Chelsea face a daunting Champions League task against Paris Saint-Germain without captain Reece James, who has suffered another hamstring problem. Liam Rosenior confirmed James will miss the last-16 second leg, with the Blues already trailing 5-2 on aggregate and winless in five Champions League meetings with PSG, drawing two and losing three.
James completed the full 90 minutes in the 1-0 Premier League defeat to Newcastle United, yet the defender was absent from Chelsea’s training session at Cobham on 16 March. The 26-year-old has featured 36 times in all competitions during the 2025-26 campaign, but his latest setback arrives after a career already interrupted by fitness issues.

Rosenior detailed how the injury emerged, confirming James will not feature against the European champions at Stamford Bridge. "With Reece, he felt something in his hamstring at the end of the game against Newcastle [United]," Rosenior told reporters. "Really disappointing. We don’t know the full extent, but it rules him out for tomorrow’s game. It could be [weeks]. With a hamstring injury, it is never great. Hopefully, we can get him scanned, know the full extent, and go from there."
Chelsea’s options at right-back are further reduced, with Rosenior adding that Malo Gusto is also unavailable because of illness. There was at least one boost, as Estevao returned to training and is in contention. Those changes leave Rosenior needing to adjust both the defensive structure and leadership group for the visit of PSG.
The first leg in Paris left Chelsea in serious trouble, as Luis Enrique’s team controlled much of the match at the Parc des Princes. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia came off the bench and helped ensure PSG took a strong lead back to London, punishing Chelsea’s errors and putting the holders in a commanding position in the tie.
Chelsea’s recent knockout record underlines the scale of the challenge. The Blues have lost their last three Champions League knockout matches and have never previously suffered four consecutive defeats at this stage. They conceded five goals in the opening leg, already close to their highest tally allowed across a two-legged knockout tie in the competition, which stands at seven against Bayern Munich in the 2019-20 round of 16.
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History also weighs against Chelsea when attempting a comeback against the holders. Only Deportivo de La Coruna have managed to eliminate defending champions after losing the first leg by at least three goals, doing so against AC Milan in the 2003-04 quarter-finals. That precedent highlights how rare such recoveries are at this level of European football.
Rosenior accepted the scale of the deficit, yet underlined the need for focus in both boxes. "If you look at the game in isolation and the scoreline, we were punished by very good players for our own mistakes," Rosenior said. "We have been undone in games by those moments. We can’t make mistakes tomorrow. We have to remember PSG are European champions for a reason, but we know we can compete."
Data from the Opta supercomputer reflects those concerns. Chelsea are given only a 6% chance of progressing to the quarter-finals. Among the remaining teams, only Tottenham, at 4%, and Atalanta, at 0%, are rated as less likely to advance, underlining how difficult overturning the 5-2 deficit is expected to be.
Despite the numbers, forward Joao Pedro stressed that belief remains strong within the squad and coaching staff. "I think this week was difficult for us. We know our strengths, we still believe because we showed in the Club World Cup when we won 3-0," Joao Pedro said. "The group believe, the manager believes, the fans should believe as well." Chelsea now look to channel that confidence as they attempt to stretch PSG across the pitch and extend their Champions League campaign.