After Chelsea booked a place in this season’s FA Cup final by overcoming Leeds United, Calum McFarlane explained why it was a vital result to hit the reset button on our recent form going into the last few games of the season, which now includes a return trip to Wembley.
In a fiercely contested semi-final at the national stadium, it was the Blues who dominated the game throughout, even if it was a solitary first-half goal by Enzo Fernandez that proved decisive.
McFarlane was back in the Chelsea dugout for this big game at Wembley as interim head coach, a role he will fulfil until the end of the season. Speaking after securing our progress in the FA Cup, he explained why this could be a crucial win for the Blues, beyond the obvious motivation of a final now to come.
‘It was important to get the win,’ he said. ‘I'm not sure if that’s in relation to having an FA Cup final or a carrot to look forward to, I think it was important to break the momentum and the form that we were in.
‘We were confident that we would do that today and I think that completely changes the feel within the group. I think that was probably more important and gives us confidence going into the next five games.
‘We spoke in the lead up to the game, that we've got a minimum of five games left, potentially six if we win against Leeds, and that it's tough in this moment when you've been on a losing run, but one moment, one result, one performance can change that.
‘That's what we've been going after in terms of shifting the momentum in the group. I did reinforce that at the end of today’s game, but it goes without saying, we're at Chelsea Football Club, we need to try and win every game. So that is our target from now until the end of the season.’
McFarlane and the Blues now have five games remaining of this season, with four fixtures left in the race for European qualification in the Premier League, in addition to our return to Wembley on 16 May to face Manchester City in the FA Cup final.
‘We want to win every game for the fans in every competition,’ Calum continued. ‘It's unfortunately not worked out like that this year, but we want to win every single game from now until the end of the season, as you do in any season, but it's not about extra motivation.
‘We want to do it for ourselves, we want to do it for the fans and the club, everyone. The FA Cup is a massive competition, historic, and we want to win the final and win every Premier League game remaining.’