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On eve of crucial game in Europe, Chelsea’s young striker predicts three years of success under Portuguese manager

From the outside it appears familiar cracks are opening up. Senior players look unsettled, unnerved by the new demands being placed upon them, threatened by the prospect of upheaval and dissatisfied by stodgy results. Frank Lampard scowls as he trudges prematurely from the turf. Nicolas Anelka and Alex are transfer-listed and cast to the margins, high-profile victims of a process of evolution.

Yet if instinct suggests disaffection is welling up just as it did so critically under Avram Grant and Luiz Felipe Scolari, with the appetite for life under André Villas-Boas to be sternly tested by Valencia’s considerable threat at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday, then the reality is apparently very different. “Even after the losses we’ve had, we’ve always had confidence in ourselves and in the manager,” said Daniel Sturridge. “I’m behind him. Everyone else is, too. He’s going to be here for the next three years. We’re not worried about any other manager coming in because we know he’s going to be here for those three years.”

That was timely backing before a game that will determine Chelsea’s further involvement in the Champions League. The club were shrewd in designating Sturridge, one of the new generation thriving under the Portuguese’s guidance, for pre-match media duties. These are transitional times and a young manager with awkward decisions to make needs a core of support from within. Should his side secure the victory or goalless draw they require to emerge from Group

André Villas-Boas can be Chelsea manager for 15 years, says chairman

• Bruce Buck hoping Chelsea have found long-term solution
• Club ‘envy longevity’ of Arsène Wenger and Alex Ferguson

The Chelsea chairman Bruce Buck says he hopes André Villas-Boas will be the club’s manager for the next 15 years.

Villas-Boas is the seventh manager of the Roman Abramovich era, but Buck believes the club may finally have found their Sir Alex Ferguson figure. Ferguson will celebrate 25 years in charge of United next month, while Arsène Wenger recently marked 15 years as Arsenal manager.

Buck told the BBC: “We do envy Arsène Wenger at Arsenal and Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United in terms of longevity, but it shouldn’t be longevity for longevity’s sake.

“It has to be the right guy in the job for 10 or 15 years and, in light of André’s age, he may well be that guy.”

Villas-Boas turns 34 this month and is only his third season of full-time management. He has previously said he only wants to remain in the profession for between 10 and 15 years.

Buck added: “Everyone thinks his age might have been a negative but it’s a positive. He has really been able to relate to the players. He is a very organised guy who really understands football.”

Meanwhile Buck has admitted Chelsea need to improve their youth development policy to make further savings in the light of Uefa’s Financial Fair Play regulations.

“The problem has been transfer fees paid to other clubs for new players and that’s probably our biggest expense,” he said. “The way we’ve tried to attack that – not as successfully as we’d have liked to be honest – is by putting a lot of money into the academy.

“The maths is pretty simple. If you can bring a player or two through the academy every couple of years, then you’re saving £10million, £20million, £30million of transfer fees.”

André Villas-BoasChelseaguardian.co.uk

Chelsea take first step towards leaving Stamford Bridge for new home

• Club seek to buy back freehold on current home
• Chairman Bruce Buck seeks to reassure fans

Chelsea are to take what will be perceived as the first significant step towards leaving Stamford Bridge for a new 60,000-seat stadium, by seeking to buy back the freehold for the land on which their home of 106 years is built.

Shareholders at Chelsea Pitch Owners plc, a company founded in 1993 to safeguard the then financially vulnerable London club’s future at Stamford Bridge, will receive on Tuesday details of an offer to repurchase the pitch, the turnstiles and the freehold for the land on which the stadium’s four stands are built. The company bought the assets for £10m in 1997, with the aid of an £8.5m loan secured from Chelsea’s then holding company. The club are now offering effectively to write off that debt and buy back the freehold for an identical £1.5m.

While Chelsea are at pains to insist that no dialogue is underway with developers over potential new sites, there have been tentative discussions in the recent past over the availability and viability of sites at Battersea Nine Elms, Earl’s Court and Olympia, White City and Imperial Wharf to house a ground that can better Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium in terms of capacity and match-day revenue.

Chelsea are aware of the difficulties in increasing the 41,800 capacity of Stamford Bridge, and they would be better positioned to react to a suitable area becoming available once they have secured the land on which their home since 1905 stands. They would need to sell the stadium for redevelopment, in order to part-fund the purchase of land for any new ground and the construction costs.

Chelsea expect fierce opposition within CPO, a company that was formed to ensure Stamford Bridge never fell into the hands of property developers – the ground had been sold to Marler Estates plc (later Cabra Estates plc) in 1984, only for that company to go into liquidation eight years later – and which may oppose the possibility of the club leaving their only home. The Chelsea chairman, Bruce Buck, is hopeful the potential long-term benefits can secure an agreement.

“Some shareholders will not react positively, and there will be a group of fans who consider this to be a precursor to Chelsea moving, and they will not want Chelsea to move,” Buck said. “At the moment we have no discussions on-going with any developer, and we still have not made the decision that, yes, Chelsea definitely want to move. But, just like any business, we have at least to be prepared for a move if something right comes along.

“This [buying the freehold] is something we should have done five years ago when we were clearing up the financial housekeeping of Chelsea, like the Eurobonds issue and other kinds of financing that we had on the books that really weren’t appropriate for a club now wholly owned by Roman Abramovich.” Asked whether buying the freehold represented the only way Chelsea could move to a new home, Buck said: “That’s the bottom line. We could not move unless the club had the ability to redevelop this site. That would be a precondition to getting the money to help us move.”

Notification of an extraordinary general meeting, to be held on 27 October, has been issued to the 12,000 CPO shareholders. The club will need to secure the support of 50% of those in attendance if their offer is to be accepted. There remains, therefore, potential for the plans to be blocked at an early stage. The fact that shareholders are seeing no return for their investment – the shares cost £100 each in 1997 – could prompt further opposition.

Chelsea have indicated that 10% of seats in any new stadium would be available to families and supporters under 21, and that no relocation would take place before 2020, unless within a three-mile radius of Stamford Bridge.

“There are only ‘x’ number of sites in London that we would consider and, by 2020, we expect those sites to be gone,” Buck said. “So we would have no restrictions after 2020 in terms of where we could move. But we are confident that most of these shareholders are fans of Chelsea and will understand and approve what we’re trying to do.”

ChelseaDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk