Chelsea's head coach Frank Lampard applauds the supporters at the end of the English Premier League soccer match between Chelsea and Leicester City. Photo / AP
Frank Lampard climbed the steps in the tunnel and emerged to rapturous applause from Chelsea fans, a flame display and a giant banner at one end of Stamford Bridge that read "Welcome Home Super Frank."
"The stuff of dreams," Lampard described his homecoming yesterday. He couldn't mark it with a victory, though.
Lampard's winless run as manager of the club where he is the record scorer and one of their greatest players extended to three games after Leicester City fought back to earn a 1-1 draw in the Premier League.
"It's very early for us," Lampard said after his first home match in charge of Chelsea. "We have to be patient as we are working towards something."
After a 4-0 loss at Manchester United on the opening weekend of the league and then a penalty-shootout defeat to Liverpool on Thursday, Chelsea couldn't hold on to the lead given by youngster Mason Mount's seventh-minute goal.
Holding midfielder Wilfred Ndidi was at fault for that goal after being dispossessed by Mount on the edge of Leicester's area but he made amends by scoring the equaliser.
James Maddison swung over the corner and Ndidi rose higher than marker Cesar Azpilicueta to plant a firm header into the corner.
Chelsea struggled in the second half, perhaps through fatigue having been taken to extra time by Liverpool in the Super Cup, which finished after midnight local time in Turkey.
Leicester wasted a clear chance to take all three points when Maddison weaved past Chelsea's static defence in the 73rd minute only to blaze over from close range.
"It's a results business," Lampard said. "It's strange because the performance against Manchester United overall made me happier [than yesterday], even though it was a 4-0 result. We need both.
"There were frustrations. If there were frustrations in the crowd, there were frustrations in the team and on the bench."
While Chelsea have started the season disappointingly under Lampard, Leicester — fancied as contenders to break into the top six under Brendan Rodgers — are also without a win after opening with a 0-0 home draw against Wolverhampton.
"The top six is always going to be difficult," Rodgers said, "but we have got to be aggressive and dominate, whatever arena you are playing in, home or away, and you saw that from my team [yesterday]."
• Sheffield United are comfortably settling back into the Premier League after their return to the top flight after a 12-year absence.
A 1-0 win over Crystal Palace yesterday followed up a 1-1 draw at Bournemouth on the opening weekend.
Only Liverpool and Arsenal have more than Sheffield United's four points from two games.
John Lundstram was the team's match-winner, the midfielder finishing from close range in the 47th minute after Palace keeper Vicente Guaita could only tip away a driven cross into the box.
Palace have yet to score this season, having started with a 0-0 home draw against Everton.