With seven wins from his nine games in charge and fresh from a 3-1 win away from home, you might have expected Liam Rosenior to be content with life in charge of the Blues. But Chelsea's head coach was immediately focusing on where his side can improve at Molineux. He wants more.

Apart from the two defeats to Arsenal in the League Cup, Rosenior's start to life in the Blues' dugout has been almost faultless. In the Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup, the 41-year-old has only tasted victory.

But there is a reason why Rosenior is our head coach. He is always striving for improvements and is determined to deliver them, the more time he has with his players on the training pitch at Cobham.

Rosenior said: ‘It was very frustrating [to concede] as you always want to keep clean sheets. Whether it was the ten minutes against Crystal Palace, the first half against West Ham, the first half against Napoli, or in moments today – because we still played some good stuff in the second half [against Wolves] – I want us to have a perfect 90 minutes. That's my job.

‘I don't want us to switch off from set plays; I don't want us to give cheap chances away. That's something for us to improve on.

'I think when we have more time to work on things, and how we manage games, because there are a lot of game management things we need to look at, we can be even more difficult to beat.’

Chelsea raced to a 3-0 lead in the first half courtesy of Cole Palmer's hat-trick, and in truth, we could have had even more.

We struggled to replicate that dominance following the interval, as Wolves pulled a goal back early in the second period, but still managed to see out the game with minimal fuss.

Again, though, Rosenior highlighted areas for improvement.

He said: ‘There are different ways you can control games. I challenged the lads at half time, as the last time Chelsea played here [at Molineux earlier in the season], they were 3-0 ahead at half time, but the game ended 4-3. So I said, "We want to go on [in the second half of this game]".

‘Sometimes – and I don’t want to make excuses because I want us to be perfect all the time, and I wanted the same performance in the second half – but when you concede a goal, it changes the momentum and the flow of the game.

'I saw frustration from the players to conceding, which I liked from the players in not keeping a clean sheet, and sometimes if you have the ball, the other team can't score.

‘I'd like us to be more offensive at times, but I think the first half was a really, really good platform to build on.’

We return to Stamford Bridge on Tuesday evening for our clash against Leeds. With general admission tickets sold out, Club Chelsea is your only way to watch the action live. Seat-only tickets start from £210 per person (inc. VAT) – book now by clicking here!