Three days after a 0-1 defeat to Manchester City in the FA Cup Final, Chelsea return to Premier League action at Stamford Bridge under interim manager Calum McFarlane, processing a second major disappointment of their spring. Across the technical area will sit Roberto De Zerbi, the Tottenham head coach who arrived at Spurs with considerable ambition but is now reportedly wrestling with a significant internal dilemma, according to the Standard. With Tottenham sitting 17th and Chelsea 10th, the match is short on title-race stakes but long on narrative, particularly around what De Zerbi is building and where he intends to take the club.

Roberto De Zerbi’s tactical fingerprint
De Zerbi built his reputation at Shakhtar Donetsk, Sassuolo and Brighton on a possession-heavy, positional style that asks fullbacks to invert, midfielders to rotate constantly, and forwards to press high as the first line of defence. His teams are designed to dominate the ball and create overloads in central areas through quick combination play, making them uncomfortable to press and difficult to track without a well-organised defensive block.
Against a Chelsea side operating without their permanent head coach and still carrying the emotional weight of Saturday’s final, De Zerbi will likely instruct Tottenham to stay compact in shape and use their technical midfielders, including Rodrigo Bentancur and Lucas Bergvall, to control tempo. Chelsea’s form reads DLLLL in their last five league outings, and they have conceded 49 goals in 36 Premier League games this season. That defensive vulnerability is precisely the kind of opening De Zerbi’s system is built to exploit.

What the data says
Tottenham’s last five results show W-W-D-D-L, a sequence that suggests a team finding its feet rather than one in free fall, despite the 17th-place ranking on 38 points. The draw at home to Leeds eight days ago was flat, but back-to-back wins against Wolverhampton and Aston Villa before that gave De Zerbi’s side a more encouraging stretch. Chelsea, by contrast, have won once in their last five across all competitions, that being a 1-0 FA Cup semi-final win over Leeds in April.
The head-to-head record at Stamford Bridge strongly favours the hosts: Chelsea have won eight of the last ten meetings between the sides across all tracked fixtures, and in the last five H2H Premier League matches they have won four with one away victory for Tottenham. The reverse fixture this season ended 0-1 to Chelsea at Tottenham’s ground. De Zerbi has yet to oversee a Spurs win in this fixture, adding another layer of personal motivation.
The stakes for Roberto De Zerbi
The Standard reported 44 hours before kickoff that De Zerbi is navigating an unexpected internal dilemma at the club, though the specifics centre on squad decisions rather than his position itself. Still, a coach who arrived to transform Tottenham’s identity cannot afford the season to simply drift out. Finishing 17th would represent one of the club’s worst top-flight campaigns in recent memory and would intensify scrutiny over whether his project is taking root. A win at Stamford Bridge, historically a difficult venue for Spurs, would give him a concrete reference point to point toward as he shapes the squad this summer. For a coach whose system demands buy-in and time, ending the season with momentum matters more than the final placing can reflect.
Key Stats
Our Prediction
De Zerbi will set Tottenham up to control possession and test Chelsea’s fragile defensive shape, and there is real logic to Spurs picking up something here given their opponents’ emotional and physical fatigue. That said, Chelsea’s H2H dominance at Stamford Bridge is hard to ignore, and even a makeshift Blues side has shown enough at home to make this competitive. A draw feels like the most honest reflection of where both clubs are right now.