For Jose Mourinho, that euphoric Premier League title feeling came with beating Crystal Palace. By the timeChelsea got around to lifting the trophy on Sunday he was past it, speaking with the pride of a winner but also the steely glint in the eye of a man who is already plotting the next triumph.
“I always believe if you are not better than you were the season before, normally you don’t retain the title, so if we want to win the title next year, and obviously we want to do that, we have to be better,” he told Sky Sports as his players celebrated on the pitch at Stamford Bridge. “I have to be better, these players have to be better and maybe our squad needs some fresh blood to put the current squad under a bit of pressure.
“The players know me, they know I’m not going to give positions just because of what they did this year, but I think maybe a couple of players to improve the squad to put them under pressure would help us compete against the fantastic opponents we are going to have.”
Mourinho is well aware that Chelsea’s first Premier League title in five years was made possible by a brilliant summer of targeted recruitment. Diego Costa was acquired in a €46 million deal from Atletico Madrid to provide the goals that a faded Fernando Torres could not. Cesc Fabregas came in to turn a talented but reactive midfield into one capable of winning matches on the front foot. Thibaut Courtois finally made the leap from loan superstar to first-choice goalkeeper.
All three men were integrated into the squad before Chelsea embarked on a pre-season tour of mainland Europe in late July, and by the start of the season Mourinho could not hide his pleasure at the talent and cohesion of his group. “We have the squad that we want to have,” he told reporters in August. “It is a squad for tomorrow, for next season and also a squad with big possibilities for the next five or 10 years with so many young people. So I like my squad very much.”
Chelsea’s achievement mirrored that of Manchester City the summer before, when Fernandinho and Jesus Navas arrived to bolster an already formidable squad on July 1 and went on to play key roles as Manuel Pellegrini’s men saw off Liverpool and the Blues to claim a second title in three seasons, scoring an outrageous 102 goals in the process.
It is a common theme. In the last five seasons only two men signed towards the end of a summer window have gone on to be key contributors to a Premier League title-winning team. One was Sergio Aguero, a superstar-in-waiting when he joined City in late July of 2011, missing most of the club’s pre-season tour of the USA. The other was Robin van Persie, already the best striker in England by a distance upon signing for Manchester United in mid-August 2012.
LATE IMPACT | Sergio Aguero arrived from Atletico Madrid in late July but hit the ground running (Getty)
ALL SMILES | RVP was Sir Alex Ferguson's last big-name signing and was an instant hit (Getty)
These exceptional talents are the exceptions that prove the rule. Louis van Gaal only has to cast his mind back to last summer to recall how difficult it is to try to keep up with the Premier League’s finest after a chaotic, disjointed and draining pre-season. Their major transfer business done early, Chelsea’s preparations were every bit as serene as what has followed.
This summer the sense of urgency is exacerbated by the fact that the new Premier League season is slated to begin on August 8 – the earliest starting date for 15 years. Signings will have less time to adjust to their new surroundings, team-mates and managers, making those July weeks all the more crucial if they are to hit the ground running in the manner of Costa and Fabregas.
United have made an encouraging start, wrapping up a €31.4m deal for Memphis Depay with three matches of the season to spare and sending the faded Radamel Falcao back to Monaco. But Van Gaal still has plenty to do if he wants to bring the Premier League’s most unbalanced squad up to championship standard.
City’s planned overhaul should make their supporters nervous – and not just because Txiki Begiristain is the man making the decisions. The likes of Raheem Sterling, Kevin De Bruyne and Paul Pogba are glamorous targets but if Pellegrini is saddled with wholesale change he will need every minute of pre-season to turn his squad into coherent contenders.
CREATOR IN CHIEF | Former Chelsea man Kevin De Bruyne has starred in the Bundesliga (Getty)
WANTED MAN | City will be among a host of clubs interested in Juventus' Paul Pogba (Getty)
Arsene Wenger is right when he insists that Arsenal require quality rather than quantity, but there remains the fear that his endless pondering will be wholly unsuited to a transfer window where decisiveness will be more valuable than ever before.
News of an ambitious bid for Real Madrid’s Karim Benzema is heartening but the Gunners’ boss will be judged on his results.
Chelsea will again look to strengthen but they enjoy the advantage of building from the highest base. “It’s not the problem of Chelsea, it’s the problem of the others,” Blues legend Marcel Desailly told
Goal last week. “If United, Arsenal and City don’t have that consistency of performance, Chelsea will again be ahead of all the other teams.”
With Mourinho already eyeing the next piece of silverware, Chelsea’s Premier League rivals face an unenviable task to ensure their squads are up for the challenge. Worse still, the clock is ticking.