Atalanta Stun Chelsea with Late Comeback to Dent Blues’ Champions League Hopes

Chelsea’s hopes of sealing automatic qualification for the Champions League knockout rounds suffered a setback as Atalanta overturned a deficit to win in Bergamo.
Both teams entered the match level on points, each with three wins, one draw and one defeat. Chelsea struck first when João Pedro guided home Reece James’ cross, but Atalanta remained dangerous throughout, with former Charlton and Everton forward Ademola Lookman a constant threat.
James went close early in the second half, yet Atalanta’s pressure grew and they deservedly equalised through Gianluca Scamacca’s well-taken header. Alejandro Garnacho tested the keeper soon after, but Chelsea’s defence later backed off Charles De Ketelaere, who punished them with a powerful late winner.
Pedro was denied an equaliser by a brilliant Marco Carnesecchi save, leaving Chelsea empty-handed and dropping from the top eight to 11th with two league-phase fixtures remaining. Atalanta’s victory lifts them to third, three points ahead of the Blues.
Chelsea analysis – slump deepens
Chelsea will be frustrated to leave with nothing after leading, especially as even a draw would have kept them on track for a top-eight finish and automatic qualification. Atalanta’s form made this a tough challenge, but defensive lapses proved costly.
The defeat extends Chelsea’s poor run: since beating Barcelona 3–0 in late November, they have gone four matches without a win across competitions.
Is rotation harming Chelsea?
Enzo Maresca made five changes to his starting XI, continuing a trend of heavy rotation—five changes against Leeds and six against Bournemouth. While he argues this is necessary to manage workloads, he insists the core of the team remains consistent.
He noted that eight or nine of the starters had also featured against Tottenham, Barcelona, and Arsenal, suggesting the team’s spine is intact despite the frequent adjustments.