Cahill: Raise your game or risk being shown the door by Chelsea

Reuben Rosso-Powell
Press Association
Gary Cahill and caretaker boss Frank Lampard know what it means to be Chelsea players
Gary Cahill and caretaker boss Frank Lampard know what it means to be Chelsea players

Gary Cahill claims Chelsea's misfiring players must prove themselves or face the prospect of being sold this summer. 

Cahill's former side were comfortably beaten 2-1 at home by Brighton last weekend, leaving the Blues languishing 11th in the Premier League. 

Frank Lampard's men will bid to overturn a 2-0 deficit against Real Madrid in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final tonight at Stamford Bridge. 

Speaking ahead of the game, Cahill said: "Ultimately, if people are not playing up to their level then they leave or they get sold. That's my experience at the club. 

"As soon as you're not cutting it, you're out the team or you're sold and they get the next best thing in. 

"As a player I'd be looking and thinking am I playing to the level I should be? If I'm not, I'd be worried in terms of thinking I'm not going to be here. 

Chelsea have a mountain to climb after last week's 2-0 defeat at the Bernabeu
Chelsea have a mountain to climb after last week's 2-0 defeat at the Bernabeu

"The pressure's on at the big clubs and that's the difference. Your job's sometimes easy because you play with better players but the pressure around you is 10 times more than it is when you're playing at a smaller club. 

"If they're not playing well enough I'm sure the club will move them on, so there's pressure from everyone.

"Playing for the badge at Chelsea — from my experience and from Lamps' experience and the lads before us — is to go on and challenge for trophies. 

"That's the whole reason you try and get into the top teams because you want to try and win stuff."

Cahill, who played for Chelsea between 2012 and 2019, highlighted the troubles that come hand-in-hand with the club's overloaded squad. 

The ex-England international, 37, added: "When you've got so many players, man-managing is really, really difficult, especially at a big club. You've got players all thinking they should play. 

"You’re leaving players on the bench that are slightly not happy, you're leaving a lot of players in the stand. 

"It's really hard to manage that group of players and get the best out of them."

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