-
Oil extends losses as Trump flags Venezuela shipments, stocks mixed
-
Medvedev extends strong start to season ahead of Australian Open
-
Bethell slams maiden century to leave final Ashes Test on knife edge
-
Nollywood meets Bollywood: filmmaker fuses Indian, Nigerian culture
-
India women's historic cricket World Cup win fires up T20 league
-
South Korea's Lee says urged Xi to help curb North's nukes
-
England's Bethell hits maiden Test century as family watch on
-
US car market expected to moderate in 2026
-
Swiatek, Gauff ease to United Cup victories
-
Strasbourg face pitfalls of multi-club system as Chelsea take Rosenior
-
Bethell stands tall as England 174-3 in final Test, nine behind
-
Ex-CIA agent convicted of spying for Soviets dies in prison
-
James, Doncic carry Lakers past Pelicans
-
Vietnamese caught in Japan's illegal worker crackdown
-
Nostalgia and new fans as Tamagotchi turns 30
-
Oil extends losses as Trump flags Venezuela shipments, stocks wobble
-
Overseas scholars drawn to China's scientific clout, funding
-
From music to mind reading: AI startups bet on earbuds
-
'Of course it's not safe': small city in Russia tries to shrug off war
-
'Simple' goodbye to Bardot lined up in Saint-Tropez
-
England lose Crawley as they battle to save final Ashes Test
-
Nvidia CEO praises robots as 'AI immigrants'
-
Talks on Ukraine guarantees to continue after Paris 'progress'
-
Pentixapharm Receives FDA Feedback for Phase 3 Diagnostic Study in Hypertension
-
CellRight Tech: Private Equity Funding Secured
-
Grande Portage Receives US Forest Service Special Use Permit for Environmental Infrastructure at the New Amalga Gold Project
-
WELT Unveils the World's First "AI-Combo Drug" at CES 2026
-
AI, outdated visuals fuel misinformation after Maduro capture
-
John Harbaugh fired by Ravens after 18 seasons
-
Jays and Astros hope to match Dodgers' Japan success
-
Under-fire Frank claims support of Tottenham hierarchy
-
Fletcher asked for Ferguson's advice before taking Man Utd interim role
-
Juventus bounce back in Serie A as Roma, Como in Champions League hunt
-
New Venezuela leader says 'no foreign power' running country
-
NBA Bulls sign Japanese guard Kawamura
-
Rubio was called a sell-out, then he won on Venezuela
-
Relief mixed with fear as Venezuelans cross into Colombia
-
Nine dead in clashes between Syria govt, Kurdish forces in Aleppo
-
Forest boost survival bid to leave West Ham in turmoil
-
Boulbina stunner takes Algeria through, Diallo sparkles for I. Coast
-
Trump considering military options to acquire Greenland
-
Diallo stars as Ivory Coast set up Egypt showdown in AFCON
-
Teen killed in anti-conscription protest in Jerusalem
-
Diallo stars as Ivory Coast set up Egyptsh owdown in AFCON
-
Black Caps go spin heavy for T20 World Cup campaign
-
Brazil oil drilling near Amazon halted over 'fluid leak'
-
Western allies agree Ukraine guarantees after Paris 'progress'
-
DR Congo's human statue becomes AFCON's most famous fan
-
Boulbina extra-time stunner takes Algeria through to AFCON quarter-finals
-
Doncic, Giannis lead NBA All-Star voting
Little-known Rosenior set for surprise chance at Chelsea
Liam Rosenior is a little-known English coach who looks certain to be thrust into a fierce spotlight as Chelsea's new manager.
If Rosenior becomes the latest coach on the Chelsea carousel to replace the departed Enzo Maresca, he will have benefited from the Blues' owners' multi-club model to earn promotion from Ligue 1's Strasbourg to the upper echelons of the Premier League.
And while he may never have coached in the Premier League, he comes with a glowing reference from former Manchester United and England great Wayne Rooney.
After a short spell in charge of Brighton's under-23s, Rosenior, 41, began his senior coaching career in 2019 at Derby County, first under Philiip Cocu and then as assistant to Rooney.
"He's taken chances, and hopefully that pays off because I think Liam is as good a coach as I've ever worked with," Rooney said on his BBC podcast.
"He was incredible in his coaching ability," added Rooney, highlighting Rosenior's attention to detail.
Rosenior briefly replaced Rooney on an interim basis in 2022 and later that year took over as manager of Hull City in the Championship.
After just over 18 months in charge, he was sacked and in July 2024 was appointed by Strasbourg, the French club who are owned by Chelsea's parent company BlueCo,
That link appears to be the main reason the west Londoners are considering Rosenior, given his relative dearth of top-flight experience. Strasbourg are currently seventh in Ligue 1.
But according to Rooney, "he's done his apprenticeship... so he'll have no doubts in his mind that he's capable of doing that job."
He would become only the fourth English manager in the current Premier League.
In an interview with AFP last year, Rosenior spelled out his coaching philosophy.
"For me, regardless of style of play, tactics, systems, how fit your team is, I think football is played by people," he said.
"People have emotions and are complex. They have good days and bad. My job is actually to get the best out of people."
- Role model dad -
Rosenior, a right back in his playing days, certainly has football in his blood.
His father Leroy was a striker for Fulham, Queens Park Rangers, West Ham and Bristol City and, although born in London, he represented the Sierra Leone national team due to family links.
Liam followed in his father's footsteps, playing for both Bristol City and Fulham during a long career split mostly between the Premier League and Championship.
Leroy also went into management and Liam twice played under his dad, firstly in the Bristol City youth ranks and then in the old Third Division during a brief loan spell at Torquay United when he was 19.
"I'm grateful to my dad for giving me that chance. I learnt more in three months there than anywhere else," Liam told The Independent in 2006.
Perhaps surprisingly, though, Leroy was not a pushy parent and always let Liam choose his own path.
"Dad is the main influence in my career, not because he was always telling me what to do, but through his presence and that he had done it before," Liam told The Independent. "Kids have role models; my dad was mine."
Like his father, he represented England at under-21 level, although he never made the switch to Sierra Leone at senior level.
Incidentally, his brother Darren played amateur rugby union for Rosslyn Park.
Liam found silverware hard to come by as a player, but did score the clinching second goal for Bristol City in their Football League Trophy success in 2003.
In 2014, he was part of the Hull City team that took an early 2-0 lead over Arsenal in the FA Cup final, only to lose 3-2 after extra time.
If he is appointed soon, one of his first tasks as Chelsea manager would be trying to get the Blues past Arsenal in a two-legged League Cup semi-final, with the first leg on January 14.
L.Harper--AMWN