Liam Rosenior was honest in his assessment of Chelsea's performance against Burnley, as our head coach was left to rue a lack of concentration and called for increased accountability from his players following today's 1-1 draw.
Chelsea scored our fastest goal of the Premier League campaign when Joao Pedro bundled the ball home after just three minutes and ten seconds for his 14 of the season in all competitions.
The home side were completely dominant throughout the first half and the beginning of the second period, until Wesley Fofana's red card on 72 minutes changed the dynamics of the contest entirely.
Rosenior brought on the likes of Tosin, Jorrel Hato, Mamadou Sarr and Josh Acheampong, as well as Liam Delap, following the red card due to a combination of players suffering with fatigue and also in a bid to shore up our defence as the visitors pilled on the pressure.
With set-piece specialist James Ward-Prowse coming on for the Clarets, the Blues were always likely to face late pressure from deliveries into the box and it was from a corner by the England international that Zian Flemming headed Burnley level in the third minute of injury-time.
The Clarets could have snatched a winner from another Ward-Prowse corner moments later and at the other end, Delap fired over the bar with the final kick of the game but both teams had to settle for a point.
Rosenior's post-match press conference started with a question asking how Fofana was feeling, but the head coach replied: 'No, that wasn't on Wesley. That was on our performance.
'From the first goal, we lacked incision when we had control. I want incision. I want us to create wave after wave of attack. We were too safe in our possession. When you give a team, any team, a one-goal advantage, anything can happen.
'The red card happens, you're down to 10 men. We knew their biggest threat with Ward-Prowse on the pitch was set plays. We went as big as we possibly could because that was the only way they could score with 10 men. We still don't see it out.
'I think the frustration is more the last two home games. From being in winning positions and being in control of the game to not win the two games, that's the biggest frustration. It's not a blame on an individual.'
Last Friday's FA Cup win away to Hull City came either side of two home matches where we have ended with draws after taking the lead at Stamford Bridge, having been 2-0 up against Leeds United on 10 February.
And Rosenior added: 'I will never, ever speak about what's happened before me. What has happened with me is we have set fire to four points from two home games. It's not good enough for a club of this level. It's not good enough for me to come and say we were the better team. We need to be the better team in every game. We need to win games of football. I know what the answer is and we will address it in the week.
'There's an inquest after every game whether we win or lose. I'm learning about the players. I'm learning about the people you can lean on when things aren't going your way and you need to see a game out. That's something we need to address very quickly.'
While Chelsea did not manage a shot on target in the second half, we created a number of clear openings which led to efforts which were heading on target until last-ditch Burnley blocks, with Cole Palmer, Joao Pedro and Moises Caicedo all having goal-bound efforts blocked.
There was also a Hato effort sliced wide from the edge of the area and Delap could have won it with the final kick of the game.
And Rosenior said: 'I felt the second-half performance was actually miles better than the first-half performance, even though we were 1-0 up at half-time.
'Up until the red card, I felt it was wave after wave of attack [in the second half]. We didn't make the right decision for the moments that we created and we didn't finish off the game when we should have. When you don't do that, you leave yourself open.
'But there's too many instances, even in my time here. Wolves away, Crystal Palace away, Leeds at home, today, where we've conceded goals from moments of lack of concentration, lack of accountability. If we want to maximise the potential, which I know is there, we have to address that very quickly.'