It was a night to forget for Chelsea on Tuesday as their season plummeted to a new low when Liam Rosenior's side were routed 3-0 by Brighton in East Sussex.
Rosenior slammed the performance as "indefensible" and for the first time directly called out his players. Captain Enzo Fernandez looked forlorn as he stood in front of the away fans at the end of the game, clearly realising the enormity of what missing out on Champions League football could mean for the club.
So just how bad is this run -- and what do the stats say?
Historic defeat to Brighton
Chelsea's horror run continued against Brighton at the Amex on Tuesday. Mike Hewitt/Getty Images Chelsea fans turned on manager Liam Rosenior as the club's slim hopes of Champions League qualification suffered another major setback following a dire defeat at the hands of fellow European hopefuls Brighton.
Albion piled pressure on Rosenior by leapfrogging their opponents into sixth place in the Premier League table thanks to goals from Ferdi Kadioglu, Jack Hinshelwood and substitute Danny Welbeck.
The west London outfit have now lost five straight games a row without scoring in the Premier League following the defeat to the Seagulls.
In that period they've been beaten by Newcastle, Everton, Manchester City, Manchester United and now Brighton. The only other Premier League team to go on a five-game winless -- and scoreless -- run this season is a Wolves team that was relegated from the top-flight this week.
Chelsea have conceded 11 goals in those five games and failed to score once -- something which hasn't happened since all the way back in November 1912.
To put that into perspective: that's the same year the Titanic hit the iceberg -- it's no surprise there's a sinking feeling around the club right now...
Next up is a welcome distraction from the Premier League as they face in-form Leeds in an FA Cup semifinal at Wembley.
Chelsea's slide under Liam Rosenior
Rosenior's record as Chelsea manager in all competitionsis W11 D2 L10 from 23 games played, a win percentage of 47.8%.
It's easy to forget how well Rosenior started out as he became just the second English manager to win his first four Premier League games (against Brentford, Crystal Palace, West Ham and Wolves)
During that period there was also a heavy loss to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League round of 16. It was the club's joint-heaviest defeat in a two‑legged European tie, losing 8-2 on aggregate and 3-0 on the night to the French side.

