Filip Jorgensen had a night to forget in Chelsea’s 5-2 loss to Paris Saint-Germain in their Champions League Round of 16 first leg tie, and he made things worse for himself at full-time.
Liam Rosenior made the brave decision to drop his most experienced goalkeeper, Robert Sanchez, for Chelsea’s clash with PSG, and it backfired.
Filip Jorgensen conceded five goals and made at least two mistakes. Conceding those five goals is something that Sanchez has never managed in his entire Chelsea career.
The French media were straight on the back of Jorgensen, claiming they knew the mistakes were coming and that he’s too calm on the ball.
And the goalkeeper made things worse for himself at full-time by heading straight down the tunnel.
What should Liam Rosenior’s next move be?🤔
Filip Jorgensen doesn’t even clap the Chelsea fans
The media were brought to the attention of a video that appeared to show Reece James telling Jorgensen to come over and clap the away fans, however, it looked slightly edited.
Nevertheless, Chelsea fan @Adamkhanna7 on X, who was in the away end, tweeted out an image of the players at full-time with the caption ‘Jorgensen straight down the tunnel as well, never want to see him play ever again.’
Of course, after conceding five goals, you’re naturally going to be gutted and want the ground to swallow you up, but to not go and show support to the travelling Chelsea fans is just unforgivable.
These supporters have paid their hard-earned money to come and watch their boys away in France, and for Jorgensen to make a mistake or two and then not even apologise just makes things ten times worse.
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In the landscape of football, the post-match walk to the away end is an unwritten contract between a squad and its travelling support.
Regardless of the scoreline, acknowledging the fans who have sacrificed time and money is viewed as a mark of respect. To bypass this, especially by heading straight for the tunnel, is often interpreted as a gesture of defiance or a lack of accountability.
When a player potentially ignores their own captain’s lead to applaud the supporters, it shatters the collective front a club is expected to maintain.
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