Posted: 08:23, 1 May 2022 | Updated: 10:18, 1 May 2022
Everton fans are desperately trying to help their team avoid relegation after the fireworks outside the Chelsea hotel. Thomas Tuchel’s team is in town to face the Toffees at Goodison Park in the Premier League on Sunday. However, any hope for an early night for the Blues’s players was dashed as fans threw a series of fireworks outside the Hilton Hotel in an attempt to prevent visitors from falling asleep long before the Premier League clash. Everton fans set off fireworks outside Chelsea hotel to disrupt guests’ sleep patterns In the video, loud fireworks, explosions and crackling are seen just outside the hotel and reportedly lasted more than an hour and a half until almost 3 in the morning. It comes before a crucial clash for Frank Lampard’s team, which needs all the help it can get, as their chances of avoiding relegation from the Premier League now seem smaller and smaller. They have just six games to defend the proud record of the top division since 1954. Frank Lampard’s team has just six games to avoid relegation for the first time since 1954 The Toffees are currently in the bottom three with two games in hand with Burnley and Leeds Everton are currently in the top three with two games to go against Burnley and Leeds – although they are now five points behind. Burnley ousted their fortune under caretaker manager Mike Jackson following the recent dismissal of Sean Dietz. Things are starting to look more and more worrying for the Toffees, so the fans are trying to play their part by helping them avoid falling. The fans are also planning a support march on Goodison Road to lift the players as they arrive to face Chelsea. Everton can be encouraged by their home form, as they have taken seven points in nine of their last three home games under Lampard. He could do with a similar result to the one that shocked Manchester United with a 1-0 victory thanks to Anthony Gordon last month. “I see a club here in Everton that are very good guys trying to stay in the league,” said the coach. “We have to keep that spirit because the spirit in football is a huge thing. At the moment, the children are very much together and they are fighting together and I have to lead it “. Boss Lampard is looking for inspiration from his first club, West Ham, and his uncle Harry Redknapp, as Everton struggle to stay afloat and try to become the right Premier League force. “We understand how important it is for us to stay in the league, but no one gets a free ticket,” Lampard said. ‘ There are things I see in the long run that I want to change to make the club better and I have had a lot of support for it. “West Ham have fought against relegation, they now have a fantastic coach and one of the best young players in the world from their academy at Declan Rice, but for all that you have to work.”