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Maurizio Sarri felt greater pressure from Napoli fans than at Chelsea

 during the Carabao Cup Semi-Final First Leg match between Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea at Wembley Stadium on January 8, 2019 in London, England.
Image: Sarri felt the pressure more during his time at Napoli

Maurizio Sarri says he is not fazed by the pressure building on him following Chelsea's slump in form, insisting the stakes were higher in his previous job with Napoli.

The Blues dropped out of the Champions League places on Wednesday night after they were thrashed 4-0 at Bournemouth - their third successive away defeat.

Chelsea is a club with a reputation for showing little patience with under-performing managers - they have had 12 permanent bosses in 15 years - but Sarri is not concerned.

He said: "My job is always at risk, and I love my job for this. I thrive on pressure.

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Maurizio Sarri admits he did not anticipate taking over as Chelsea head coach would prove to be so difficult.

"I arrived from Napoli and they were in the Champions League for the third time in a row. The level here is very high, but the level there wasn't so low.

"I think there was more pressure at Napoli. Naples is the only city in Italy with only one team, so the pressure from the fans is really big.

"It's not my problem. I want to remain the same man. If I am a dreamer, I'm a dreamer. If I have fun with my football, I want to play my football. If I believe organisation of the team is everything, I cannot change my mind."

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Sarri admitted once again following Chelsea's defeat at the Vitality Stadium that he may be unable to motivate the players he inherited after arriving in the summer.

Maurizio Sarri congratulates Gonzalo Higuain after this record-breaking feat
Image: Sarri worked with Gonzalo Higuain at Napoli

The 60-year-old says it is tough for him to make adjustments on the training field, however, due to the intense nature of Chelsea's fixture schedule.

"It's very difficult to have training here [in England]. You start to play every three days in August. In five months, we have only one week without a match in the week," said Sarri.

"So it's very difficult to improve single players and the team. We are trying to change something but we have little time.

"Now we are working on the last 30 metres [the attack], but the time is very little."

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