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Chelsea's Thibaut Courtois wants Didier Drogba to return from MLS

Thibaut Courtois believes Chelsea legend Didier Drogba would be a "great addition" to Guus Hiddink's backroom staff as the Premier League champions look to turn around their disappointing season.

Chelsea want to add their former striker Drogba to the club's coaching team but negotiations have proven difficult, given the 37-year-old remains under contract with MLS side Montreal Impact until December 2016.

The striker sat alongside interim manager Hiddink and club owner Roman Abramovich during the 3-1 victory over Sunderland at Stamford Bridge on Dec. 19, though Hiddink later said it would be down to Chelsea officials to determine whether Drogba can join his coaching staff.

But Blues goalkeeper Courtois says he would welcome Drogba back to West London, and thinks the forward -- who won four Premier Leagues, four FA Cups and the Champions League during his two spells at the club -- would boost the team as they sit 14th in the table.

"I had a very good relationship with him last year. He was great for the dressing room and our team," Courtois said. "If he comes back as a coach it will be a great addition to all the team."

Courtois, 23, says the Blues' mentality has changed under Hiddink, who is now unbeaten in three games after Sunday's 3-0 win at Crystal Palace.

The victory leaves Hiddink's men nine points off sixth-placed West Ham and 13 adrift of Tottenham in fourth, but the performance suggested they may yet be capable of a late surge towards the European spots.

Chelsea host Scunthorpe in the FA Cup third round on Sunday before league games at home to West Brom and Everton, and Courtois insists all is not lost with his team also through to the Champions League last 16.

"Obviously if you win the FA Cup or the Champions League maybe it will still be a positive [season]," he said. "Success is a big word if you play until now not very well except the last three or four games. But still with the FA Cup or maybe the Champions League it could be a positive season if we end up in the top four or top six.

"We have to go step by step. Some teams are close together. If we beat West Brom and Everton we could be maybe eighth or ninth in a few weeks. Everything can change very fast, we just need the results."

Oscar, Willian and Diego Costa were all on the scoresheet at Selhurst Park for Hiddink's first win since being appointed as Jose Mourinho's successor just over two weeks ago.

Costa and Oscar, both struggling under Mourinho, now have five goals between them since the Portugese coach left while Cesc Fabregas, another to lose form earlier this season, was also much improved against Palace.

"It's something psychological and sometimes it changes with little changes. Maybe we needed a little change to pick up our level," Courtois said.

"In football it's always like that. When results are not good the first thing they look at is the manager. But I don't think it is only the manager, the players have to take responsibility as well. We were the ones who were not playing as well. With a new manager some things changed. Maybe with some players the mentality changed.

"We of course know we were responsible as well. We had team meetings where we said, 'OK, the manager has gone, but we are responsible as well and we need to pick up our levels because we are not good enough for being a Chelsea player.' Now we are stepping up our game."

Hiddink led Chelsea to FA Cup glory when he took temporary charge at Stamford Bridge in 2009, and the Dutchman already appears to have imposed a sense of stability at the club.

"Obviously training is a little bit different -- the approach he has sometimes in how he wants to train," Courtois added. "Maybe sometimes a bit more tactical, a bit less, different types of little games we play or shooting the ball to give confidence to the strikers.

"Sometimes he is more outside of the training, more observing and leaving the training more to [assistant first-team coaches] Steve Holland and Eddie Newton. He just steps in when he thinks he needs to explain something to the team. When he explains he explains it well. Every manager has his way of working."

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