Monday, July 14, 2025

The Weekly Take, Issue 370: Mr. Clutch Does It Again

The final of the Club World Cup had been expected to be one-sided. With the exception of an unexpected group stage loss against Botafogo, Paris Saint-Germain had been taking apart every team that stood in their path. It looked almost certain that PSG, fresh off a historic first-ever Champions League victory, could not be stopped on their imperious charge to the Club World Cup title.

PSG would be playing against Chelsea in the final. The Blues didn’t even top their group after having lost to Flamengo and prior to the final, the only opponent that they faced who had been expected to give the London club any trouble was Benfica, who took Chelsea to extra time before eventually succumbing. Even against these lesser opponents, Chelsea were unimpressive but nonetheless managed to get over the line.

With all this in mind, almost no one gave the London club any chance whatsoever to even slightly trouble the reigning European champions. As things turned out, however, it was indeed a one-sided result - but in a way opposite of what most were expecting. Chelsea beat PSG 3-0 to clinch the title in the first iteration of the revamped Club World Cup.

Chelsea scored all three goals in the first half. Cole Palmer opened the scoring in the 22nd minute, placing his shot from the edge of the penalty area into the bottom corner of the net after having been set up by Malo Gusto. Eight minutes later, Palmer made it 2-0 with a goal that appeared to be remarkably similar to his first - only this time around, he was assisted by Levi Colwill.

Two minutes before the half-time break, Chelsea scored their third with Palmer setting up Brazilian striker João Pedro, Chelsea’s new signing from Brighton & Hove Albion. Capping off PSG’s crushing loss was a red card issued to midfielder João Neves with just five minutes of regulation time remaining following a VAR check.

In any case, the main point following the match was obvious: Cole Palmer has done it again. With two goals and an assist, Palmer has now racked up six goal contributions over his last three finals for both club and country. The Manchester-born winger isn’t just unfazed by the pressure of the big occasion - he thrives under it.

Slightly less than two months ago, Palmer had two assists in another outstanding display in the UEFA Conference League final against Real Betis; he was at the heart of just about everything meaningful that Chelsea did and was then, as he was in the Club World Cup final, named man of the match.

Ever since arriving at Stamford Bridge two years ago after signing from Manchester City, Palmer has time and again put Chelsea on his back and dragged what has often been a very mediocre team to results far beyond what one would ordinarily expect of them. Now, it finally seems as though after years of underwhelming rosters, Chelsea have finally put together a reasonably competitive roster that might just be enough to give Palmer the support he needs.

Of course, Chelsea aren’t going to be the favourites to win the Premier League - those would, as usual, be City and reigning champions Liverpool - but based on what we saw in the final, for the first time since the 2018-19 season, Chelsea will have at least a puncher’s chance of winning the league for the first time since the 2016-17 season.

Adding another layer to this is the World Cup which will take place at the conclusion of the upcoming season. There’s a case to be made that Palmer is already England’s best player right now. At just the age of 23 (24 by the time the World Cup begins), Palmer might already be the player around whom England’s first World Cup-winning team in 60 years could be built. It’s often the case that the Three Lions have wilted under the highest pressure - but Palmer has done the opposite time and again.

Chelsea will enter the 2025-26 season having fired the first salvo - they’ve now shown what they’re truly capable of. And, with Cole Palmer in this form, still several years from his apex, and now surrounded by the team he always should’ve been, for the first time in ages Chelsea are a bona fide force again.

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