotated their lineup slightly, resting Eden Hazard and Cesc Fàbregas. However, Stoke City started a completely rotated lineup, with manager and former Chelsea player Mark Hughes prioritizing the upcoming Newcastle game. After two goals in the opening ten minutes from Antonio Rüdiger and Danny Drinkwater, Chelsea looked set to dominate the match, and did so, scoring three more goals through Pedro, Willian and Davide Zappacosta. Chelsea ended the calendar year in second place, one point ahead of Manchester United and 14 points behind runaway leaders Manchester City.

Position at the end of December
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
2 Chelsea 21 14 3 4 39 14 +25 45
Source:

January

Ross Barkley is presented to Chelsea fans at Stamford Bridge following his move from Everton.

On 1 January 2018, Diego Costa officially departed the club and signed for Atlético Madrid.[87]

On 3 January, Chelsea took on Arsenal in a thrilling encounter which ended 2–2 away at the Emirates Stadium. Jack Wilshere opened the scoring after the break, following an end-to-end first half, headlined by a clear-cut chance missed by Álvaro Morata in the 15th minute. However, following the opener, Chelsea scored twice, once courtesy of an Eden Hazard penalty, and again in the 84th minute, when Marcos Alonso scored what looked to be the winner. However, in the 92nd minute, Héctor Bellerín scored a late equaliser into the bottom left corner of the goal, earning both teams one point. In the last minute of stoppage time, Morata missed another clear-cut chance, and substitute Davide Zappacosta lashed the rebound goalwards, only to see it bounce back off of the crossbar with virtually the last kick of the match. Following the match, Morata was heavily criticised due to his poor performance.[88]

On 5 January 2018, Chelsea signed 24-year-old Englishman Ross Barkley from Everton for a reported £15 million. He was assigned the number 8 shirt, previously occupied by Oscar and Frank Lampard. Barkley did not make any appearances for Everton in the 2017–18 season, so he was eligible to play in all of Chelsea's competitions. Following signing, Barkley said, "To be given a fresh start at a new club like Chelsea, it's unbelievable for me. I'm looking forward to continuing where I left off at the end of last season and hoping to improve and add more goals to my game."[89]

On 30 January 2018, Chelsea announced the signing of 23-year-old Brazilian–Italian Emerson from Roma for a reported £17 million; he was assigned the number 33 shirt.

On 31 January 2018, Chelsea announced the signing of Olivier Giroud from Arsenal for £18 million; he will wear the number 18 shirt.[90]

Position at the end of January
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
4 Chelsea 25 15 5 5 45 19 +26 50
Source:

February

On 5 February, Chelsea defeated by Watford 4–1 at Vicarage Road. Troy Deeney opened the scoring line with a goal from penalty after being fouled by Bakayoko; Bakayoko received a second yellow card after 30 minutes play. The Blues played an hour with ten men after Bakayoko's red card capped a dreadful individual 30-minute performance in which he gifted Watford four chances. The Hornets, who had won only one of their previous 12 Premier League matches, led controversially as Gerard Deulofeu went down easily under keeper Thibaut Courtois challenge and Deeney open scored through the penalty. Chelsea, who brought on Olivier Giroud for a debut in the second half, scored an undeserved equaliser when Eden Hazard curled home brilliantly from 25 yards. However, two minutes later, Daryl Janmaat scored a fantastic goal of his own when he cut in from the right wing, played a one-two with Roberto Pereyra and beat another couple of defenders before scoring with his weaker left foot. Deulofeu added another when he ran from halfway before his shot was deflected home by Gary Cahill and Pereyra scored a fourth from Abdoulaye Doucouré's through-ball. Deulofeu got a Man of The Match in this campaign.[91]

On 12 February, Chelsea bounced back from their disappointing defeat with a 4–1 home victory over West Bromwich Albion Hazard exchanged passes with Olivier Giroud before giving Chelsea a first-half lead and, after Victor Moses slid home a second after the break, sealed victory with a powerful drive in the 71st minute. The win took the Blues one point ahead of fifth-placed Tottenham.[92] Hazard received the Man of the Match award in this match, with his two goals against West Brom.

On 20 February, Chelsea drew Barcelona 1–1 at Stamford Bridge in the first leg of the UEFA Champions League Round of 16. The Blues had subdued Messi and Willian struck the woodwork twice in the first half before a fine low finish from the edge of the area made it third time lucky for the Brazilian to give Chelsea a deserved lead after 62 minutes. Barcelona had barely threatened but a misplaced pass from Andreas Christensen gave Andrés Iniesta the opportunity to allow Messi to end his 730-minute drought against Chelsea with a crisp left-foot drive 15 minutes from time.[93]

On 22 February, Mitchell Beeney was loaned out to Ireland top division club Sligo Rovers until 30 June 2018.[94]

On 25 February, Chelsea lost 2–1 away at Old Trafford in the Premier League against Manchester United. The Red Devils came from behind after Willian started and finished a flowing move to give Chelsea the lead in the first half. United pulled level before the break with striker Romelu Lukaku getting in front of Marcos Alonso to score against his former club for the first time. Lukaku then set-up Jesse Lingard to head home with 15 minutes left, after which Chelsea's Álvaro Morata had a goal incorrectly disallowed for offside. The defeat left the Blues in fifth place after Tottenham defeated Crystal Palace 1–0 earlier that day. A run of just one win in their past four league matches, coupled with Spurs' ten-game unbeaten streak, bumped Chelsea out of the Champions League places with ten matches to play.[95]

Position at the end of February
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
5 Chelsea 28 16 5 7 50 25 +25 53
Source:

March

On 4 March, Chelsea again lost in the Premier League, falling 1–0 to Manchester City away at the Etihad. The Blues failed to recorded a shot on target in the match as Bernardo Silva's goal less than one minute into the second half sealed the match and pushed City 18 points clear at the top of the league table and closer to the title. Chelsea did not register a single shot on target, leaving Manchester City keeper Ederson a virtual bystander, as he was even able to watch Alonso's timid shot drift wide with seconds left. After the loss, Chelsea fell five points adrift of Tottenham for fourth place in the league table.[96]

On 10 March, Chelsea bounced back with a 2–1 home victory over Crystal Palace. Willian opened the scoring for the hosts — aided by a deflection off Palace defender Martin Kelly — with a shot that crept inside the left-hand post. Chelsea spurned several excellent openings before doubling their advantage, again thanks to significant chunk of good fortune. Kelly was again involved, with the former Liverpool player initially doing well to clear Davide Zappacosta's drive off his own goal line only for the ball to ricochet off Eagles goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey and strike Kelly before entering the net. Eden Hazard had a goal disallowed for offside and Chelsea's profligacy threatened to give Roy Hodgson's team a route back into the match. Patrick van Aanholt's late goal briefly raised their hopes, but Conte's side held on with Palace remaining in the bottom three. After defeats to both Manchester clubs had weakened their grip on a Champions League place, this represented a welcome three points for Chelsea, who dominated proceedings from start to finish.[97]

In the away leg of the UEFA Champions League following a 1–1 draw at home against Barcelona, Chelsea fell behind after just 128 seconds after Lionel Messi shot through the legs of Thibaut Courtois from a tight angle. Messi then set-up Ousmane Dembele to hammer home the second after Cesc Fàbregas lost possession. Marcos Alonso hit the post for Chelsea with a free-kick before Messi's 100th Champions League goal — following a mistake by César Azpilicueta — took the hosts out of sight. Alonso was then denied a penalty after a challenge by Gerard Piqué as Barça joined La Liga rivals Real Madrid and Sevilla in the competition's quarter-final draw.[98]

On 15 March, Chelsea announced that they had reached settlement in last right of light issue holding up stadium development.[99]

After Chelsea's elimination from the Champions League, the club defeated Leicester City 1–2 away at the King Power Stadium in the FA Cup. Just before half-time, Álvaro Morata took Willian's pass in his stride to beat Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel. Jamie Vardy made amends for a poor headed miss when he pounced in a goalmouth scramble for a 76th-minute equaliser for the Foxes. The decisive moment came just before the interval in extra time when Chelsea substitute Pedro beat the onrushing Schmeichel to N'Golo Kante's cross and headed in the winner. With the victory, Chelsea qualified for the competition's semi-finals.[100] Chelsea play this match after they're knocked from Champions League against Barcelona 3-0 in Round of 16. Barcelona won 4–1 on Aggregate.

Position at the end of March
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
5 Chelsea 30 17 5 8 52 27 +25 56
Source:

April

On 1 April, Chelsea lost at home against London rivals Tottenham. Álvaro Morata headed-in a Victor Moses cross to give the hosts the lead. However, Christian Eriksen hit a stunning equaliser on the stroke of half-time, his dipping effort from 25 yards dropping just under the bar and over a stranded Willy Caballero. Dele Alli then took centre stage in the second half, putting Tottenham ahead just after the hour mark when he produced a sublime first touch to bring Eric Dier's ball under control before slotting beyond Caballero. Alli was well-placed four minutes later to stab in following a goalmouth scramble and wrap-up a win that moved fourth-placed Spurs eight points clear of Chelsea, who remained in the fifth position.[101]

On 8 April, Chelsea faced West Ham at Stamford Bridge. Javier Hernández's second-half equaliser boosted West Ham's Premier League survival prospects and damaged Chelsea's slim hopes of finishing in the top-four on an emotional day at Stamford Bridge, as the previous Wednesday, former Chelsea midfielder and assistant coach Ray Wilkins passed away at age 61. Prior to kick-off, there was a minute's applause for Wilkins, with the Chelsea players also donning black armbands in his memory. In the match, César Azpilicueta had prodded the hosts ahead following Álvaro Morata's knock-down, with Azpilicueta dedicating his goal to Wilkins. However, just three minutes after entering the match as a substitute, Hernández struck his ninth career goal against the Blues to earn a point for the Hammers. The Mexican's effort, driven into the corner after Marko Arnautović's fine cut-back, moved David Moyes' club six points clear of the relegation places. It was only West Ham's third touch inside the Chelsea's penalty area. In contrast, Antonio Conte's men — who were in fifth position but ten points behind Tottenham and Liverpool — had 23 shots on goal and were good value for their lead for long periods, including having two would-be goals from Álvaro Morata called-back for offside and several quality chances turned aside by goalkeeper Joe Hart. The win for Moyes as a manager ended a personal 15-match winless run at Stamford Bridge.[102]

On 14 April, Chelsea returning to the winning track with a thrilling 3–2 late comeback victory against Southampton at St. Mary's Stadium. Dušan Tadić's opener — a placed effort following Ryan Bertrand's marauding run — and Polish defender Jan Bednarek's left-footed shot looked to lift the Saints out of the bottom three with manager Mark Hughes seemingly on course for a first league victory as Southampton manager since arriving on 14 March. However, after coming on a substitute, Olivier Giroud scored his first Premier League goal for Chelsea, a 70th-minute header. Just five minutes later, Eden Hazard scored a left-footed finish, followed by a second goal from Giroud coming in the 78th minute, the eventual match-winner. The victory saw Chelsea move within seven points of fourth-placed Tottenham.[103]

On 19 April, Chelsea defeated Burnley 2–1 away at Turf Moor. Kevin Long's own goal sent Conte's men on their way in the first half. However, Ashley Barnes deflected Jóhann Berg Guðmundsson's wayward shot to equalise for Burnley. Victor Moses' right-footed shot into the bottom corner proved decisive and ensured the Blues, who trailed fourth-placed Tottenham by ten points the previous week, narrowed the gap to five points. Sean Dyche's Burnley remain seventh and on course for 2018–19 UEFA Europa League qualification with an eight-point advantage over Leicester City, sitting in eighth.[104]

On 21 April, Chelsea reached the FA Cup Final after defeating Southampton 2–0 at Wembley Stadium. Chelsea striker Olivier Giroud received the ball from Eden Hazard and jinked his way past two Southampton players in a crowded area before he stabbed the ball home. With ten minutes to play, Giroud was replaced by Álvaro Morata, who ensured progression with Chelsea's second goal after he headed-in at the back post from a César Azpilicueta cross. Southampton went close with Nathan Redmond's low drive from distance, while Charlie Austin hit the post. The victory meant Chelsea manager Antonio Conte would match-up against managerial adversary José Mourinho at Wembley on 19 May against Manchester United.[105]

On 28 April, Chelsea take against Swansea at Liberty Stadium, Chelsea returned to playing in the league after playing in the FA Cup last week. Fabregas' curling finish was a fitting way to bring up his half-century of goals in the Premier League, but it was Hazard's clinical exploitation of a Swansea error that made it, pouncing on Andy King's sloppy loss of possession, weaving his way forward and picking out the right pass. Antonio Rudiger may well have given Hazard his second assist soon after, only for the defender to spurn the chance at the far post following a corner. Hazard was at the heart of Chelsea's best threatening moves and made the most of some naive defending as Swansea afforded him plenty of space for surging runs on the counter. Chelsea - who had skimmed the top of the bar after Alfie Mawson cleared an Olivier Giroud header - did not see goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois really tested until the final 15 minutes, when Andre Ayew fizzed in a shot. Kyle Naughton, Tom Carroll and Wayne Routledge also went close. Swansea claimed for a penalty when Gary Cahill challenged Nathan Dyer, with the Chelsea defender also involved in a clash with Jordan Ayew in injury time after a late barge from the Ghanaian.[106]

Position at the end of April
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
5 Chelsea 35 20 6 9 60 34 +26 66
Source:

May

On 6 May on Gameweek 37, Chelsea beat Liverpool at the Bridge 1-0 with a header from Giroud in the 32nd minute after receiving an assist from Moses. Giroud expertly headed in Moses' cross in the first half after the visitors had dominated possession and failed to capitalize. Chelsea remain in fifth but move within three points of third-placed Liverpool. With two games remaining to Liverpool's one, Chelsea can move level on points with the Champions League finalists when they face Huddersfield on Wednesday. Liverpool had more than 66% possession in the first half and created plenty of chances - the best falling to Mane, who was denied twice by Thibaut Courtois - but it was Chelsea who came closest. Bakayoko's header bounced inches wide just moments before Giroud leapt high to nod home Moses' cross. And Fabregas' smart run in behind the defence created an opening which he could not convert from a tight angle. Chelsea had the best chances of the second half too. Hazard almost danced his way through before Rudiger's header was ruled out for offside and Alonso's volley flew inches wide.[107]

On 13 May, at the last Gameweek, Chelsea claimed a 3–0 defeat at St James' Park. The Blues had a chance of sneaking into the top four by beating the Magpies, but Liverpool's victory over Brighton means they finish fifth and must settle for a Europa League spot. A barrage at goal from the hosts forced visiting goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois to make sharp saves from the impressive Jonjo Shelvey and Mohamed Diamé. But Ayoze Pérez poked home twice in the second period as his side finished the season in 10th position. Chelsea's best chance fell to striker Olivier Giroud, but the Frenchman's acrobatic effort was tipped away by goalkeeper Martin Dubravka.[108] Shelvey gets an MOTM in this match.

On 19 May, on the FA Cup Final, Chelsea lifted the FA Cup trophy after beat Manchester United 1–0 at Wembley with a single-goal by Eden Hazard's from penalty at 22 minutes after Phil Jones fouls. Chelsea have won their 8th of FA Cup Trophy and first since 2012.

Position at the end of May
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
5 Chelsea 37 21 6 10 61 37 +24 69
Source:

Coaching staff

Position Staff
First-team Manager Antonio Conte
Assistant Managers Angelo Alessio
Gianluca Conte
Carlo Cudicini
Paolo Vanoli
Goalkeeper Coach Gianluca Spinelli
Assistant Goalkeeper Coach Henrique Hilário
Head Fitness Coaches Paolo Bertelli
Chris Jones
Julio Tous
Assistant Fitness Coach Constantino Coratti
Consultant Personal Trainer/Nutritionist Tiberio Ancora
Video Analyst Davide Mazzotta
Senior Opposition Scout Mick McGiven
Medical Director Paco Biosca
Head of Youth Development Neil Bath
Loan Technical Coach Eddie Newton
Under-23 Team Manager Joe Edwards
Under-18 Team Manager Jody Morris
Head of International Scouting Scott McLachlan

Source: Chelsea F.C.

Other information

Stamford Bridge
Owner Roman Abramovich
Chairman Bruce Buck
Directors Marina Granovskaia
Eugene Tenenbaum
Chief Executive Guy Laurence
Club Secretary David Barnard
Ground (capacity and dimensions) Stamford Bridge (41,663 / 103x67 metres)
Training Ground Cobham Training Centre

Source: Chelsea F.C.

Squad information

First team squad

As of 19 May 2018.[109][110]
    No. Name Nat Position Since Date of birth (Age) Signed from Games Goals
    Goalkeepers
    1 Willy Caballero GK 2017 (1981-09-28)28 September 1981 (aged 36) Manchester City 13 0
    13 Thibaut Courtois GK 2011 (1992-05-11)11 May 1992 (aged 26) Genk 154 0
    37 Eduardo GK 2016 (1982-09-19)19 September 1982 (aged 35) Dinamo Zagreb 0 0
    Defenders
    2 Antonio Rüdiger CB / RB 2017 (1993-03-03)3 March 1993 (aged 25) Roma 45 3
    3 Marcos Alonso LWB / LB 2016 (1990-12-28)28 December 1990 (aged 27) Fiorentina 81 14
    15 Victor Moses HG1 RWB / RW 2012 (1990-12-12)12 December 1990 (aged 27) Wigan Athletic 122 18
    21 Davide Zappacosta RB / RWB / LB 2017 (1992-06-11)11 June 1992 (aged 25) Torino 35 2
    24 Gary Cahill HG1 (C) CB 2012 (1985-12-19)19 December 1985 (aged 32) Bolton Wanderers 282 25
    27 Andreas Christensen U21 HG2 CB / RB 2012 (1996-04-10)10 April 1996 (aged 22) Academy 43 0
    28 César Azpilicueta (VC) CB / RB / LB 2012 (1989-08-28)28 August 1989 (aged 28) Marseille 280 8
    30 David Luiz CB / CDM 2016 (1987-04-22)22 April 1987 (aged 31) Paris Saint-Germain 197 15
    33 Emerson LWB / LB 2018 (1994-08-03)3 August 1994 (aged 23) Roma 7 0
    50 Trevoh Chalobah U21 HG2 CB / RB / LB 2018 (1999-07-05)5 July 1999 (aged 18) Academy 0 0
    66 Dujon Sterling U21 HG2 RWB / RW 2017 (1999-10-24)24 October 1999 (aged 18) Academy 2 0
    Midfielders
    4 Cesc Fàbregas HG1 CM 2014 (1987-05-04)4 May 1987 (aged 31) Barcelona 182 21
    6 Danny Drinkwater HG1 CM 2017 (1990-03-05)5 March 1990 (aged 28) Leicester City 22 1
    7 N'Golo Kanté CM / CDM / RM 2016 (1991-03-29)29 March 1991 (aged 27) Leicester City 89 3
    8 Ross Barkley HG1 AM / CM 2018 (1993-12-05)5 December 1993 (aged 24) Everton 4 0
    10 Eden Hazard LW / RW 2012 (1991-01-07)7 January 1991 (aged 27) Lille 300 89
    11 Pedro RW / LW 2015 (1987-07-28)28 July 1987 (aged 30) Barcelona 131 28
    14 Tiémoué Bakayoko CM / CDM 2017 (1994-08-17)17 August 1994 (aged 23) Monaco 43 3
    22 Willian RW / LW 2013 (1988-08-09)9 August 1988 (aged 29) Anzhi Makhachkala 236 44
    36 Kyle Scott U21 HG2 CM 2017 (1997-12-22)22 December 1997 (aged 20) Academy 1 0
    44 Ethan Ampadu U21 HG1 CM / CB / CDM 2017 (2000-09-14)14 September 2000 (aged 17) Exeter City 7 0
    70 Callum Hudson-Odoi U21 HG2 AM 2017 (2000-11-07)7 November 2000 (aged 17) Academy 4 0
    Forwards
    9 Álvaro Morata ST 2017 (1992-10-23)23 October 1992 (aged 25) Real Madrid 48 15
    18 Olivier Giroud ST 2018 (1986-09-30)30 September 1986 (aged 31) Arsenal 18 5
    • HG1 = Association-trained player
    • HG2 = Club-trained player
    • U21 = Under-21 player

    New contracts

    No. Pos Player Contract length Contract end Date Source
    AM Kasey Palmer 4 years 2021 3 July 2017 [111]
    CF Tammy Abraham 5 years 2022 4 July 2017 [112]
    CM Josimar Quintero 2 years 2019 5 July 2017 [113]
    43 LM Isaac Christie-Davies 1 year 2018 6 July 2017 [113]
    52 LB Cole Dasilva 1 year 2018 6 July 2017 [113]
    47 CB Ali Suljic 1 year 2018 6 July 2017 [113]
    35 CB Jake Clarke-Salter 4 years 2021 14 July 2017 [114]
    AM Lucas Piazon 2 years 2019 14 July 2017 [115]
    CM Marco van Ginkel 3 years 2020 16 July 2017 [116]
    CF Ike Ugbo 4 years 2021 17 July 2017 [117]
    LB Jay Dasilva 4 years 2021 21 July 2017 [118]
    5 CB Kurt Zouma 6 years 2023 21 July 2017 [119]
    CM Mason Mount 4 years 2021 24 July 2017 [120]
    CF Izzy Brown 4 years 2021 25 July 2017 [121]
    32 CB Tomáš Kalas 4 years 2021 27 July 2017 [122]
    GK Jamal Blackman 4 years 2021 27 July 2017 [123]
    39 CM Mario Pašalić 4 years 2021 2 August 2017 [124]
    54 CM Jacob Maddox 4 years 2021 6 August 2017 [125]
    34 CM Lewis Baker 5 years 2022 11 August 2017 [126]
    49 RB Charlie Wakefield 2 years 2019 15 August 2017 [127]
    CB Kenneth Omeruo 3 years 2020 25 August 2017 [128]
    38 LW Jérémie Boga 3 years 2020 28 August 2017 [129]
    65 CM George McEachran 2 years 2019 31 August 2017 [130]
    63 CB Marc Guehi 3 years 2020 14 September 2017 [131]
    44 CB Ethan Ampadu 3 years 2020 18 September 2017 [132]
    RB Tariq Lamptey 3 years 2020 30 September 2017 [133]
    CM Jon Russell 3 years 2020 9 October 2017 [134]
    GK Jared Thompson 2 years 2019 19 October 2017 [135]
    CB Jack Wakely 3 years 2020 25 October 2017 [136]
    70 CF Callum Hudson-Odoi 2 years 2019 17 November 2017 [137]
    66 RB Dujon Sterling 5 years 2022 20 November 2017 [138]
    17 LW Charly Musonda 5 years 2022 8 December 2017 [139]
    GK Nathan Baxter 3 years 2020 5 January 2018 [140]
    27 CB Andreas Christensen 5 years 2022 9 January 2018 [141]
    50 CB Trevoh Chalobah 4 years 2021 9 March 2018 [142]
    53 CB Josh Grant 1 year 2019 10 May 2018 [143]
    56 CB Richard Nartey 1 year 2019 10 May 2018 [143]

    Transfers

    Summer

    First Team

    No. Pos Player Transferred From Fee Date Source
    1 GK Willy Caballero Manchester City Free 1 July 2017 [144]
    2 CB Antonio Rüdiger Roma £29,000,000[lower-alpha 1] 9 July 2017 [145]
    14 CM Tiémoué Bakayoko Monaco £40,000,000 15 July 2017 [146]
    9 ST Álvaro Morata Real Madrid £58,000,000[lower-alpha 2] 21 July 2017 [147]
    21 RB Davide Zappacosta Torino £23,000,000 31 August 2017 [48]
    6 CM Danny Drinkwater Leicester City £35,000,000 31 August 2017 [148]

    Development and Academy

    No. Pos Player Transferred From Fee Date Source
    GK Karlo Žiger NK Zagreb Undisclosed 1 July 2017 [149]
    72 GK Nicolas Tié Poitiers Undisclosed 1 July 2017 [150]
    71 AM Billy Gilmour Rangers £500,000 1 July 2017 [151][13]
    73 CF Daishawn Redan Ajax Free 1 July 2017 [152]
    44 CB Ethan Ampadu Exeter City Undisclosed 1 July 2017 [153]
    LW Adebambo Akinjogbin Abbey Rangers Free 17 August 2017 [154]
    LB Renedi Masampu Metropolitan Police Free 17 August 2017 [154]
    LW Tushaun Walters Abbey Rangers Free 17 August 2017 [154]
    48 LW Kylian Hazard Újpest Undisclosed 29 August 2017 [155]

    Winter

    First Team

    No. Pos Player Transferred From Fee Date Source
    8 AM Ross Barkley Everton £15,000,000 5 January 2018 [156][89]
    33 LB Emerson Roma £17,500,000 30 January 2018 [157]
    18 ST Olivier Giroud Arsenal £18,000,000 31 January 2018 [158]

    Summer

    No. Pos Player Transferred To Fee Date Source
    1 GK Asmir Begović Bournemouth £10,000,000 1 July 2017 [159]
    41 CF Dominic Solanke Liverpool Tribunal 1 July 2017 [160]
    RW Juan Cuadrado Juventus £17,300,000[lower-alpha 3] 1 July 2017 [161]
    RW Christian Atsu Newcastle United £6,200,000 1 July 2017 [162]
    RW Alex Kiwomya Doncaster Rovers Free 1 July 2017 [163]
    RW Bertrand Traoré Lyon £8,800,000 1 July 2017 [8]
    6 LB Nathan Aké Bournemouth £20,000,000 1 July 2017 [164]
    LB Cristián Cuevas Huachipato Undisclosed 1 July 2017 [165]
    26 CB John Terry Aston Villa Free 3 July 2017 [166][167]
    29 CM Nathaniel Chalobah Watford £5,000,000[lower-alpha 4] 13 July 2017 [168]
    DM Mukhtar Ali Vitesse £500,000 17 July 2017 [169]
    21 CM Nemanja Matić Manchester United £40,000,000[lower-alpha 5] 31 July 2017 [170]
    CM Tika Musonda Llagostera Free 22 August 2017 [171]
    CB Kyle Jameson West Bromwich Albion Undisclosed 31 August 2017 [172]
    CF Malakai Hinckson-Mars Barnet Undisclosed 31 August 2017 [172]
    18 CF Loïc Rémy Las Palmas Free 1 September 2017 [173]
    CB Alex Davey Cheltenham Town Free 21 September 2017 [174][175]
    1. £4,300,000 in bonuses
    2. £12,000,000 in possible add-ons
    3. £4,000,000 in variables
    4. £2,000,000 in bonuses
    5. £5,000,000 in possible add-ons

    Winter

    No. Pos Player Transferred To Fee Date Source
    19 CF Diego Costa Atlético Madrid £50,000,000[lower-alpha 1] 1 January 2018 [176][177][178][179]
    CF Adebambo Akinjogbin Unattached[lower-alpha 2] Free 1 January 2018 [180]
    47 CB Ali Suljic Unattached[lower-alpha 3] Free 31 January 2018 [182]
    45 LM Miro Muheim St. Gallen Free 31 January 2018 [182]
    1. £8,000,000 in add-ons
    2. Akinjogbin joined Wingate & Finchley on 18 April 2018.
    3. Suljic joined BK Häcken on 2 July 2018.[181]

    Summer

    No. Pos Player Loaned To Start End Source
    CM Danilo Pantić Partizan 1 July 2017 30 June 2018 [183]
    GK Nathan Baxter Woking 1 July 2017 30 June 2018 [184]
    RB Fankaty Dabo Vitesse 1 July 2017 30 June 2018 [185]
    CF Tammy Abraham Swansea City 4 July 2017 30 June 2018 [112]
    AM Kasey Palmer Huddersfield Town 4 July 2017 3 January 2018 [lower-alpha 1] [111]
    RB Todd Kane Groningen 5 July 2017 30 January 2018 [lower-alpha 2] [188]
    CM Josimar Quintero Rostov 5 July 2017 1 January 2018 [lower-alpha 3] [190]
    CM Charlie Colkett Vitesse 6 July 2017 31 January 2018 [lower-alpha 4] [191]
    GK Bradley Collins Forest Green Rovers 7 July 2017 30 June 2018 [192]
    34 RB Ola Aina Hull City 11 July 2017 30 June 2018 [193]
    14 CM Ruben Loftus-Cheek Crystal Palace 12 July 2017 30 June 2018 [194]
    AM Lucas Piazon Fulham 14 July 2017 30 June 2018 [115]
    CM Marco van Ginkel PSV Eindhoven 16 July 2017 30 June 2018 [195]
    CF Ike Ugbo Barnsley 17 July 2017 3 January 2018 [lower-alpha 5] [196]
    LB Jay Dasilva Charlton Athletic 21 July 2017 30 June 2018 [118]
    5 CB Kurt Zouma Stoke City 21 July 2017 30 June 2018 [119]
    CM Mason Mount Vitesse 24 July 2017 30 June 2018 [120]
    CF Izzy Brown Brighton & Hove Albion 25 July 2017 10 January 2018 [lower-alpha 6] [198]
    32 CB Tomáš Kalas Fulham 27 July 2017 30 June 2018 [122]
    CB Michael Hector Hull City 27 July 2017 30 June 2018 [199]
    GK Jamal Blackman Sheffield United 27 July 2017 30 June 2018 [123]
    CB Matt Miazga Vitesse 28 July 2017 30 June 2018 [200]
    GK Jared Thompson Chippenham Town 28 July 2017 30 June 2018 [201]
    DM Victorien Angban Waasland-Beveren 28 July 2017 30 June 2018 [202]
    39 CM Mario Pašalić Spartak Moscow 2 August 2017 30 June 2018 [203]
    34 CM Lewis Baker Middlesbrough 11 August 2017 30 June 2018 [126]
    CB Kenneth Omeruo Kasımpaşa 25 August 2017 30 June 2018 [128]
    38 LW Jérémie Boga Birmingham City 28 August 2017 30 June 2018 [129]
    42 CM Jordan Houghton Doncaster Rovers 31 August 2017 30 June 2018 [lower-alpha 7] [205]
    49 RB Charlie Wakefield Stevenage 31 August 2017 30 June 2018 [172]
    LW Nathan Amiens 31 August 2017 1 January 2018 [lower-alpha 8] [206]
    31 CB Fikayo Tomori Hull City 31 August 2017 30 June 2018 [207]
    CF Joao Rodríguez Tampico Madero 5 September 2017 30 June 2018 [208]
    1. On 3 January 2018, Palmer's loan spell was terminated.[186]
    2. On 30 January 2018, Kane's loan spell was terminated.[187]
    3. On 1 January 2018, Quintero's loan spell was terminated.[189]
    4. On 31 January 2018, Colkett's loan spell was terminated.[182]
    5. On 3 January 2018, Ugbo's loan spell was terminated.[186]
    6. On 10 January 2018, Brown's loan spell was terminated.[197]
    7. On 5 January 2018, Houghton's loan spell was extended until 30 June 2018.[204]
    8. On 1 January 2018, Nathan's loan spell was terminated.

    Winter

    No. Pos Player Loaned To Start End Source
    CF Ike Ugbo Milton Keynes Dons 4 January 2018 30 June 2018 [209]
    35 CB Jake Clarke-Salter Sunderland 8 January 2018 30 June 2018 [210]
    CM Josimar Quintero Betis B 17 January 2018 30 June 2018 [211]
    LW Nathan Belenenses 18 January 2018 30 June 2018 [212]
    16 LW Kenedy Newcastle United 23 January 2018 30 June 2018 [213]
    LB Baba Rahman Schalke 04 29 January 2018 30 June 2019 [214]
    17 MF Charly Musonda Celtic 29 January 2018 17 May 2018[lower-alpha 1] [216]
    RB Todd Kane Oxford United 31 January 2018 30 June 2018 [182]
    23 CF Michy Batshuayi Borussia Dortmund 31 January 2018 30 June 2018 [217]
    AM Kasey Palmer Derby County 31 January 2018 30 June 2018 [218]
    41 GK Mitchell Beeney Sligo Rovers 22 February 2018 30 June 2018 [94]

    Overall transfer activity

    Pre-season

    On 16 March 2017, it was announced that Chelsea would play Arsenal at the Beijing National Stadium in China, prior to the 2017 International Champions Cup.[219] Before heading to China, Chelsea played a behind-closed-doors friendly against local rivals Fulham, which they won by a convincing scoreline of 8–2.

    15 July 2017 Friendly Chelsea 8–2 Fulham Cobham
    17:00 BST Willian  14', 17', 43'
    Batshuayi  31', 34'
    Rémy  57', 86' (pen.)
    Azpilicueta  75' (pen.)
    Report Azpilicueta  20' (o.g.)
    Johansen  55' (pen.)
    Stadium: Cobham Training Centre
    22 July 2017 Friendly Arsenal 0–3 Chelsea Beijing, China
    19:40 CST Report Willian  40'
    Batshuayi  42', 49'
    Stadium: Beijing National Stadium
    Referee: Fu Ming (China)

    International Champions Cup

    On 16 March 2017, the schedule for the 2017 International Champions Cup was announced. Chelsea played Bayern Munich and Internazionale in the club's first ever trip to Singapore.[220][219]

    25 July 2017 ICC Chelsea 2–3 Bayern Munich Kallang, Singapore
    19:35 SST Alonso  45+3'
    Batshuayi  85'
    Report Rafinha  6'
    Müller  12', 27'
    Stadium: Singapore National Stadium
    Attendance: 48,522
    Referee: Muhammad Taqi Aljaafari Bin Jahari (Singapore)
    29 July 2017 ICC Chelsea 1–2 Internazionale Kallang, Singapore
    19:35 SST Kondogbia  74' (o.g.) Report Jovetić  45+3'
    Perišić  53'
    Stadium: Singapore National Stadium
    Attendance: 32,547
    Referee: Subkhir Singh (Singapore)

    Competitions

    FA Community Shield

    Details for the 2017 FA Community Shield were announced on 15 June 2017.[221]

    6 August 2017 Final Arsenal 1–1
    (4–1 p)
    Chelsea Wembley
    14:00 BST Bellerín  15'
    Kolašinac  82'
    Report Azpilicueta  13'
    Alonso  35'
    Willian  37'
    Moses  46'
    Pedro  81'
    Stadium: Wembley Stadium
    Attendance: 83,325
    Referee: Bobby Madley
    Penalties
    Walcott
    Monreal
    Oxlade-Chamberlain
    Giroud
    Cahill
    Courtois
    Morata

    Premier League

    League table

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
    3 Tottenham Hotspur 38 23 8 7 74 36 +38 77 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
    4 Liverpool 38 21 12 5 84 38 +46 75
    5 Chelsea 38 21 7 10 62 38 +24 70 Qualification for the Europa League group stage[lower-alpha 2]
    6 Arsenal 38 19 6 13 74 51 +23 63
    7 Burnley 38 14 12 12 36 39 3 54 Qualification for the Europa League second qualifying round[lower-alpha 2]
    Source: Premier League
    Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored. 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).[222]
    Notes:
    1. On 17 May 2018, Kane's loan spell was terminated.[215]
    2. Since the winners of the 2017–18 FA Cup (Chelsea) and the winners of the 2017–18 EFL Cup (Manchester City) both qualified for European competition based on their league positions, the berths awarded to the 5th-placed team (Europa League group stage) and the League Cup winners (Europa League second qualifying round) were passed down the league.

    Result summary

    OverallHomeAway
    PldWDLGFGAGDPtsWDLGFGAGDWDLGFGAGD
    38 21 7 10 62 38  +24 70 11 4 4 30 16  +14 10 3 6 32 22  +10

    Last updated: 13 May 2018.
    Source: Premier League

    Results by matchday

    Matchday1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
    GroundHAHAHAHAHAHAAHHAAHAHHAHAHAHAAHHHAAAHHA
    ResultLWWWDWLLWWWWDWWLWWDWWDDWLLWLLWLDWWWWDL
    Position1411633345444333333333234344455555555555
    Updated to match(es) played on 13 May 2018. Source: 11v11
    A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

    Matches

      Win   Draw   Loss

    The fixtures for the 2017–18 season were announced on 14 June 2017.[223][224]

    12 August 2017 1 Chelsea 2–3 Burnley Fulham
    15:00 BST Alonso  3'
    Cahill  14'
    Fàbregas  16'  81'
    Morata  69'
    David Luiz  77',  88'
    Rüdiger  89'
    Report Vokes  24', 43'
    Ward  39'
    Brady  60'
    Mee  63'
    Arfield  77'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,616
    Referee: Craig Pawson
    20 August 2017 2 Tottenham Hotspur 1–2 Chelsea Wembley
    16:00 BST Dier  31'
    Vertonghen  51'
    Batshuayi  82' (o.g.)
    Alderweireld  84'
    Kane  88'
    Report Alonso  24', 88',  87'
    Rüdiger  30'
    David Luiz  38'
    Stadium: Wembley Stadium
    Attendance: 73,587
    Referee: Anthony Taylor
    27 August 2017 3 Chelsea 2–0 Everton Fulham
    13:30 BST Fàbregas  27'
    Morata  40'
    Moses  76'
    Azpilicueta  88'
    Report Gueye  9'
    Rooney  71'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,382
    Referee: Jonathan Moss
    9 September 2017 4 Leicester City 1–2 Chelsea Leicester
    15:00 BST Vardy  62' (pen.)
    Ndidi  84'
    Report Morata  41'
    Kanté  50'
    Stadium: King Power Stadium
    Attendance: 30,923
    Referee: Lee Mason
    17 September 2017 5 Chelsea 0–0 Arsenal Fulham
    13:30 BST Morata  65'
    David Luiz  87'
    Report Elneny  84'
    Kolašinac  90+1'
    Bellerín  90+3'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,478
    Referee: Michael Oliver
    23 September 2017 6 Stoke City 0–4 Chelsea Stoke-on-Trent
    15:00 BST Shaqiri  49'
    Crouch  89'
    Report Morata  2', 77', 82'
    Pedro  30'
    Alonso  51'
    Kanté  57'
    Stadium: bet365 Stadium
    Attendance: 29,661
    Referee: Mike Dean
    30 September 2017 7 Chelsea 0–1 Manchester City Fulham
    17:30 BST Report Fernandinho  61'
    De Bruyne  67'
    Otamendi  89'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,530
    Referee: Martin Atkinson
    14 October 2017 8 Crystal Palace 2–1 Chelsea Selhurst
    15:00 BST Azpilicueta  11' (o.g.)
    Zaha  45'
    Milivojević  71'
    Dann  83'
    Report Bakayoko  18',  87' Stadium: Selhurst Park
    Attendance: 25,480
    Referee: Andre Marriner
    21 October 2017 9 Chelsea 4–2 Watford Fulham
    12:30 BST Pedro  12'
    Rüdiger  23'
    Morata  56'
    Batshuayi  71', 90+5'
    Azpilicueta  87'
    Report Holebas  12'
    Mariappa  19'
    Doucouré  45+2'
    Pereyra  49'
    Femenía  78'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,467
    Referee: Jonathan Moss
    28 October 2017 10 Bournemouth 0–1 Chelsea Bournemouth
    17:30 BST A. Smith  59'
    Frances  88'
    Report Hazard  51' Stadium: Dean Court
    Attendance: 10,988
    Referee: Craig Pawson
    5 November 2017 11 Chelsea 1–0 Manchester United Fulham
    16:30 GMT Bakayoko  20'
    Morata  55'
    Report Jones  49'
    Herrera  51'
    Fellaini  71'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,615
    Referee: Anthony Taylor
    18 November 2017 12 West Bromwich Albion 0–4 Chelsea West Bromwich
    15:00 GMT Rondón  54'
    Yacob  88'
    Report Morata  17',  90'
    Hazard  19',  23', 62'
    Alonso  38'
    Fàbregas  50'
    Stadium: The Hawthorns
    Attendance: 23,592
    Referee: Jonathan Moss
    25 November 2017 13 Liverpool 1–1 Chelsea Liverpool
    17:30 GMT Salah  65' Report Willian  85' Stadium: Anfield
    Attendance: 53,225
    Referee: Michael Oliver
    29 November 2017 14 Chelsea 1–0 Swansea City Fulham
    19:45 GMT Rüdiger  55'
    Morata  90+3'
    Report Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41365
    Referee: Neil Swarbrick
    2 December 2017 15 Chelsea 3–1 Newcastle United Fulham
    12:30 GMT Hazard  21', 74' (pen.)
    Morata  33'
    Report Gayle  12'
    Clark  45+1'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,538
    Referee: Kevin Friend
    9 December 2017 16 West Ham United 1–0 Chelsea Stratford
    12:30 GMT Arnautović  6',  7'
    Adrián  58'
    Reid  67'
    Cresswell  68'
    Obiang  70'
    Masuaku  87'
    Report Alonso  18' Stadium: London Stadium
    Attendance: 56,953
    Referee: Anthony Taylor
    12 December 2017 17 Huddersfield Town 1–3 Chelsea Huddersfield
    20:00 GMT Depoitre  90+2' Report Bakayoko  23'
    Willian  43'
    Pedro  50'
    Stadium: John Smith's Stadium
    Attendance: 24,169
    Referee: Andre Marriner
    16 December 2017 18 Chelsea 1–0 Southampton Fulham
    15:00 GMT Alonso  45+3',  90+4' Report Yoshida  45+2'
    Redmond  87'
    Stephens  87'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,562
    Referee: Roger East
    23 December 2017 19 Everton 0–0 Chelsea Liverpool
    12:30 GMT Calvert-Lewin  10'
    Martina  21'
    Keane  57'
    Report Stadium: Goodison Park
    Attendance: 39,191
    Referee: Bobby Madley
    26 December 2017 (2017-12-26) 20 Chelsea 2–0 Brighton & Hove Albion Fulham
    15:00 GMT Morata  46'
    Alonso  60'
    Report Stephens  57' Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,568
    Referee: Mike Dean
    30 December 2017 21 Chelsea 5–0 Stoke City Fulham
    15:00 BST Rüdiger  3'
    Drinkwater  9'
    Pedro  23',  52'
    Willian  73' (pen.)
    Zappacosta  88'
    Report Diouf  27' Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,433
    Referee: Kevin Friend
    3 January 2018 22 Arsenal 2–2 Chelsea Holloway
    19:45 BST Wilshere  31',  63'
    Holding  53'
    Özil  67'
    Bellerín  90+2'
    Report Fàbregas  43'
    Hazard  67' (pen.)
    Alonso  84'
    Courtois  89'
    Stadium: Emirates
    Attendance: 59,379
    Referee: Anthony Taylor
    13 January 2018 23 Chelsea 0–0 Leicester City Fulham
    15:00 GMT Kanté  56'
    Morata  87'
    Report James  18'
    Okazaki  61'
    Chilwell  63'  68'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,552
    Referee: Mike Jones
    20 January 2018 24 Brighton & Hove Albion 0–4 Chelsea Falmer
    12:30 GMT Schelotto  36'
    Duffy  56'
    Goldson  79'
    Report Hazard  3', 77'
    Willian  6'
    Moses  89'
    Stadium: Falmer Stadium
    Attendance: 30,600
    Referee: Jonathan Moss
    31 January 2018 25 Chelsea 0–3 Bournemouth Fulham
    19:45 GMT Fàbregas  77' Report Wilson  51'
    Stanislas  64'
    Aké  67'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,464
    Referee: Lee Probert
    5 February 2018 26 Watford 4–1 Chelsea Watford
    20:00 GMT Deeney  42' (pen.)
    Richarlison  45'
    Prödl  50'
    Janmaat  84'
    Deulofeu  88'
    Pereyra  90+1'
    Report Bakayoko  25'  30'
    David Luiz  58'
    Fàbregas  62'
    Hazard  82'
    Stadium: Vicarage Road
    Attendance: 20,157
    Referee: Mike Dean
    12 February 2018 27 Chelsea 3–0 West Bromwich Albion Fulham
    20:00 GMT Hazard  25', 71'
    Moses  63'
    Report Evans  45+3'
    Gibbs  49'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,071
    Referee: Lee Mason
    25 February 2018 28 Manchester United 2–1 Chelsea Manchester
    14:05 GMT Lukaku  39'
    Valencia  68'
    Lingard  75'
    Matić  85'
    Report Kanté  30'
    Willian  32'
    Morata  88'
    Stadium: Old Trafford
    Attendance: 75,060
    Referee: Martin Atkinson
    4 March 2018 29 Manchester City 1–0 Chelsea Manchester
    16:00 GMT Zinchenko  24'
    B. Silva  46'
    Gündoğan  47'
    Report Rüdiger  57' Stadium: Etihad Stadium
    Attendance: 54,328
    Referee: Michael Oliver
    10 March 2018 (2018-03-10) 30 Chelsea 2–1 Crystal Palace Fulham
    17:30 GMT Willian  25'
    Kelly  32' (o.g.)
    Morata  86'
    Report Van Aanholt  59',  90'
    Tomkins  86'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 40,800
    Referee: Anthony Taylor
    1 April 2018 31 Chelsea 1–3 Tottenham Hotspur Fulham
    16:00 GMT Morata  30' Report Eriksen  45+1'
    Alli  62', 66'
    Davies  70'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,364
    Referee: Andre Marriner
    8 April 2018 32 Chelsea 1–1 West Ham United Fulham
    16:30 BST Azpilicueta  36' Report Noble  46'
    Hernández  73'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,324
    Referee: Kevin Friend
    14 April 2018 33 Southampton 2–3 Chelsea Southampton
    12:30 BST Tadić  21'
    Højbjerg  42'
    Ward-Prowse  44'
    Bednarek  60'
    Bertrand  65'
    Romeu  78'
    Long  81'
    Report Hazard  64',  75'
    Giroud  70', 78'
    Willian  82'
    Cahill  90+4'
    Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
    Attendance: 31,764
    Referee: Mike Dean
    19 April 2018 34 Burnley 1–2 Chelsea Burnley
    19:45 BST Tarkowski  28'
    Barnes  64'
    Report Long  20' (o.g.)
    Moses  69'
    Stadium: Turf Moor
    Attendance: 21,264
    Referee: Bobby Madley
    28 April 2018 35 Swansea City 0–1 Chelsea Swansea
    17:30 BST A. Ayew  15' Report Fàbregas  4'
    Moses  30'
    Stadium: Liberty Stadium
    Attendance: 20,900
    Referee: Jonathan Moss
    6 May 2018 36 Chelsea 1–0 Liverpool Fulham
    16:30 BST Giroud  32'
    Alonso  79'
    Moses  81'
    Courtois  90+4'
    Report Salah  39'
    Clyne  40'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,314
    Referee: Anthony Taylor
    9 May 2018 37 Chelsea 1–1 Huddersfield Town Fulham
    19:45 BST Alonso  62' Report Depoitre  50'
    Lössl  88'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 38,910
    Referee: Lee Mason
    13 May 2018 38 Newcastle United 3–0 Chelsea Newcastle upon Tyne
    15:00 BST Gayle  23'
    Pérez  59', 63'
    Report Bakayoko  62' Stadium: St James' Park
    Attendance: 52,294
    Referee: Martin Atkinson

    FA Cup

      Win   Draw   Loss

    In the FA Cup, Chelsea entered in the third round and were drawn away to Norwich City.[225]

    6 January 2018 (2018-01-06) Third round Norwich City 0–0 Chelsea Norwich
    17:30 GMT Hanley  76'
    Tettey  86'
    Report David Luiz  41'
    Cahill  62'
    Stadium: Carrow Road
    Attendance: 23,598
    Referee: Stuart Attwell
    17 January 2018 (2018-01-17) Third round replay Chelsea 1–1 (a.e.t.)
    (5–3 p)
    Norwich City Fulham
    20:00 GMT Batshuayi  55'
    Pedro  62'  117'
    Willian  92'
    Morata  120+1'  120+1'
    Report Lewis  90+4'
    Maddison  97'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 39,684
    Referee: Graham Scott
    Penalties
    Willian
    David Luiz
    Azpilicueta
    Kanté
    Hazard
    Oliveira
    Maddison
    Vrančić
    Murphy
    28 January 2018 (2018-01-28) Fourth round Chelsea 3–0 Newcastle United Fulham
    13:30 GMT Batshuayi  31', 44'
    Alonso  72'
    Report Mbemba  17' Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,049
    Referee: Kevin Friend
    16 February 2018 (2018-02-16) Fifth round Chelsea 4–0 Hull City Fulham
    20:00 GMT Willian  2', 32'
    Pedro  27'
    Giroud  42'
    Scott  82'
    Report Stewart  33'
    Irvine  86'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 39,591
    Referee: Andre Marriner
    18 March 2018 (2018-03-18) Quarter-finals Leicester City 1–2 (a.e.t.) Chelsea Leicester
    16:30 GMT Maguire  25'
    Vardy  76'
    Report Morata  42'
    Bakayoko  45+1'
    Moses  89'
    Pedro  105'
    Stadium: King Power Stadium
    Attendance: 31,792
    Referee: Craig Pawson
    22 April 2018 (2018-04-22) Semi-finals Chelsea 2–0 Southampton Wembley
    15:00 BST Giroud  46'
    Morata  82'
    Report Yoshida  40'
    Romeu  50'
    Lemina  55'
    Hoedt  65'
    Stadium: Wembley Stadium
    Attendance: 73,416
    Referee: Martin Atkinson
    19 May 2018 (2018-05-19) Final Chelsea 1–0 Manchester United Wembley
    17:15 BST Hazard  22' (pen.)
    Courtois  90+3'
    Report Jones  21'
    Valencia  58'
    Stadium: Wembley Stadium
    Attendance: 87,647
    Referee: Michael Oliver

    EFL Cup

    Chelsea entered the competition in the third round and were drawn at home to Nottingham Forest.[226] Another home tie against Everton was confirmed for the fourth round.[227] A third home tie was drawn for the Blues as they hosted Bournemouth in the quarter-finals.[228]

      Win   Draw   Loss

    20 September 2017 Third round Chelsea 5–1 Nottingham Forest Fulham
    19:45 BST Kenedy  13'
    Batshuayi  19', 53', 85'
    Musonda  40'
    Report Hobbs  21'
    Darikwa  90+1'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 40,621
    Referee: Chris Kavanagh
    25 October 2017 Fourth round Chelsea 2–1 Everton Fulham
    19:45 BST Rüdiger  26',  66'
    Willian  90+2'
    Report Williams  28'
    Davies  50'
    McCarthy  52'
    Jagielka  61'
    Calvert-Lewin  90+4'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 40,655
    Referee: Neil Swarbrick
    20 December 2017 Quarter-finals Chelsea 2–1 Bournemouth Fulham
    19:45 GMT Ampadu  2'
    Willian  13'
    Fàbregas  39'
    Zappacosta  62'
    Morata  90+1',  90+2'
    Report Simpson  72'
    Francis  76'
    A. Smith  82'
    Gosling  90',  90+1'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,168
    Referee: Lee Mason
    10 January 2018 Semi-finals
    First leg
    Chelsea 0–0 Arsenal Fulham
    20:00 GMT Kanté  79' Report Xhaka  51'
    Elneny  86'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 40,097
    Referee: Martin Atkinson
    24 January 2018 Semi-finals
    Second leg
    Arsenal 2–1
    (2–1 agg.)
    Chelsea Holloway
    19:45 GMT Rüdiger  12' (o.g.)
    Wilshere  31'
    Xhaka  60'
    Monreal  66'
    Report Hazard  7',  17'
    Moses  62'
    Stadium: Emirates Stadium
    Attendance: 58,964
    Referee: Michael Oliver

    UEFA Champions League

    On 24 August 2017, the group stages were confirmed with Chelsea facing Atlético Madrid, Roma and Qarabağ in Group C.[229] The club finished as runners-up in the group stages and were drawn against Barcelona in round of 16.[230]

    Group stage

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification ROM CHL ATL QRB
    1 Roma 6 3 2 1 9 6 +3 11[lower-alpha 1] Advance to knockout phase 3–0 0–0 1–0
    2 Chelsea 6 3 2 1 16 8 +8 11[lower-alpha 1] 3–3 1–1 6–0
    3 Atlético Madrid 6 1 4 1 5 4 +1 7 Transfer to Europa League 2–0 1–2 1–1
    4 Qarabağ 6 0 2 4 2 14 12 2 1–2 0–4 0–0
    Source: UEFA
    Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
    Notes:
    1. Head-to-head results: Chelsea 3–3 Roma, Roma 3–0 Chelsea.

      Win   Draw   Loss

    12 September 2017 1 Chelsea 6–0 Qarabağ London, England
    19:45 BST Pedro  5'
    Cahill  16'
    Zappacosta  30'
    Azpilicueta  55'
    Bakayoko  71'
    Batshuayi  76'
    Medvedev  82' (o.g.)
    Report Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,150
    Referee: Anastasios Sidiropoulos (Greece)
    27 September 2017 2 Atlético Madrid 1–2 Chelsea Madrid, Spain
    19:45 BST Griezmann  40' (pen.),  54'
    Partey  47'
    Report David Luiz  39'
    Morata  59'
    Batshuayi  90+4'
    Stadium: Estadio Metropolitano
    Attendance: 60,643
    Referee: Cüneyt Çakır (Turkey)
    18 October 2017 3 Chelsea 3–3 Roma London, England
    19:45 BST David Luiz  11'
    Hazard  37', 75'
    Bakayoko  69'
    Report Kolarov  40'
    Džeko  64', 70'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 41,105
    Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)
    31 October 2017 4 Roma 3–0 Chelsea Rome, Italy
    19:45 GMT El Shaarawy  1', 36'
    Perotti  63'
    Report Stadium: Stadio Olimpico
    Attendance: 55,036
    Referee: Jonas Eriksson (Sweden)
    22 November 2017 5 Qarabağ 0–4 Chelsea Baku, Azerbaijan
    17:00 GMT Sadygov  19'
    Rzeźniczak  41'
    Medvedev  71'
    Report Hazard  21' (pen.)
    Willian  36', 85'
    Alonso  53'
    Fàbregas  73' (pen.)
    Stadium: Baku Olimpiya Stadionu
    Attendance: 67,100
    Referee: Jorge Sousa (Portugal)
    5 December 2017 6 Chelsea 1–1 Atlético Madrid London, England
    19:45 GMT Zappacosta  52'
    Savić  75' (o.g.)
    Report Hernandez  16'
    Saúl  56'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 40,875
    Referee: Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)

    Knockout phase

    Round of 16
    20 February 2018 First leg Chelsea 1–1 Barcelona London, England
    19:45 GMT (UTC+00:00) Willian  62'
    Rüdiger  80'
    Morata  86'
    Report Rakitić  29'
    Messi  75'
    L. Suárez  76'
    Busquets  90'
    Stadium: Stamford Bridge
    Attendance: 37,741
    Referee: Cüneyt Çakır (Turkey)
    14 March 2018 Second leg Barcelona 3–0
    (4–1 agg.)
    Chelsea Barcelona, Spain
    20:45 CET Messi  3', 63'
    Dembélé  20'
    Roberto  22'
    Report Willian  45'
    Giroud  49'
    Alonso  75'
    Stadium: Camp Nou
    Attendance: 97,183
    Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)

    Statistics

    Appearances

    No. Pos. Name Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup Champions League Community Shield Total Discipline
    Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
    1 GK Willy Caballero 306040000013000
    2 DF Antonio Rüdiger 2726051601045360
    3 DF Marcos Alonso 3373120701046890
    4 MF Cesc Fàbregas 3224040811049361
    6 MF Danny Drinkwater 1214030300022100
    7 MF N'Golo Kanté 3415020601048140
    8 MF Ross Barkley 20101000004000
    9 FW Álvaro Morata 3111623171104815101
    10 MF Eden Hazard 341251418300511730
    11 MF Pedro 3146230711048722
    13 GK Thibaut Courtois 3501010801046030
    14 MF Tiémoué Bakayoko 2925040510043361
    15 MF Victor Moses 25 (3)33020401135 (3)450
    18 FW Olivier Giroud 6 (7)33 (1)200100010 (8)510
    21 DF Davide Zappacosta 12 (10)1403 (1)04 (1)10023 (12)220
    22 MF Willian 20 (16)65 (1)23 (1)24 (4)31033 (22)1340
    24 DF Gary Cahill 24 (3)05 (1)0305 (1)01038 (5)031
    27 DF Andreas Christensen 23 (4)02 (1)0405 (1)00034 (6)000
    28 DF César Azpilicueta 3724020811052320
    30 DF David Luiz 9 (1)12000411016 (1)261
    33 DF Emerson 3 (2)0200000005 (2)000
    36 MF Kyle Scott 000 (1)00000000 (1)010
    37 GK Eduardo 00000000000000
    44 MF Ethan Ampadu 0 (1)02 (1)02 (1)000004 (3)010
    50 DF Trevoh Chalobah 00000000000000
    66 DF Dujon Sterling 000 (1)00 (1)000000 (2)000
    70 MF Callum Hudson-Odoi 0 (2)00 (2)00000000 (4)000
    Players who left the club in August/January transfer window or on loan
    16 MF Kenedy 00203100005100
    17 MF Charly Musonda 0 (3)00 (1)021000 (1)02 (5)100
    23 FW Michy Batshuayi 3 (9)2333 (2)31 (3)21011 (14)1000
    35 DF Jake Clarke-Salter 00000 (1)000000 (1)000
    38 MF Jérémie Boga 10000000001000

    Last updated: 19 May 2018.
    Source: Chelsea F.C.

    Top scorers

    The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.

    Rnk Pos No. Player Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup Champions League Community Shield Total
    1 MF 10 Eden Hazard 12113017
    2 FW 9 Álvaro Morata 11211015
    3 MF 22 Willian 6223013
    4 FW 23 Michy Batshuayi 2332010
    5 DF 3 Marcos Alonso 710008
    6 MF 11 Pedro 420107
    7 FW 18 Olivier Giroud 320005
    8 MF 15 Victor Moses 300014
    9 DF 2 Antonio Rüdiger 201003
    DF 28 César Azpilicueta 200103
    MF 4 Cesc Fàbregas 200103
    MF 14 Tiémoué Bakayoko 200103
    13 DF 21 Davide Zappacosta 100102
    DF 30 David Luiz 100102
    15 MF 6 Danny Drinkwater 100001
    MF 7 N'Golo Kanté 100001
    MF 16 Kenedy 001001
    MF 17 Charly Musonda 001001
    Own goals 2 0 0 2 0 4
    Total 62 13 10 17 1 103

    Last updated: 19 May 2018.
    Source: Chelsea F.C.

    Clean sheets

    The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.

    Rnk No. Player Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup Champions League Community Shield Total
    1 13 Thibaut Courtois 15112019
    2 1 Willy Caballero 140005

    Last updated: 19 May 2018.
    Source: Chelsea F.C.

    Summary

    Games played59 (38 Premier League) (7 FA Cup) (5 EFL Cup) (8 Champions League) (1 Community Shield)
    Games won32 (21 Premier League) (5 FA Cup) (3 EFL Cup) (3 Champions League)
    Games drawn14 (7 Premier League) (2 FA Cup) (1 EFL Cup) (3 Champions League) (1 Community Shield)
    Games lost13 (10 Premier League) (1 EFL Cup) (2 Champions League)
    Goals scored103 (62 Premier League) (13 FA Cup) (10 EFL Cup) (17 Champions League) (1 Community Shield)
    Goals conceded58 (38 Premier League) (2 FA Cup) (5 EFL Cup) (12 Champions League) (1 Community Shield)
    Goal difference+45 (+24 Premier League) (+11 FA Cup) (+5 EFL Cup) (+5 Champions League)
    Clean sheets24 (16 Premier League) (5 FA Cup) (1 EFL Cup) (2 Champions League)
    Yellow cards74 (44 Premier League) (9 FA Cup) (8 EFL Cup) (10 Champions League) (3 Community Shield)
    Red cards7 (4 Premier League) (2 FA Cup) (1 Community Shield)
    Most appearances Willian (55 appearances)
    Top scorer Eden Hazard (17 goals)
    Winning PercentageOverall: 32/59 (54.2%)

    Last updated: 19 May 2018.
    Source: Chelsea F.C.

    Awards

    Player

    No. Player Award Month Source
    22 Willian Premier League Goal of the Month
    January
    [231]
    3 Marcos Alonso PFA Team of the Year
    2017–18
    [232]

    Manager

    Manager Award Month Source

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