Chelsea's new manager Maurizio Sarri is beginning to settle in his new surroundings.The 59-year-old Italian coach replaced his compatriot Antonio Conte after a drawn-out summer saga.Sarri finished his three-year stay at Napoli after transforming them into one of the most exciting outfits across Europe.He begins his Chelsea reign with a pre-season friendly against Perth Glory on July 23."The child in each of us must be nurtured because this is what makes us the best," said Sarri at his unveiling last week."Trying to create a play that has fun is the first thing to obtain."As part of their stay in Australia, the Chelsea players took part in an open training session in Perth on Saturday.

Insight into Sarri's training

Fans and media were treated to a first look at Sarri's coaching.

The Daily Mail's Kieran Gill offered a fascinating insight into the Italian's unique training methods.

He wrote: "It [the training session] started with Chelsea's players playing with the ball at the back, producing one-touch passes as if for the sake of it, before a whistled signal from Maurizio Sarri.

"Suddenly, choreographed chaos. The ball had to be handed to Jorginho and the entire team would break at electrifying speed, the move eventually ending once Alvaro Morata had scored.

"An exercise in how to go from back to front in less than 10 seconds, essentially, and one we can expect to see examined on Match of the Day this season.

"If they scored, Sarri would shout: 'Again.' If they missed: 'Again.' If they messed it up midway through: 'Again.'

"Repetitive, but the new boss wants this to become second nature."

We're going to see a very different Chelsea this season.

Footage shared on Twitter

Napoli's style of football was lauded all over Europe last season - and Sarri is hoping to make a similar impression in west London.

An Australian Chelsea fan posted a video from Sarri's training session on Twitter.

Gill added: "One drill included keeping possession in tight circles while defenders acted as piggies in the middle. Another was about winning the ball as high up the pitch as possible.

"There was also a short 11-a-side match with both teams playing 4-2-3-1 in the first half then 4-3-3 in the second. Jorginho the orchestrator on one side, Cesc Fabregas on the other."

If nothing else, Chelsea are going to be a lot more fun to watch under Sarri.

Will he be a success at Stamford Bridge? Let us know your opinion in the comments section below.