Soccer-Chelsea captain James ruled out of PSG clash with hamstring injury


Soccer Football - Premier League - Chelsea v Newcastle United - Stamford Bridge, London, Britain - March 14, 2026 Chelsea's Reece James applauds their fans after the match REUTERS/David Klein

LONDON, March 16 (Reuters) - Chelsea captain Reece ⁠James will miss Tuesday's Champions League last-16 second-leg clash against Paris St Germain after sustaining a ⁠hamstring injury, manager Liam Rosenior said on Monday, adding that the problem could be serious ‌for the right back.

James, who last week signed a six-year contract extension tying him to his boyhood club until 2032, picked up the issue during Chelsea's 1-0 Premier League home defeat by Newcastle United on Saturday.

The 26-year-old England international did not take part ​in training ahead of the Stamford Bridge game, with Chelsea needing ⁠to overturn a 5-2 first-leg deficit against ⁠the reigning European champions.

"Reece felt something in his hamstring towards the end of the Newcastle game," Rosenior told ⁠reporters. "We ‌don't know the full extent of the injury yet, but he will be out for tomorrow's game.

"It could be serious - with a hamstring injury, it's never ideal. Hopefully, we can get him ⁠scanned and find out more."

Rosenior also provided updates on other fitness ​concerns, with right back Malo Gusto ‌and goalkeeper Filip Jorgensen both doubts.

"Malo is ill today, so we'll look at that tomorrow. ⁠With Filip, he's felt ​something in his groin and we will get him scanned," he said.

Chelsea received a boost on the disciplinary front, with winger Pedro Neto cleared to play after UEFA handed him a warning for pushing a ball boy during the ⁠first-leg defeat at the Parc des Princes.

"He's a fantastic player, he ​has apologised for the incident and I think UEFA have made the right decision," Rosenior said.

Earlier on Monday, Chelsea were fined a record total of 10.75 million pounds ($14.30 million) for historical breaches of Premier League regulations. The ⁠club were also handed a one-year first-team transfer ban, suspended for two years, along with an immediate nine-month academy transfer ban.

Rosenior played down the impact of the sanctions on preparations for Tuesday's match.

"It's not a negative distraction. It's a line drawn through that issue. (Now) we can plan to make this club as strong as ​possible," the 41-year-old Englishman said.

Despite the injuries, off-field issues and a daunting ⁠scoreline, Rosenior insisted his side still believe they can trouble PSG.

"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 (against PSG in ​the final). The group believe, the manager believes, the fans should believe as well," he said.

($1 = 0.7515 pounds)

(Reporting by Pearl Josephine Nazare in Bengaluru, editing by Ed Osmond and Christian Radnedge)

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