In the wake of our victory over Djurgarden on Thursday night, Enzo Maresca spoke about the three Premier League ‘finals’ we have to play before taking on Real Betis. Our head coach has looked ahead to the first of those, up at Newcastle on Sunday, in greater detail.

The Blues travel north knowing a victory over a Champions League qualification rival would be a massive step forward in our efforts to finish in the top five.

Maresca’s men have picked up three league wins on the bounce at a crucial time in the season, and he is confident we can maintain that momentum at St James’ Park.

‘It’s a big one, it’s a huge one,’ said the Blues head coach. ‘Manchester United will be a big one. Nottingham Forest will be a big one. Each of them will be big games, and on Sunday, it’s the chance to start in the right way. We are on a good run, in a good mood, and hopefully we can play a good game and win.

‘We are going to try to win the three games we have. How many points do we need to finish top five? No idea because it depends on the other results. We just need to be focused on ourselves and try to win the three games. That is the focus.’

Maresca was able to name an unchanged starting XI for the home wins over Everton and Liverpool, something that has rarely been the case this season due to injuries and fixture congestion.


However, he is yet to decide if he will stick with the same side that overcame the Reds for the early Sunday kick-off.

He said: ‘We will see. The first result against Djurgarden gave us the chance to rotate and protect players for the second leg. But we still have today and Saturday to prepare the game, then we will see.

‘It’s a 12pm kick-off and we played on Thursday night, so it’s not the ideal situation, but we need to play and we need to adapt immediately, prepare for the game in the best way, and hopefully continue our good moment.

'We have two days and the players need to be focused on the Newcastle game because it’s the next one. For us, we have to think like it’s the last game of the season, give everything, and then we see at the end [of the game].’