I don’t even understand what those three came here to play tonight!” Reports claim Enzo Maresca was seen blasting three Chelsea players after the game, accusing them of being too easy to break down and costing the team.

Chelsea Dressing Room Erupts: Maresca Tears Into Midfield Trio After Narrow Cup Win

The Carabao Cup should have been a footnote. Instead, Chelsea’s 2-1 escape at Lincoln City on September 23, 2025, has turned into a flashpoint inside Enzo Maresca’s squad.

According to multiple reports, the Italian boss lost his composure post-match, singling out Enzo Fernández, Andrey Santos, and Facundo Buonanotte as “too easy to break down” after a first half where League One Lincoln bullied the Blues with long balls and set-piece chaos.

  • Fernández, the £107m World Cup winner, drew the sharpest rebuke for sloppy passing and poor tracking, one lapse directly gifting Lincoln’s opener.
  • Santos, making only his third Chelsea start, was branded “too lightweight” after struggling to shield the backline.
  • Buonanotte heard frustration over his lack of cutting edge, completing neat passes but creating nothing of note in the final third.

Maresca’s fury reportedly boiled over into shouts of: “I don’t even understand what those three came here to play tonight!” Eyewitnesses said the atmosphere was “tense but contained,” with the manager later softening the blow in one-on-ones. Fernández skipped media duty, while Santos and Buonanotte tried to spin the criticism as a lesson learned.

Ironically, it was the half-time triple change—Dewsbury-Hall, Madueke, and Essugo—that flipped the script, sparking a six-minute turnaround that saved Chelsea’s blushes. But the damage to trust may linger.

Already under strain after defeats to Bayern Munich and Manchester United, Maresca is balancing a crippling injury list with mounting fan scrutiny. Some supporters praised the tough love, while others warned the outburst risks alienating loanees and youngsters. Pundits are split too: Gary Neville likened it to “a Mourinho-style wake-up call,” while Jamie Carragher suggested Maresca should share the blame for squad rotation.

With Brighton up next in the league and a fourth-round cup draw looming, the question hangs: will Maresca’s fire forge resilience—or fracture belief?

For Fernández, Santos, and Buonanotte, one message rang clear: excuses won’t cut it at Chelsea.

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