sport news After Frank Lampard, why are Chelsea's young stars jumping ship?

sport news After Frank Lampard, why are Chelsea's young stars jumping ship?
sport news After Frank Lampard, why are Chelsea's young stars jumping ship?

Of all the images that stuck with Chelsea fans after they were crowned winners of the Champions League in Porto, it was the beaming smiles of Mason Mount and Reece James clutching the trophy that stood out. 

Two players that were every bit made at Cobham. Talent nurtured, patience shown and both now stand as bonafide first team stars.

Academy stars making the grade is often high up a supporter's priority list at clubs at every level but when Chelsea have so many resources, so many leading talents, supporters are itching to see them thrown in.

And under Frank Lampard - and a transfer embargo - they did get a go, multiple chances in fact. These 'kids' were the 'future of this club,' claimed Lampard. What he must make of this mass exodus.

Lewis Bate, 18, is one of a number of Chelsea Academy talents that has moved this summer

Lewis Bate, 18, is one of a number of Chelsea Academy talents that has moved this summer

Marc Guehi has joined Crystal Palace in an £18m deal

Billy Gilmour has opted to join Norwich on a season-long loan

Marc Guehi has joined Crystal Palace in an £18m deal while Billy Gilmour is on loan at Norwich

Mount returned from a loan spell with Derby, under Lampard, and soon took the next step while James proved he was cut-out for the limelight as he enjoyed a stellar campaign in a right back battle with Cesar Azpilicueta.

Tammy Abraham got ample opportunities to lead the line and he repaid Lampard handsomely by finishing 2019-20 as Chelsea's top scorer with 15 goals.

There were opportunities too for Fikayo Tomori and towards the end of the season in came young Scot Billy Gilmour. 

Even Callum Hudson-Odoi, who had been used sparingly by Maurizio Sarri, was getting a more prominent role amid Bayern Munich's interest. The future couldn't have looked brighter.  

Lampard guided his gang of plucky youngsters to fourth in the league and with it came Champions League qualification, a huge success given the star-studded line-ups of rivals.

It wasn't a league title or a Champions League trophy but that season, and those young rising stars, brought plenty of excitement and enjoyment to supporters.

One or two marquee additions last summer was the sense among some, give the youngsters some star quality to help them kick on.

What instead transpired was a £220million attack on the transfer market that saw Kai Havertz, Timo Werner, Thiago Silva and Ben Chilwell among the heavyweight arrivals. 

Tomori had already been farmed out loan to AC Milan by Lampard after Silva arrived and perhaps that was a sign of what was to come. 

Thomas Tuchel is in win-now mode and there is only so far sentiment with the Academy will go

Frank Lampard was quick to promote a number of academy players into the first team when he took over

Thomas Tuchel (left) is in win-now mode and there is only so far sentiment with the Academy will go as he has shown less willingness to blood youngsters than Frank Lampard (right) did

Mount survived the overhaul, as did James, but it was those looking up, the likes of Gilmour and defender Marc Guehi, that were having to ask themselves: can I ever break through? 

And so when Lampard was axed back in January in favour of Thomas Tuchel, there was an air of trepidation as to what that meant for the next crop of kids. He arrived in a win-now mode and was also tasked with getting the likes of Werner and Havertz singing.

Sentiment can only go so far and the exile of Abraham, which has seen him linked to a move across London to join Arsenal this summer, shows Tuchel's ruthlessness when it comes to the Cobham Kids.   

It seems the concern for a pathway to the first team is sinking in with Chelsea's rising stars and rather than dipping in and out with loans, many are now heading elsewhere, and heading out the door en masse this summer.  

Lewis Bate, 18, had one year left on his Chelsea deal but opted against signing a new one due to concerns about his potential pathway.

Lampard made Reece James (middle) a key part of his plan as he navigated a transfer embargo

Lampard made Reece James (middle) a key part of his plan as he navigated a transfer embargo

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