Fresh from claiming the biggest win of his Chelsea career so far, Graham Potter takes his Blues side to the King Power Stadium for Saturday's clash with a confidence-sapped Leicester City.
The visitors saw off Borussia Dortmund 2-1 on aggregate in the Champions League last 16 in midweek, while Brendan Rodgers's men went down 1-0 to Southampton last time out.
Match preview
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At a ground where they famously put nine past Southampton only three and a half years ago, Leicester were stunted by the Saints at St Mary's, failing to turn 65% possession into anything meaningful as they slumped to another painful defeat.
A solitary Carlos Alcaraz strike in the 35th minute was all that was needed to separate the two sides on the night, condemning the Foxes to a fourth straight defeat - including three Premier League defeats in a row - during their latest discouraging spell of form.
As well as witnessing his side fail to find the back of the net or even the target, Rodgers was subjected to chants from the fans calling for his departure, as Leicester languish in 15th in the Premier League table - just two points clear of the drop zone and a further 10 adrift of a top-half spot.
Few would knock Leicester for losing to Arsenal and Manchester United, but going out of the FA Cup at the hands of Blackburn Rovers before wasting chance after chance against Southampton is alarming, and the Foxes could now become the first Premier League team on record to have no shots on target three games in a row.
Rodgers is also at risk of making unwanted personal history - the 50-year-old has lost a joint-high 15 league games this season and could make that 16 this weekend - and Leicester enter Saturday's contest having failed to score in four of their last six Premier League home battles.
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The security of Graham Potter's job has also been a hot topic in the Premier League managerial landscape, but the Englishman has surely got some of the Blues' disgruntled fans back on his side by masterminding a thoroughly-deserved success over Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League.
In an all-too familiar sight for Blues supporters, the ball seem destined to not cross the line at Stamford Bridge, but Raheem Sterling's strike and a retaken Kai Havertz penalty saw Chelsea erase a 1-0 deficit from the first leg and book their spot in the quarter-finals.
Now basking in the success of back-to-back wins following last week's top-flight triumph over Leeds United, Potter may be starting to vindicate the board's decision to keep him on, but Wesley Fofana's game-winning header against the Whites did little to improve Chelsea's 10th-placed standing in the Premier League table.
With an 11-point gap to make up to fourth-placed Tottenham Hotspur - who have played a game more - going for glory in the Champions League is arguably the Blues' best route back into continental competition next year, and their away fortunes still make for wholly unpleasant reading.
Indeed, Chelsea are now winless in their last 10 road matches in all competitions - losing seven of them and scoring just four goals in the process - but the Blues prevailed 2-1 against the Foxes at Stamford Bridge in August and could record their first league double over the hosts since 2016-17, when they wrestled the Premier League crown out of Leicester's grasp.
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Leicester's misery at Southampton was compounded by an injury to Harvey Barnes, who had to be withdrawn at half time due to a twisted ankle, although he is not thought to have suffered any serious damage and may be available here.
However, Saturday's game is expected to come too soon for James Justin, Youri Tielemans and Victor Kristiansen - while Ryan Bertrand and Jonny Evans remain doubts as they build up their respective fitness levels, but the latter is in with a chance of making the squad
Kelechi Iheanacho was guilty of squandering several chances against Southampton, but Rodgers has leapt to the defence of the Nigerian and should keep faith in him from the first whistle here.
Similarly, Chelsea have a few definite absentees of their own to make do without in Thiago Silva, Armando Broja and Edouard Mendy, while N'Golo Kante may not be considered for selection against his old club as Potter urges caution over his fitness.
The luckless Reece James will also sit this one out due to illness, while Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (back) and Sterling (hamstring) are also doubtful, so Ruben Loftus-Cheek and Mykhaylo Mudryk can feel confident of earning starts.
Mason Mount missed the win over Dortmund due to suspension, but he will also need assessing after an abdominal issue kept him out of last weekend's clash with Leeds, while Cesar Azpilicueta may be given a bit more time to recover from the sickening head injury he sustained against Southampton.
Potter's decision to bring Marc Cucurella back in from the cold was justified in midweek, but Benoit Badiashile - who was ineligible for that tie alongside Aubameyang - will expect an immediate recall to the backline here.
Leicester City possible starting lineup:
Ward; Pereira, Souttar, Faes, Castagne; Tete, Ndidi, Dewsbury-Hall, Maddison; Daka, Iheanacho
Chelsea possible starting lineup:
Kepa; Badiashile, Koulibaly, Fofana; Loftus-Cheek, Kovacic, Fernandez, Chilwell; Mudryk, Havertz, Felix
We say: Leicester City 0-1 Chelsea
Switching to a back three has evidently led to a greater sense of defensive discipline for Chelsea, whose staunch rearguard should keep a profligate and likely Barnes-less Leicester at bay with minimal difficulty.
Finding a clinical edge is still a work in progress for the Blues - who have been beset by a few fresh fitness concerns - but with confidence levels slowly rising on the back of recent results, we have faith in Potter's side to record a third win on the bounce.
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