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Facing the most important match of the season so far for Chelsea, Liam Rosenior must confront a major dilemma in his starting lineup.

Liam Rosenior will be playing for a spot in the Champions League quarterfinals with a dilemma on his mind: play Filip Jorgensen, who made several errors in the first leg, or return the starting spot to Robert Sanchez, who could not prevent Newcastle United's victory this weekend.

The English coach surprised everyone by starting Jorgensen at the Parc des Princes. A risky decision that cost him the match, with a distribution error that led to Vitinha's 3-2 goal and a poor save on Khvicha Kvaratskhelia's shot that resulted in the 5-2. Enzo Fernandez, angry with his teammate's performance, confronted him about it.

"I trust both goalkeepers I have. His match against PSG was magnificent for 75 minutes; then he made a mistake, and we lost a match in a way we shouldn't have," Rosenior admitted after the match.

Jorgensen has been Robert Sanchez's regular backup this season and has played only 10 matches across all competitions. However, his good performance on March 3 against Aston Villa motivated Rosenior to start him in one of the key matches of the season.

This "punishment" of Robert Sanchez did not work out, and Rosenior had to backtrack this weekend, lining up the Spaniard in the 1-0 loss against Newcastle.

"Rob Sanchez is one of the best goalkeepers in the league. There are no doubts about two players of this quality, but my decision is based on each match and depending on what I prefer in that position," the Blues' coach acknowledged.

Rosenior, from the start, has opted not to have a No. 1. At least not officially. From Jan. 14 until March 1, Robert Sanchez played every match. Twelve straight matches, until the loss against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium, encouraged the coach to bench the Murcian and give the starting spot to Jorgensen.

Now, the atypical situation has arisen where Chelsea has alternated its goalkeepers in the last five matches. This is a top-level team, and at the key moment of the season, with three competitions at stake, it is very rare, and looking ahead to Tuesday, Rosenior will have to decide again. Be consistent and start Jorgensen again against Paris Saint-Germain, or, as everything points to, trust Robert Sanchez again.

Be that as it may, it is plausible that, given the instability in Chelsea's goal, the club will have to turn to the winter transfer market to try to find a solution to a position that has not had a consistent, long-term owner since the days of Thibaut Courtois at Stamford Bridge.

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