Sunday, February 26, 2017

Swansea City 3-1


Observer:

Fàbregas and Pedro see off stubborn Swansea as Chelsea stay way out in front

Chelsea 3 - 1 Swansea

Dominic Fifield

Antonio Conte has grown used of late to knocking back suggestions the Premier League title is already all but Chelsea’s, though he will do well to maintain that facade of incredulity for much longer.

His side’s advantage gapes at 11 points after this victory, a win chiselled out against a much improved Swansea City. If the leaders crane their necks, squinting back over their shoulders, they might just make out the chasing pack massing on the horizon, but their threat is distant.

This was a 12th consecutive home success, equalling a club record, with Conte having triumphed in all but one of his matches in this arena since taking charge last summer. His delighted post-match routine, gripping triumphant players in bear hugs out on the pitch, has become the norm. All his key performers, from the irrepressible N’Golo Kanté to David Luiz, Eden Hazard to Diego Costa, continue to deliver. Pedro Rodríguez is prolific, and even those considered back-ups are proving influential.

Cesc Fàbregas was offered a relatively rare start but still revelled, scoring on his 300th Premier League appearance and providing a passable impression of Frank Lampard with his threatening runs from deep. It was fitting the club’s leading scorer was present as a guest to witness this display.

Given how efficiently every facet of this team is functioning, it is hard to imagine Chelsea stumbling over the last three months. Their distant challengers have been left pinning all their hopes on a collapse that would now need to be worse than that blip in the autumn and those defeats to Liverpool and Arsenal, which had famously sparked the change in system, resolve and fortune. It would take more than a stumble. Chelsea would have to collapse entirely to be denied a second title in three seasons. Wins like this, in games that are tight for periods but end up appearing comfortable, give the impression this pursuit of silverware has long since become something of a procession.

Swansea could cling to the equaliser they plundered in stoppage time at the end of the first half, courtesy of Gylfi Sigurdsson’s wonderfully arced free-kick from the centre-circle and Fernando Llorente’s emphatic header beyond Thibaut Courtois.

Paul Clement could also point to the non-award of a penalty while the contest was still level early in the second half, Sigurdsson flicking the ball up on to César Azpilicueta’s hand with the referee, Neil Swarbrick, apparently enjoying a fine view of the incident.

But even the Swansea manager admitted those were isolated incidents, provoking pangs of anxiety amid waves of Chelsea optimism. “On reflection they’ve had a lot more chances, and a lot more of the ball, so probably deserved the victory,” said the former Chelsea No2. “They’ve got a lot of great players. We had to defend really, really well for 90 minutes-plus, and we couldn’t quite do that.”

Chelsea did not allow them to. They might have scored after 57 seconds through Pedro, struck the woodwork through Fàbregas, and forced Lukasz Fabianski to block two fine efforts, both from the former Arsenal midfielder. Kanté’s energy and blur of interceptions gave the hosts a relentless momentum, with Swansea pinned back for long periods. As resolute as they were, their game of containment always appeared stretched.

In the end they were always likely to crack and the goals pilfered by Pedro, whose shot squirmed disappointingly through Fabianski’s grasp, and Diego Costa gave the scoreline a more realistic feel. The striker’s volley was born of Hazard’s trickery and delivery down the flank, teasing space from Kyle Naughton. There was to be no recovery from that.

Swansea need not be too dismayed in defeat, for all that some of those beneath them in the table have started to flicker back into life. Their crucial run of games is still to come, with Burnley, Hull, Bournemouth and Middlesbrough their next four opponents.

“You never want to lose a game, but the performance doesn’t damage our confidence,” Clement said. The fact he has secured as many points – 12 – from his seven games in charge as Swansea managed in their first 19 games is a source of confidence, and better teams than theirs will be sunk at Stamford Bridge.

It is the depth of Chelsea’s options which must deflate opponents. Fàbregas has flitted in and out of the side, swapping opportunities with Nemanja Matic, but dominated this occasion with all the authority of old.

It had been his goal which set the hosts en route to their win, Tom Carroll’s mistake seized on by Hazard who eventually forced the ball wide for Pedro. He squared into the muddle of bodies loitering near the penalty spot, with Fàbregas taking one touch before calmly stabbing the ball across Fabianski with his second.

His class would tell with Chelsea’s progress serene.



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Telegraph:

Chelsea 3 Swansea 1: Antonio Conte's side move 11 points clear with clinical, simple victory

Sam Wallace

They welcomed Frank Lampard back to Stamford Bridge on the pitch at half-time, and while the devotion will forever be strong to the club’s greatest-ever goalscorer, the best thing you could say about the Antonio Conte era is that it is not as if they desperately miss their great No 8.

Of course, a goalscoring midfielder of Lampard’s class is a rare thing indeed, but this time Conte could rely on goals from two others in that position, including Cesc Fabregas who kept his place in the team from the FA Cup fifth round and scored the team’s first. Although Chelsea ran the first half they conceded an equaliser just before the break, from Fernando Llorente, and had to fight anew for the winner.

In the end it was simple, with a mistake from Lukasz Fabianski for Pedro’s second half strike, before Diego Costa finished the job. They are 11 points clear for now at the top with Manchester City not playing this weekend and Tottenham Hotspur in third having to wait until Sunday to play. There are 12 games left in their season and Conte’s team show no sign of slowing down.

They did have just one setback: there was already one minute and 29 seconds of time added on at the end of the first half when Gylfi Sigurdsson struck a free-kick from halfway inside the Chelsea half, Llorente slipped away from Victor Moses and nodded a nicely judged header out of the reach of Thibaut Courtois.

To say Swansea could consider themselves lucky was an understatement. They were lucky to get the free-kick for a N’Golo Kante tackle that Neil Swarbrick said was a foul, let alone a goal. Chelsea’s domination of the first half had been complete, they just had failed to make their advantage count nearly as much as they should have done.

Fabregas scored the first goal on 19 minutes in his first league start since Dec 31 against Stoke, taking a ball played behind him by Pedro into his stride and poking it past Fabianski and into the corner with his second touch. As they had many times, Diego Costa and Eden Hazard had split Swansea open and there were times when they could not get out their own half.

At one point Kyle Naughton simply wrapped an arm around Hazard and dragged him to a standstill, barely glancing upwards at the yellow card dealt to him. There was a further chance for Fabregas and Pedro cut in brilliantly from the left side and went past Federico Fernandez and Jack Cork before he was finally stopped.

But Llorente struck with just seconds of the half to play and Conte’s tea came back out still requiring more goals. On their way out they passed Lampard, a man with 211 goals to his name for Chelsea, more than any other in their history, who finally got his chance to take the mic and say a few words to the home fans on the Stamford Bridge pitch.

Fabregas struck the bar on 51 minutes and while Chelsea still looked the most likely winners they did not dominate quite as completely as before the break. Cesar Azpilicueta should have been penalised when he lost track of a bouncing ball at the feet of Sigurdsson and the ball struck the right arm of the defender in his own area.

On that occasion Swarbrick denied the away side the penalty. Chelsea were probably due a stroke of luck and there was more of that for the goal that Pedro scored on 72 minutes. He took the pass from Fabregas and ran at an angle from right to left striking a left-footed shot that should have been saved easily by Fabianski but went straight through the goalkeeper.

The assists for Fabregas took him to a career 102 in the Premier League, second on the all-time list in joint position with Lampard, with whom he had a few bad-tempered battles over the years. Hazard made the third for Costa, forcing Naughton backwards in his own area with the full-back afraid to make a challenge, before the Belgian slipped past him and cut the ball back. Swansea remains four points above the relegation places.

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Independent:

Pedro and Diego Costa settle Chelsea's nerves against Paul Clement's plucky Swansea

Chelsea 3 Swansea 1: Fernando Llorente's late first-half goal gave the visitors hope but the Blues soon found their grove to pull ahead at Stamford Bridge

Luke Brown

Chelsea’s seemingly unstoppable march towards the Premier League title continued on Saturday afternoon, as Pedro and Diego Costa both scored late in the second-half to consign Swansea City to an unfortunate 3-1 defeat at Stamford Bridge.

The champions-elect were however made to work far harder for their victory than they would have liked, after Fernando Llorente’s thumping header on the stroke of first-time cancelled out Cesc Fabregas’s early goal.

Swansea took a point off Chelsea at the beginning of the season in a rare highlight under the management of Francesco Guidolin and, for the majority of the second-half, it looked as though the relegation-threatened team would deny the league leaders once again.

But shorty after a very credible Swansea penalty appeal was ignored by referee Neil Swarbrick, Pedro burst forward for Chelsea and curled a shot towards goal. Lukasz Fabiański should have kept it out; instead the ball slipped inexplicably under his body. Swansea, in search of an unlikely equaliser, then conceded a third when Diego Costa volleyed home from close range, stretching Chelsea's lead at the top to a surely insurmountable eleven points.

Chelsea have, however, been eager to prove that they are taking nothing for granted in this most one-sided of title races and they started the game at a suitably rapid pace. Pedro struck narrowly over from an early corner and Fabregas went close with a low shot, which ricocheted wide.

Swansea — playing their first match in two weeks — stuck diligently to their game-plan, repeatedly flinging long-balls forward in the direction of Spanish international Fernando Llorente in an attempt to by-pass Chelsea’s talented, but tiny, midfield. And in a warning sign that ultimately went unheeded, Federico Fernandez took advantage of some sloppy set-piece marking to go close from a corner.

It was with some cruel irony, then, that Chelsea’s opening goal came as a direct consequence of Swansea keeping the ball on the ground in a rare soiree forward. Tom Carroll, so impressive since signing from Tottenham Hotspur in January, was the man responsible for conceding possession, losing the ball in midfield and then failing to atone for his error with a despairing lunge.

Hazard punished Swansea: exchanging cute one-passes with Diego Costa he spotted Pedro in space on his right-hand side. He continued his run, but Pedro instead pulled it back for Fabregas, whose first touch to control the ball was a little ungainly, but whose second to score was sublime. The goal came on his 300th Premier League appearance and Fabianski had no chance of keeping the close-range shot out.

The Spaniard should have had a second moments later. Victor Moses escaped the attentions of Swansea’s other January arrival, Martin Olsson, and dropped an inch-perfect cross into the path of Fabregas, whose volleyed effort was struck from a similar distance to his goal. This time however Fabianski was equal to the danger, throwing himself through the air to tip the shot wide.

In the technical area Clement stood largely impassive as Chelsea began to increase the pressure in search of a second. In stark contrast Conte animatedly waved his arms around throughout, standing so far forward in his technical area that at times it looked almost as if he was attempting to usurp Marcos Alonso's place on the left-wing.

He took a large step backward just moments before the interval however, as Pedro — largely restricted to a role on the fringes with Hazard very clearly taking centre stage — suddenly burst into life out wide. Hugging the left-touchline in a powerful burst forward, he cut inside and made mincemeat of Swansea's ragged defence only for his eventual shot to be deflected clear.

In the face of such overwhelming pressure a Swansea equaliser looked unlikely but Chelsea’s players, unlike their manager, were guilty of a lapse in intensity with half-time in sight, during which Kante conceded an utterly necessary free-kick. Predictably, Sigurdsson went long, and Fernando Llorente shrugged off Victor Moses on the edge of the box, heading powerfully past a despairing Courtois.

Stung into action, Chelsea started the second-half much as they had started the first: aggressively, with Hazard rarely to be found off the ball. His smart cut-back very nearly saw the superb Fabregas score his second — but his first-time shot from the edge of the box cannoned off the bar — and a similar low pass flashed dangerously across the face of goal moments later.

Chelsea’s desire to flood forward led to opportunities at both ends, with both sides having very credible penalty appeals turned down within a minute of one another by an unmoved Swarbrick. First Sigurdsson was incandescent that Azpilicueta was not penalised for handling in the box, then the home crowd were whipped into a fury when Diego Costa was shoved over in the box with recrimination. On reflection, both teams have a right to feel aggrieved.

"I thought it was a penalty and it doesn't matter whether they should have had one up the other end immediately after, because it should have been a penalty to us first," an aggrieved Clement commented after the match.

The vital second goal came just moments later for Chelsea, as Swansea’s brave resistance was finally ended. Pedro picked up the ball and scampered towards the edge of the box where he shot more in hope than expectation. But Fabianski inexplicably allowed the ball to skid under his body, handing Chelsea all three points. He bore no responsibility for Diego Costa’s late third, but by that point, the game had already been lost.


Chelsea (3-4-2-1): Courtois, Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill, Moses (Zouma '85), Kante, Fabregas, Alonso, Pedro (Matic '76), Costa, Hazard (Willian '85).

Subs: Begovic, Zouma, Loftus-Cheek, Matic, Willian, Batshuayi, Terry.

Swansea: Fabianski, Naughton, Fernandez, Mawson, Olsson, Fer, Cork, Carroll (Ayew '76), Routledge (Narsingh '81), Llorente, Sigurdsson.

Subs: Ayew, Amat, Britton, Borja Baston, Nordfeldt, Rangel, Narsingh.

Referee: Neil Swarbrick (Lancashire)


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Mail:

Chelsea 3-1 Swansea City: Cesc Fabregas, Pedro and Diego Costa strike for hosts to cancel out Fernando Llorente's headed goal as Blues extend lead at top

 By Rob Draper for The Mail on Sunday

Frank Lampard knows. Titles are won on dreary, drizzly days when obstructive opponents make you doubt your own superiority.

The former Chelsea midfielder was here on Saturday, a guest of honour finally given a proper chance to say goodbye to fans after his publicly unheralded departure in 2014.

And he must have liked what he saw. Despite their propensity for rotating managers, Chelsea's identity remains constant. Lampard would certainly recognise this team's characteristics. They can attack with flair but defend with doggedness. And when a game looks like it might be heading towards an unsatisfactory conclusion, champions find a way.

So, though Pedro's cut inside and strike from outside the box in the 71st minute and Lukasz Fabianski's fumble will not make the cut for Chelsea's best bits of 2016-17, do not doubt its significance.

Chelsea's rivals are looking for any sign of a stutter and even a hint of hope. You do not expect this side to lose, but perhaps they might draw a game or two? Offer some respite to Manchester City, Tottenham or Arsenal? Yet, though we are still in February, those clubs are running out of time and games.

So accomplished are Antonio Conte's team, so far clear are they — 11 points — that soon they will be able to stage manage the end of the season, when draws will be enough to see them over the line.

And it will be because of victories like this. They were held at Turf Moor two weeks ago and at Anfield before that. But not at Stamford Bridge, not even against this vastly improved Swansea side.

Unlike last season's model, this Chelsea are not in the habit of foolish lapses. They look every inch a title-winning side. No team comes close to their balance between creativity and organisation.

'It's not easy,' said Conte. 'To keep the concentration for the whole championship is not easy. But I have a lot of players who played and won in the past. They know very well the way that we must continue. For this reason, I'm lucky. I'm lucky to have a lot of players who, in the past, won a lot. And if sometimes, I can see some of them relaxing, it's right for me to try and help them be focused for every moment. But, honestly, that hasn't been necessary for me.'

He does indeed have a team of winners. Of his starting XI, only Victor Moses and Marcos Alonso have not won a domestic title.

But good though Chelsea were at times — and Cesc Fabregas and N'Golo Kante were outstanding — it was not always straightforward.

Indeed, just before Pedro hit that winning strike, Fernando Llorente had cut inside and was breaking into the box. He lifted the ball and it struck Cesar Azpilicueta's hand. Referee Neil Swarbrick took the view it was accidental. It was 1-1 and 69 minutes had been played.

'It was a penalty,' said manager Paul Clement. 'It's 1-1 and we had a chance to go 2-1. But on reflection, they've had a lot more chances and a lot more of the ball, so probably deserved the win. But we defended resolutely for long periods, made it difficult. It was 'game on' at half-time so that was a big moment at 1-1. Then we concede a soft goal for the second.'

Fabregas, preferred ahead of Nemanja Matic against a more-technical team, was relishing his start, dashing around in midfield as well as getting himself into forward positions. He was there in the 14th minute when a slick move involving a Diego Costa feint and cut back, followed by a Eden Hazard feint and cut back, saw his shot deflected wide.

A similar move in the 19th minute was more productive. Hazard found Costa whose unwillingness to yield saw the ball played on to Pedro. He pulled it back and Fabregas managed to strike it decisively past Fabianski.

He was there again in the 27th minute, when a Moses pull back and a Fabregas strike required a fine reaction save.

At this stage it was hard to avoid the conclusion that Chelsea were toying with their opponents. Kante's ability to tidy up anyone's mistakes in midfield and regain possession should earn the gratitude of several team-mates, not least David Luiz. And yet there is something about Clement's Swansea.

Given a free-kick in first-half injury-time, Gylfi Sigurdsson floated the ball with just the right trajectory for Llorente, a former Conte player at Juventus, to head home emphatically. It gave not just Swansea hope but all of Chelsea's opponents.

But Pedro made it 2-1 and then, in the 84th minute, Hazard wriggled his way through to pull the ball back to Costa, who volleyed home.

Chelsea might need the odd kick start but, ultimately, the engine is ticking over nicely and the final destination is in sight.


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Mirror:

Chelsea 3-1 Swansea City: Antonio Conte's Spanish trio stretch lead to 11 points

Cesc Fabregas, Pedro Rodriguez and Diego Costa all found the net for the Blues at Stamford Bridge


BY JOHN CROSS

Diego Costa scored his 16th Premier League goal of the season to put Chelsea 11 points clear at the top of the table.

Costa struck in the 85th minute to seal victory after Pedro had put Chelsea ahead after 72 minutes following a horrible mistake by Swansea keeper Lukasz Fabianski.

That ruined Swansea’s hopes of getting a point from Stamford Bridge after Fernando Llorente’s header cancelled out Cesc Fabregas’s opener.

But Chelsea’s persistence eventually paid off as they took full advantage of Manchester City having the weekend off to extend their lead at the top.

Swansea will feel hard done by as referee Neil Swarbrick did not give a penalty when Chelsea defender Cesar Azpilicueta was guilty of a clear handball with the score still 1-1.

But the Blues are now heading into the home straight well clear of the field - here are five things we learned...


1. Heading with Fernando

Fernando Llorente is the best header of the ball in the Premier League

One chance, one goal and it throws up a debate over who is the best striker when it comes to headers in the Premier League.

Llorente just ghosted onto Gylfi Sigurdsson’s free kick, lost his marker and headed brilliantly beyond Thibaut Courtois.

Llorente has been vital in Swansea’s improved results, a top quality centre forward and there are few better in the air. Who else? Andy Carroll, Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Christian Benteke. I’d take Llorente’s aerial power over those guys.


2. Classy Chelsea pay tribute

A touch of class from Chelsea as they did a special wrap round edition of their match day programme.

They paid tribute to Frank Lampard, one of the club’s all time greats, if not the greatest player in the club’s history.

Lampard, who announced his retirement earlier this month, scored 211 goals in 648 games and won 13 trophies during a glorious career at Stamford Bridge.

The Chelsea fans sang his name throughout the game and at half time when he did a lap of honour before making a brilliant speech to thank the fans. Pure class all round.


3. Paul Clement’s tactics can keep Swansea up

Five weeks ago Swansea were bottom of the Premier League but Paul Clement has inspired a brilliant run which can keep them up.

Never mind this, their next four games are Burnley (home); Hull City (away); Bournemouth (away) and Middlesbrough (home). Swansea can beat the odds yet again.

Massive credit must go to Swansea. A shambles before Christmas, now they are so well organised. A 4-3-3 going forward, quickly becomes a 4-5-1 when they lose possession and have to defend.

Well drilled, well coached and hard to beat.


4. Jose Mourinho revisited

It was this game last season that probably spelt the beginning of the end for Jose Mourinho.

It actually seems longer but the opening day of August 2015 was the game when Mourinho lost the plot with Chelsea medic Eva Caneiro after a 2-2 draw.

That seems an eternity ago now but it’s hard to imagine Antonio Conte ever behaving quite as badly.


5. Cesc Fabregas marks a milestone

Fabregas scored the opening goal on his 300th Premier League appearance and remind us all that he is a top class player, one of the best midfielders of his generation.

The Spain World Cup winner enjoyed a glorious career at Arsenal, went to Barcelona and did not quite live up to his hopes but has found a nice home at Chelsea.

Although not a guaranteed starter, Fabregas is one hell of a player to have on the bench and in the squad. He started this one, scored with a nice finish and showed what a valuable player he has been for Chelsea.

Player Ratings

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois 6; Azpilicueta 6, Luiz 6, Cahill 6; Kante 7; Moses 6, Fabregas 8, Alonso 6; Hazard 6, Pedro 7; Costa 7. Subs: Matic 5 (Pedro 76), Zouma 5 (Moses 85), Willian 5 (Fabregas 85). Subs not used: Begovic, Loftus-Cheek, Batshuayi, Terry.

Swansea (4-3-2-1): Fabianski 4; Naughton 6, Fernandez 6, Mawson 7, Olsson 6; Cork 7, Fer 6, Carroll 6; Routledge 6, Sigurdsson 7; Llorente 7. Subs: Ayew 5 (Carroll 76), Narsingh 5 (Routledge 80). Subs not used: Nordfeldt, Amat, Britton, Borja, Rangel,.

MAN OF THE MATCH: Cesc Fabregas - Crowned an outstanding performance with the opening goal.

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Star:

Chelsea 3 Swansea 1: Cesc Fabregas scores and assists on 300th Premier League game

THIS dozen has been far from dirty – and Chelsea’s 12th straight home win in all competitions surely begins the countdown to the Premier League title.

By Tony Stenson

Cesc Fabregas scored a goal and set up another on his 300th Premier League appearance

As the saying goes, it is theirs to lose now. This was Chelsea at their imperious best, with no weak links, plenty of fight and no shortage of skill.

Antonio Conte’s side have been imperious during that run, conceding just five times – two of them in the same game against Stoke on New Year’s Eve.

And you would have to agree with star man Eden Hazard’s sentiments this week that: “Some teams are beaten before the kick-off.”

The league leaders had to overcome a Swansea side who packed their defence, sneaked an equaliser and had a decent penalty appeal turned down, when Cesar Azpilicueta appeared to have handled in the 69th minute.

Chelsea were also denied a spot-kick when Alfie Mawson hacked down Diego Costa a minute later, while David Luiz was lucky to survive when he threw out an elbow at Fernando Llorente.

But overall Swansea were forced to defend and in the end there’s only so much you can achieve when you are constantly on the back foot.

Nobody in a blue shirt worked harder than N’Golo Kante, and he is surely a leading contender for the Player of the Year award.

Eden Hazard showed why he is so highly prized with a virtuoso performance and there were some electric runs from Pedro, whose pace terrified the visitors.

Chelsea started on the front foot and in the third minute Swansea keeper Lukasz Fabianski was forced to palm out a fierce shot from Costa after he was picked out by Pedro.

It was one of many intricate moves from Conte’s side, although they were guilty of over-playing it at times.

The breakthrough was always coming, though, and in the 19th minute Hazard and Pedro unlocked Swansea’s defence to set up Cesc Fabregas, who marked his 300th Premier League appearance by poking the ball through the legs of Jack Cork and into the net.

Chelsea peppered Fabianski’s goal and the visitors seemed to offer no threat – until they equalised with their first attack in first-half added time.

Gylfi Sigurdsson hit a free-kick from almost the halfway line and Llorente rose unmarked to head past Thibaut Courtois.

The equaliser only increased the pressure from the home side and it was one-way traffic in the second half as the Swans defended desperately.

Fabregas rattled Fabianski’s bar and normal service was resumed in the 72nd minute. Pedro’s curling effort restored Chelsea’s lead and in the 84th minute Costa wrapped up the points with a close-range finish from Hazard’s exquisite pass.

Boss Conte was again all action on the touchline on a day of homecomings at The Bridge. Club legend Frank Lampard appeared at half-time to thunderous applause and there was also the return of Paul Clement and former Blues midfielder Claude Makelele, now Swansea’s numbers one and two.

The Welsh side arrived having vastly shown vast improvement under their new boss with three wins in their last four games.

Clement spent two spells working at the Bridge and it was a chance to gauge how far his side has come in a relatively short space of time in their fight to retain their place in the top flight.

His tweaks to the team in terms of organisation and switching to three at the back has sparked a real turnaround in both confidence and providing an attacking threat, after the dark days under predecessor Bob Bradley.

Although 16 points shy of the magical mark of 40, they look one of the likelier candidates to survive the relegation dogfight.


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Express:

Chelsea 3 - Swansea 1: Fabianski blunder gifts Blues win as they go 11 points clear at top

THE chant from the crowd was long and loud. 'Antonio, Antonio' they sang as Chelsea romped 11 points clear at the top of the Premier League.

By JIM HOLDEN

One Italian manager may have been ruthlessly sent on his way from English football, but another has taken over the baton of success.

Antonio Conte can do no wrong at Chelsea, not so far anyhow, and his decision to play Cesc Fabregas yesterday proved a masterstroke of management.

It was another decisive step towards what will surely be the Premier League trophy returning to Stamford Bridge.

His team have become formidable in the favoured 3-4-3 system, and Conte has a troop of superstars running like demons as well as showing their peacock flourishes.

As the rain lashed down in the second half here, and Swansea battled valiantly, so Eden Hazard, Diego Costa and company just kept up their relentless pursuit of glory.

Titles are won on tough winter afternoons like this.

Conte had opted for a Spanish armada for this game, starting with five players from Spain, including a recall for Fabregas, the player he calls his “genius in reserve”.

It looked a smart move as the 28-year-old, playing in his 300th Premier League match, dictated the play with a range of sublime passing and intricate ball skills.

He seemed to be involved in everything, including shooting and scoring.

Fabregas had already had one shot deflected wide before he put Chelsea ahead in the 19th minute, finishing off a slick move that sliced through Swansea’s deep and organised defence.

Another excellent effort was clawed away by Swansea keeper Lukasz Fabianski eight minutes later. The Spaniard was revelling in the game, and it is hard to believe this was the 671st match of his career for club and country.

The football of Fabregas can be a joy to watch. Some gorgeous passes make you wonder how he can ever be left out of the Chelsea team, as he has been for much of the season.

But then there were also moments of over-ambition, trying too hard for the killer pass.

And it was a spell of over-playing on the ball in midfield that gave possession to Swansea and led to an unexpected equaliser for the visitors on the stroke of half-time.

Moments later a free- kick from Gylfi Sigurdsson found striker Fernando Llorente free in the Chelsea box and he scored with a fine header. It was another Spanish goal.

Swansea boss Paul Clement, who was assistant manager at Chelsea in the regime of Carlo Ancelotti, celebrated wildly.

In contrast there was a distinct scowl on the features of Conte. He is so animated on the touchline. Goodness knows how angry he gets when riled in the confines of the dressing room.

Certainly, Chelsea emerged from the break full of fire and intent. Hazard had a shot saved and Fabregas struck the bar with another effort.

Yet Swansea, despite their lowly place in the table, were proving a tough nut to crack; smart and strong in defence. It took until the 72nd minute for Conte’s men to recapture the lead.

Fabregas was involved, of course, with a subtle pass to Pedro, who turned swiftly and sent a low long-range drive skidding under the arms of Fabianski, who should have saved it.

This was a goal plainly made in Spain. Fancy that!

Chelsea’s third was Spanish too, this time striker Costa steering home a low cross immaculately delivered by Hazard after a typical slalom dribble on the left flank.

‘Antonio, Antonio,’ sang the happy home crowd.

And their manager pumped his arms in triumph at the final whistle before turning to give each of his players a bear-hug as they left the field.

Meanwhile, Conte hailed Fabregas after the midfielder produced an impressive display in a rare start to inspire Chelsea on his 300th Premier League appearance.

Conte admitted: “It is fantastic to have a player like Fabregas.

“He played very well and it is important to have solutions for the team, to analyse when you need to change for different opponents and bring in a player with more quality.”

Pedro and Diego Costa also scored, and Conte added: “I have a team that really deserves to be top of the table. They never lose focus or concentration.”

Swansea manager Paul Clement also praised Conte’s team, saying: “This is a young Chelsea side and if they can keep them together for three or four years they could be formidable. Today was damage limitation for us. It’s the next period which is vital with matches against teams around us.”

Sunday, February 19, 2017

Wolverhampton Wanderers 2-0



Observer:

Chelsea ease past brave Wolves thanks to goals by Pedro and Diego Costa

Wolves 0 - 2 Chelsea

Paul Doyle

Chelsea endured a scare in the company of Wolves but emerged smiling thanks to second-half goals by Pedro and Diego Costa. It was the right result in the end but the Championship team can take pride from how difficult they made life for their illustrious visitors.

Wolves bumbled into this tie on the back of three consecutive defeats but to lift morale Paul Lambert needed only to refer to their previous performances in this competition. Victories away to two Premier League teams – Stoke City and Liverpool – had proved their capacity to antagonise the elite.

To stretch a point he might even have recalled that Chelsea only drew at Anfield, a result that meant Antonio Conte’s team had failed to win either of their previous two away matches, although using that evidence to suggest the Premier League leaders were in the midst of a stutter might have pushed the glass half-full approach so far it invited questions as to just which drink the glass was half-full of. But hey, the FA Cup is no place for moderation of ambition.


Conte made seven changes to the lineup who had started Chelsea’s last match but, make no mistake, he was aiming to preserve his team’s chances of marking his debut season in England with a domestic double. The upsets caused by Lincoln and Millwall earlier in the day led him to reinforce that message to his team. “After those results I tried to warn the players about the difficulty of this game,” he said. This manager does not neglect any competition and, as ever, his manic contortions on the touchline attested to his yearning for victory.

So did the strength of his team in spite of the changes. He retained Costa and Eden Hazard, and the players drafted in were not exactly nobodies, with Cesc Fàbregas beginning in midfield and John Terry leading a defence featuring Kurt Zouma and Nathan Aké.

Roared on by the biggest Molineux crowd since 1981, Wolves tore into their visitors. They came agonisingly close to drawing blood in the fourth minute, when Zouma failed to clear a cross by Conor Coady and the ball broke to George Saville, alone 12 yards from goal. Excitement got the better of the midfielder, a graduate of Chelsea’s academy, and he rather slashed at the ball, which hurtled past Asmir Begovic but bounced back off a post.

Wolves radiated energy but also passed slickly and they continued to worry the visitors. They also defended tightly during the inevitable spells when Chelsea forced them backwards.

Fàbregas undid Wolves’ rearguard with a classy touch in the 12th minute, dissecting the defence with an artful through-ball to Willian. Carl Ikeme charged off his line to parry Willian’s shot and then foiled his rebound, too. Eight minutes later Willian had a let-off in his own box, when the referee ignored febrile appeals for a penalty when Andreas Weimann hit the ground under the weight of a challenge by the Brazilian.

It was an even and exhilarating contest, with a cracking tempo and crunching tackles – wholesome entertainment despite the blank scoresheet at half-time.

The onus was on Chelsea to demonstrate their superiority in the second half but within a minute of the resumption they were thrown into panic at the back by a dash down the right by Hélder Costa. They survived but were patently unnerved and Pedro was booked moments later for resorting to a trip to sabotage another burst by the winger.

Fàbregas and Nathaniel Chalobah formed a less forceful midfield duo than N’Golo Kanté and Nemanja Matic, at times outrun and outfought, but when Chelsea attacked their moves usually flowed through Fàbregas. His pass before the hour led to a chance for Victor Moses, whose shot was deflected wide. In the 62nd minute Willian pinged a low pass to Costa, who twisted past Danny Batth but fired into the side netting. The pressure was building.

The breakthrough came in the 65th minute and there was no disputing its quality. Costa and Hazard conspired deftly before Willian floated in a perfect deep cross. Pedro arrived to head into the net from 10 yards.

Conte replaced Pedro with César Azpilicueta and then introduced Kanté for Willian. He was taking no chances. Wolves were left to regret missing theirs, especially when Costa pounced on a loose ball and swept it into the net in the last minute.

“I’m proud of my team because we made this game what it was,” said Lambert, who was similarly impressed with Chelsea. “It’s going to take one hell of a team to stop them doing the double,” he said.

“It is too early to talk about this,” said Conte of his side’s double prospects, but he was happy to praise his hosts’ display. “Wolverhampton deserve my compliments for the performance because they played very well,” he said. “They showed good organisation, character and intensity.”



======================================


Telegraph:

Wolves 0 Chelsea 2: Diego Costa shows his class and fight to keep Double dream alive

Sam Wallace

It was Carlo Ancelotti who won the Premier League and FA Cup double in his first season in charge of Chelsea, an achievement that did not save him from the axe one year later, and seven years on from that triumph it is another Italian general at the club who has his eye on both prizes.

Antonio Conte’s team did not exactly cruise through to the FA Cup quarter-finals against a side now 19th in the Championship, 39 places behind them in the league hierarchy, but even with extensive changes to the side they still saw it out.

A goal from Pedro in the second half was enough to set them on their way, but in a month when the proverbial giant-killings have looked like they could turn into an epidemic, Chelsea’s FA Cup life never really looked in doubt.

Diego Costa capped another epic performance leading the line for his team against an uncompromising defence by pouncing on a loose ball in the 89th minute and drilling in a second. They had to fight all the way against a Wolves team who never gave an inch but were eventually overwhelmed by the quality of the Premier League leaders, and there is no shame in that.

It was the end of a magical Cup run for Wolves in front of a crowd of 30,193, the biggest in the stadium since its latest redevelopment. Molineux broke into applause after Costa’s goal put the outcome beyond doubt, the reaction to a brave team performance.

Wolves eliminated Stoke City and Liverpool on their way to the last 16 of the competition but Conte’s Chelsea are a completely different proposition.

“It will be a hell of a team that stops them winning both trophies,” said Paul Lambert, the Wolves manager. “They have a top manager who played the game and understands the emotions on and off the pitch. They are relentless.”

Conte made seven changes from the side that drew with Burnley, with John Terry and Cesc Fabregas making their first starts since the previous FA Cup round against Brentford.

“It is not easy when you don’t play every game,” Conte said. “John and Cesc show me every day in training their commitment. It is great to have these kind of players in my squad. I know I can count on my players in every moment.”


He praised Wolves’ “good organisation and good character” and asked about non-League Lincoln City’s achievement in reaching the FA Cup quarter-finals he essayed a genuflection. “It is incredible. In Italy it would be impossible for this to happen. It shows that anything can happen if you trust in your work and have a great will to fight.”

Conte said he had warned his players beforehand about the dangers of being part of another FA Cup shock but there is not much about this Chelsea team that suggests they are complacent. Results elsewhere in the Championship meant that Wolves slipped a place downwards and the anticipation of Friday’s game against Birmingham City, five places ahead of them in 14th, was already occupying the minds of the supporters.

“There are lots of good things going on at this club,” Lambert said. “It was great that one of the [Chinese] owners was here to see what this club could be like if we got into the Premier League.”

With an impressive number of academy boys in the first team and on the bench, the standout performer for the home team was the Portugal Under-21 Helder Costa, their £13 million record signing, who sought out his namesake Diego at the final whistle for a shirt exchange.

Wolves’ level of aggression was high and there was plenty of determined tracking and tackling and chipping away at the Chelsea midfield. At the back, the two centre-halves Danny Batth and Kortney Hause gave Costa no quarter, and he accepted their challenge gladly.

Their best chance came when Kurt Zouma failed to clear a cross properly and the ball sat up nicely for George Saville on the edge of the area. Perhaps the former Chelsea academy boy had too long to choose his spot and he hit a left-footed half-volley that came off Asmir Begovic’s right post. Even then the ball dropped for Andreas Weimann but he could not get any control over what turned out to be a wild shot.

Lambert was angry that referee Jonathan Moss did not give Weimann a penalty later in the first half when Willian barged into him in the area but on balance it was the right call and in the aftermath the Wolves manager had no complaints on that score.

Wolves’ Costa had just ghosted past Pedro on the right wing minutes before the Spain international scored for Chelsea. It was a well-worked goal, with Diego Costa chasing the ball down into the corner and retrieving it for Eden Hazard. The Belgian, quiet up until then, got it back to Willian on the right who picked out the unmarked Pedro perfectly for a headed goal.

Conte brought on César Azpilicueta for Pedro shortly afterwards and deployed the Spanish defender on the left side of his back three, in order to deal with Helder Costa. N’Golo Kanté came on too and he made the opening for the second goal, the ball going to Fabregas and then onto Costa to finish.

There had been other chances too for Chelsea as Wolves went for the equaliser but no shame in this defeat because not many will find a way to beat Chelsea.




=======================================


Independent:

Chelsea see off Wolves to emerge unscathed from day of FA Cup shocks

Wolverhampton Wanderers 0 Chelsea 2: Goals from Pedro and Diego Costa secured victory for the visitors to their keep their dreams of the double alive

Miguel Delaney

Only half a side and a quarter of their usual level of performance, but still on course for the double.

A diminished Chelsea side were far from impressive against an admirably energetic Wolves but goals from Pedro and Diego Costa were enough to put them into the FA Cup quarter-finals. In the end, the home side’s level of application probably ended up working against them, as their tired legs no longer had enough in them to bridge the gap to Chelsea’s level of quality. Antonio Conte’s side at last had the space denied to them in the first half, and took the opportunity.

The opportunity to achieve something historically special is consequently growing, as Chelsea could become the first team to do the league-and-cup double since they themselves achieved it in 2010, and thereby only the second club in history to achieve it at least twice after Manchester United and Arsenal.

The biggest threat to that could well be how special they see it, and how switched on they are by the competition. Conte doesn’t have the best knock-out record having never won a cup, and it was difficult not to think this was a Chelsea that were a slightly easier touch than in the league, even allowing for the numerous changes to the team.

If the FA Cup has generally faded in prestige, though, you would not have sensed it from a raucous home crowd.

Wolves were clearly treating this as a huge occasion, and more than playing up to that. From the off, they properly rattled Chelsea and got right up against them in a way almost no one in the Premier League really has since they went to 3-4-3.

This wasn’t a team Conte would have played in the Premier League, given that there were only five regular starters in the league leader’s XI, and many of the stand-ins did look somewhat rusty, but that isn’t enough to explain how on top Wolves were.

They really went for it, and could have gone out of sight in the first half. They had that many moments of danger, that many flashes.

The biggest opportunity, however, was undeniably the first. On five minutes, the entire Chelsea box just opened up for their former youth player George Saville, as he lay in wait 12 yards from goal. Rather than ease it past Asmir Begovic in the way that seemed set up for him, though, Saville slightly sliced at it to see the ball cannon back off the post. Andreas Weimann then put the rebound over.

Far from diminishing Wolves’ early initiative, though, it only emboldened them. They kept coming at Chelsea, evidently looking to exploit the legginess of John Terry at the centre. The ball seemed to spend a lot of the first half pinballing around Begovic’s area, and just awaiting that final touch.

It eluded both Danny Batth and Jon Dadi Bodvarsson in two different inviting moments.

Before those, Weimann had gone down in the box under a shoulder from Willian only for referee Jonathan Moss to wave away complaints.

It would have been unfortunate because there had been a foul from Weimann just a second before, and Willian had been one of the few Chelsea players - bar perhaps the industrious Victor Moses - really on it.

He could have scored after just 12 minutes when a beautiful touch in the air put him through on goal, but Cark Ikeme did well to divert the ball. Beyond that, the majority of Willian’s teammates were diverting the ball where Chelsea didn’t want it.

Eden Hazard, Cesc Fabregas and Diego Costa were all guilty of sloppy touches or passes, and it just didn’t look like they were as alert as Wolves.

The problem with that extent of alertness early on, however, is that it tends to exhaust you.

Wolves impressively continued playing the way they were into the second half, but it could already be sensed that they weren’t as sharp, weren’t quite as assured.

The key moment illustrated it.

On 64 minutes, the otherwise quiet-by-his-standards Helder Costa embarrassed stand-in wing-back Pedro with a quick turn on the right, only for the ball to just end up down the Wolves end of the pitch.

It was then that Pedro got instant revenge. With Wolves struggling to get back in the manner they had been, Costa fed Willian on the right, who then clipped the ball over. Pedro was there, completely unmarked, to head in.

It was scarcely what Wolves had deserved from the general performance, but it was exactly what their defending from that moment deserved.

At the same time, it was scarcely what Chelsea deserved from their general game, but said much that they finally broke through once they put together a constructive move for the first time.

It said much that Conte still felt he had to bring on N’Golo Kante towards the end, and it paid off when he made a crucial interception just minutes after Fabregas had missed a fine opportunity.

Within seconds, Costa had finally got free himself, sliding the ball into the corner.

==================================

Mail:

Wolves 0-2 Chelsea: Pedro and Diego Costa secure FA Cup progress for Antonio Conte's side as the Spain stars ensure Blues negotiate tricky tie

By Rob Draper for The Mail on Sunday

It had all the ingredients: a famous old ground packed and passionate; a Championship side, buoyed by two previous Premier League scalps, playing well above themselves again; and the Premier League leaders, with seven changes made and their eyes seemingly on greater triumphs, distinctly perturbed.

And yet Antonio Conte and Chelsea didn’t catch the romantic mood of the day. Chelsea looked like they might submit. The inspirational Helder Costa looked like he might be the man of the moment. But cold-hearted Chelsea are simply too clinical at present to be indulgent.

After all, there is a Premier League and FA Cup double for which to aim in the absence of European football. Carlo Ancelotti managed that in his first season at the club in 2010.

At present there seems no reason why Conte shouldn’t do the same. Only Manchester United and Arsenal have won the double twice. We may well be adding Chelsea to that list come May. They weren’t especially good yesterday. They performed some way below their Premier League norm, though Cesc Fabregas was excellent. But they were good enough.

And when their moment came, with an extraordinarily-swift counter-attack goal scored by Pedro on 65 minutes, they were exquisite. Better sides than Wolves would have failed to contain them in that mood.

They finished it all off on 89 minutes, when N’Golo Kante, driving into the penalty, exchanging passes with Fabregas and provoking a loose clearance which fell for Diego Costa at close range.

He scored, inevitably, and Molineux, almost to a man and woman, stood and applauded; not the goal, but the efforts of their team. They had harried and pressed and given their all.  But against this Chelsea, that merely buys you the right to compete. Victories require more, as Paul Lambert acknowledged.

‘They're relentless,’ he said. Lambert and Conte had crossed swords before in the 1997 Champions League final when Borussia Dortmund beat Juventus. The Wolves manager prevailed that day; but not yesterday.

‘Some of their top lads didn't play for them but look at their team. I thought it might be a tad weaker but dear oh dear; their front three alone. It's going to be one hell of a team to stop them from getting both trophies.’

Conte, understandably, doesn’t want his players looking quite that far ahead. ‘I think it's early to talk about this,’ he cautioned.

‘Honestly, above all, after this game, it's important to understand nothing is easy. If someone thinks in the Premier League Chelsea for sure will become the champions and in the FA Cup for sure you can win this trophy, it'll be very difficult.

'But we stay there and we want to try to arrive at the end, to try to win some trophies. When you stay in a great club, your work is this: to try to fight until the end to win trophies.

‘After the results this afternoon, I tried to warn the changing room about the difficulty of this game and this competition. In England, an easy game does not exist.

'That's the truth. We were very good to suffer in the first half because they started the game very well, with great intensity. They hit the post after five minutes. And we were lucky. But then, in the second half, we played our football.’

And Wolves provided ample food for thought. Their impressive performance might provide a blueprint for the odd Premier League side.It should also provide for some self-reflection on their own position, now 19th in The Championship.

The club’s owner, Fosun President Wang Qunbin, attended his first match yesterday. He can’t have failed to be impressed with the fervour. But it won’t sound as good, nor be as lucrative, in League One.

‘What’s happened in the Cup run generated the atmosphere we had tonight,’ said Lambert. ‘To knock out two Premier League teams and play another one here, made this a special game. To see that that stadium full like that and the noise it generates, it’s a special place to play football.’

It is indeed and the players responded. There was Danny Batth and Kortney Hause seemingly prevailing in their non-stop physical battle with Diego Costa; there was Andi Weimann, scurrying about effectively; and then there was Helder Costa, pulling Chelsea’s back three one way, then the other.

Pedro eventually decided the most-effective weapon was the old-fashioned hack and earned himself a yellow card.

But principally there was George Saville, excellent in midfield, with that fifth minute strike. Kurt Zouma made a mess of the clearance, which sat up kindly for the former Chelsea trainee Saville. The ball fairly flew off his left foot as he connected sweetly, but the shot skewed a faction and rebounded off the inside of the post.

There would be other chances: Willian’s barge into Weimann on 22 minutes which might have been a penalty and Matt Doherty’s cross with which Jon Dadi Bodvarsson could not quite connect. But Saville’s strike was their moment.

As such, Chelsea rode out the periods of disarray. Costa and Eden Hazard struggled to find a foothold. Willian missed a good chance when Fabregas played him in. But, come the 65th minute, having plodded and scrapped and not much more, they found their better self.

Costa chased down a weighted pass from the back and found Hazard. He turned the ball on to Willian. Pedro, playing at wing back, had sprinted a good 60 yards to join the play and Willian picked himout with a dinked cross. Unmarked, the Spaniard simply headed home. The speed of the counter attack was devastating.

It didn’t puncture Wolves entirely. Still the laboured, still they tried. But the balance of power had turned and Chelsea had wrested control of the situation.

As such, Costa’s late strike was unsurprising even if harsh on Wolves. Bigger challenges lie ahead. But greater glories also beckon. Someone might stop Chelsea in this mood but at present it is not at all clear who.

There is the slight sense that Chelsea are just dropping their form a bit. The instant response to that, however, is that it comes as their chance to make history is only growing.


Wolves (4-2-3-1): Ikeme 7.5; Coady 7, Batth 7.5, Hause 7.5, Doherty 7; Price, Saville 7.5 (Saiss 84); Helder Costa 8, Edwards 7,  Weimann 7.5 (Wilson 77); Bodvarsson 6.5 (Ronan 84, 6)

Subs not used: Stearman, Evans, Enobakhare, Burgoyne, Wilson


Chelsea (3-4-3):  Begovic 7; Zouma 6.5, Terry 6, Ake 6; Moses 6.5, Fabregas 8, Chalobah, 5.5, Pedro 7.5 (Azpilicueta, 72, 6.5); Willian 6 (Kante, 79), Costa, 7.5, Hazard 7 (Loftus-Cheek 86)

Subs: Kenedy, Batshuayi, Cahill, Eduardo

Goals: Pedro 65, Costa 89


Referee: Jonathan Moss

Man of the Match: Helder Costa

Attendance: 30,193


=============================



Mirror:


Wolves 0-2 Chelsea: Diego Costa and Pedro goals keep double hopes alive

The Blues were made to fight hard but Antonio Conte's side avoided an upset to qualify for the quarter-finals

MIKE WALTERS

Not exactly a travesty, but nothing like a smooth ride.

Pedro's header midway through the second half and a late second from Diego Costa ensured Chelsea did not join the cast of Premier League fall-guys in the FA Cup .

But they had to survive a red-blooded onslaught from Wolves for 45 minutes before they finally managed to ride their luck, ride out the storm and take their place in the last eight.

After the men in old gold had pulled off expert heists at Stoke and Liverpool, the half-and-half scarf salesmen were out in force.

And they have not sung 'Hi ho, Wolverhampton' to the strains of Jeff Beck with such gusto for a while as the guttural Black Country choir cleared their throats before kick-off.

Chelsea generalissimo Antonio Conte paid Wolves the compliment of fielding a strong side, but the Premier League champions-elect were rattled inside five minutes when the unmarked George Saville rattled the post from 12 yards and Matt Doherty blazed the rebound over the top.

Carl Ikeme was soon required to intervene at the other end, thwarting Willian's attempted lob, but Wolves were incensed when the Brazilian got away with a challenge on Andi Weimann in the Blues' 18-yard area, only for referee Jon Moss to ignore their penalty claims.

With the naked eye and on TV replays, it looked as if Weimann had a strong case for a spot-kick, but Wolves boss Paul Lambert's protests to fourth official Darren Bond were as animated as they were futile.

Chelsea were poor for 45 minutes. They were rattled at the back, hustled out of their stride in midfield and forced to feed on scraps.

Apart from that one Willian chance, they barely had a sight of goal until Diego Costa, twisting and turning past two markers, fired into the side netting after an hour.

And it was a travesty when Pedro, who had been a weak link at left wing-back defensively, popped up unmarked to head the Blues in front from Willian's cross 20 minutes after the break.

From that moment onwards, Chelsea looked comfortable. And it was no surprise when Costa made it 2-0 with a smart finish a minute from the end of normal time.


1. Two sides to Pedro

He popped up to head Chelsea in front – against the balance of play – and deserves credit for venturing forward from an unfamiliar patrol as left wing-back.

But Pedro did not look comfortable in the role where Marcos Alonso has excelled for Chelsea this season.

He gave the ball away too often, did not enjoy his beat when Helder Costa was running at him and he was fortunate that Nathan Ake was on alert form and dealt with any gaps Pedro left behind.


2. Diego wins the battle of the Costas

In the duel of Wolves' record £13 million signing and Chelsea's incendiary top scorer, it was Diego Costa who just about came out on top.

When the Premier League leaders were struggling to get the gearbox out of neutral for 45 minutes, their warrior centre forward was one of the few in blue shirts who put himself about until Chelsea finally got hold of the game after an hour.

He does not save his snarling, combustible persona for top-flight defenders – he had a running battle with Wolves skipper Danny Batth.

And he deserved his 89th minute goal, devoured with customary aplomb, to make the tie safe.

Helder Costa, on the other hand, made less headway as the game wore on – although you can see why he has already scored nine goals this season and he will become a crowd pleaser in the Black Country.


3. Terry's full kit days coming to an end

Former England captain John Terry, making only his third appearance of 2017, is in the twilight of his career at 36.

The days when he pulls on his full kit for 90 minutes of hard graft - instead of photo opportunities at trophy presentations – are becoming fewer and further between.

Restored to the armband at Molineux, he made a ropey old start as George Saville was afforded far too much space to crash an early shot against the post.

The old warhorse still knows his way around the pitch – but in a reshuffled back line, he did not always look at ease.


4. Conte leaves back door ajar

Chelsea look unstoppable in the title race, but they were far from convincing at the back at Molineux – partly because pied piper Antonio Conte changed his back three.

Gary Cahill, Cesar Azpilicueta and David Luiz have been magnificent in the Premier League, and on paper John Terry, Kurt Zouma and Nathan Ake should have been capable alternatives.

But there was not the same chemistry, nor the same assurance, from Conte's rejigged defence. Much of their discomfort in the face of Wolves' first-half onslaught stemmed from their uncertainty at the back.

Where the back door invariably remains locked and bolted in the Premier League, you often felt it was ajar here.


5. Lambert on the rise again

After three years of fighting relegation at Aston Villa, and an inconclusive stopover at Blackburn, Paul Lambert is due a managerial assignment where the line on the graph curves upwardly again.

Wolves are far from safe in the foothills of the Championship, but on the evidence of their Cup run they are far too good to go down.

For long periods here, they were committed, vibrant and inventive. Finish the season strongly, and there is no reason why a famous old club should not be in the shake-up for the play-off places this time next year.


Chelsea ratings

Begovic 6 – Enjoy your parole from the bench, Courtois will be back next week

Zouma 7 – Commanding in the air but little comfort with all hands on deck

Terry 7 – This is your captain sinking – still a good organiser but legs are gone

Ake 7 – Composed under fire and covered well for the floundering Pedro

Moses 6 – Pace and mobility, but strangely reluctant to go past full-backs on outside

Chalobah 5 – Poor audition for regular starting role, too much of game passed him by

Fabregas 6 – Hit and miss with final pass – more miss than hit, to be honest

Pedro 6 – Booked. All over the shop like a trolley dash until he headed Chelsea in front

Willian 8 – Picked out Pedro with top-quality cross to break home side's resistance

Costa 8 – MOM Exemplary application, roughed up Batth and deserved his late goal

Hazard 5 – Back to bad old days of last season, nowhere near enough rocket fuel

Subs: Azpilicueta (Pedro, 73) 6, Kante (Willian, 80), Loftus-Cheek (Hazard, 85)


====================================

Star:

Wolves 0 Chelsea 2: Blues keep double dream alive with hard-fought victory at the Molineux

CHELSEA remain on course to join the elite of English football.

By Harry Pratt

After this hard-fought Fifth Round victory at Championship Wolves – courtesy of second-half strikes from Pedro and Diego Costa – Antonio Conte’s men are now just three wins from lifting the FA Cup.

And all things being equal in the on-going title race, which they lead by eight points, they are set to join the very highest company.

Not many clubs have completed the League and Cup double in more than a century of trying – and even fewer have done it twice. Only Manchester United and Arsenal have achieved the feat on more than one occasion.

Well, it would take a brave punter to bet against Conte’s Chelsea turning that exclusive duo into a trio come the end of May.

     Make no mistake, while the Premier League is the priority Conte is clearly hellbent on lifting the Cup too – and joining former Chelsea boss and fellow Italian Carlo Ancelotti as the only boss to win the Double in his debut season.

If he does, then he will look back at this showdown in the Midlands as one of those pivotal days. For, after making seven changes, his Chelsea outfit at times looked in real danger of becoming the latest victim of this year’s giantkilling acts.

Championship Wolves produced another blinder and will find it hard to believe they did not force a replay at the very least. They hit the post, had a strong penalty appeal rejected and, for an hour, matched their illustrious opponents.

Wolves kicked off having lost three league games on the bounce – and no doubt some of the confidence gained from their amazing victory over Liverpool in the Fourth Round.

Wolves, only five points above the Championship drop zone, flew out of the traps – and nearly broke the deadlock in the sixth minute.

A fine move down the right ended with the ball falling perfectly to the feet of midfielder George Saville, a former Chelsea youth player, who could not have struck his effort more sweetly but it crashed against the post of Asmir Begovic’s goal before Andreas Weimann blazed the rebound over.

That reprieve brought the visitors to life and five minutes on it was one of their fringe first-teamers, Cesc Fabregas, who split the Wolves rearguard with a stunning trademark pass.

Willian controlled in one motion but alert home keeper Carl Ikeme diverted the Brazilian’s shot out of harm’s way.

Despite plenty of possession, the visitors were unable to create anything as clear-cut again before the break.

By contrast Wolves did. They had a penalty appeal rejected after Willian sent Saville tumbling and then went close to an opener after 35 minutes.

Weimann’s cross into the six-yard box was begging to be headed into an empty net but Iceland striker Jon Dadi Bodvarsson failed to make contact.

The second half began much like the first with Wolves in the ascendancy. But that control did not last long as Chelsea gradually began to take a firm grip of proceedings.

Spain striker Diego Costa hit the side-netting on the hour mark before the Blues finally pierced Wolves’ resilient defence five minutes later.

Willian was the creator, whipping in a pin-point cross to the far post where unmarked Pedro calmly nodded in. It had been coming but one still felt for Wolves – and even more so when Costa added a second at the death.

Wolves boss Paul Lambert said: “I could not have asked for anymore. The gameplan was unbelievably performed – we were just up against a world-class side. “We gave it a good go but at big moments, we had to score.

“If George Savile’s shot had gone in, we would have something to hold on to. We played with intensity but needed breaks to go our way.”

Captain for the day John Terry said: “For players like me and Cesc Fabregas, who have not been playing, we need to come in, do well, keep the run going and give the manager food for thought.”

==================================

Express:

Wolves 0 - Chelsea 2: Pedro and Costa send Conte's men into the FA Cup quarter-finals

THE passion of Antonio Conte has charmed the game in his debut season in English football and it could lead Chelsea to the glory of The Double.

By JIM HOLDEN

His team are already far ahead of the rest in the Premier League title race and this impressive victory against a fired-up Wolves sent them cruising into the quarter- finals of the FA Cup.

There may be shocks and giantkillers galore in the Cup this year, but the strength and determination of Conte’s team meant no upset here.

Chelsea are too focused, too formidable and too stylish to be knocked off course.

Pedro and Diego Costa scored the goals here in the second half, and who would bet now against Chelsea claiming another Double.

For Wolves it was simply a step too far. They had won away to Liverpool in the previous round, no mean feat, and began with pace and purpose against the Premier League leaders.

Their best chance came early. They should have taken the lead in the fifth minute but George Saville, once a youth player with Chelsea, sent his left-foot drive crashing against the post.

Chelsea’s version of weakening their team for the FA Cup included a starting place for ex-England captain John Terry as well as Spanish star Cesc Fabregas, described as a “football genius” by Conte.

Their side was anything but shabby, and certainly no insult to the traditions of the Cup or their opponents.

After the early scare from Saville, and perhaps because of it, they responded with some slick passing football, Fabregas at the heart of the action. One superb pass set Willian running free on the Wolves goal, but keeper Carl Ikeme snuffed out the danger.

Wolves were far from overawed, relishing the physical confrontations with superstar visitors.

The trickery of the home team’s Costa was a threat to Chelsea. Helder Costa tested the keeper with one stinging shot from the left and almost created another chance with a clever free-kick.

A capacity crowd at Molineux roared its delight at the spirit and energy of their team. Occasional flashes of style from Chelsea were also appreciated – and feared.

The start of the second half mirrored the first. Wolves rampaged and then Chelsea responded with a spell of possession. Chances, though, were a rarity at either end.

Diego Costa drove a shot into the side-netting on the hour after a sublime pass from Fabregas, and it was a warning of the goal soon to come.

Five minutes later, a crisp counter-attack scythed open the Wolves defence.

When the final cross came from Willian, there was no-one left to mark Pedro as he headed home easily from close range. A moment of class had made the difference.


It symbolised Chelsea’s football this season – such a strong unit in defence and midfield allowing them the platform to capture the initiative in a flash.

Could Wolves fight back?

Only a brilliant defensive header from Kurt Zouma prevented an opportunity for Wolves striker Jon Dadi Bodvarsson, but Chelsea were now in command with their slick possession play.

The second goal came a minute from time, swept home by Diego Costa inside the penalty area as the exhausted Wolves defence left a gap for him to exploit.

Applause rang out from both sets of fans at the final whistle for a fine match that embellished the FA Cup.

There is life in the old competition yet despite its detractors.


===============================


Express and Star:

Wolves 0 Chelsea 2

Chelsea broke Wolves' hearts with two second half goals as Paul Lambert's team were dumped out the FA Cup.

Wolves more than held their own against far superior opposition, creating a number of chances and hitting the post in the fifth minute.

But Chelsea's quality eventually told with Pedro and then a late Diego Costa goal given them a 2-0 win on the day of Molineux's biggest crowd since 1981.

Analysis

Time to concentrate on the league then, as they say.

Wolves' FA Cup run - and yes two games constitutes as a run for a club that hadn't won a single game in this competition since 2011 - was great while it lasted.

Those who were at Stoke and Liverpool have memories that will last forever.

A fair few will remember this day too, despite the 2-0 scoreline.

That's because Wolves gave Chelsea a hell of game here. For the first hour you couldn't put a fag paper between the two teams, even though one cost £176m to assemble and the other £18m.

Wolves gave absolutely everything to the cause in what wasn't just a remarkable battling performance but also a brave attacking one. On another day, if George Saville's shot goes in instead of hitting the post it could have been a famous evening in WV1. But at the very least it was an evening to be proud.

They could also be proud of themselves. A total on 30,193 were in attendance - a stadium record for the rebuilt Molineux and Wolves' biggest home crowd since 1981.

Lambert made five changes from the team that lost 2-1 to Wigan in midweek.

As expected Kortney Hause, who played in rounds three and four, came into the XI, with Danny Batth his partner for the skipper's first game in the FA Cup this season.

Jack Price got the nod ahead of Lee Evans in midfield, while as against Liverpool David Edwards was chosen in the 10 role. This time he was behind Jon Dadi Bodvarsson, though, as Nouha Dicko failed a fitness test on a hamstring injury.

That meant a place on the bench for teenager Donovan Wilson, while Romain Saiss was included in a squad for the first time this year alongside him.

Chelsea went stronger than many expected. Diego Costa, Eden Hazard, Willian and Cesc Fabregas all started.

Lambert called for his team to play their own, to do what they do well and play the game not the occasion.

Well in the first half Wolves ticked all those boxes.

They weren't fazed by the Blues, they weren't overawed. They were terrier-like without the ball but also brave direct with it, pushing Chelsea back and arguably edging the first 45.

They almost took the unlikeliest of early leads through an even more unlikely source, when George Saville's free 12-yard shot smacked off Asmir Begovic's upright with the keeper motionless.

The home fans were already creating a cacophony of noise and that just raised the level further.

This was no attempt at a 'smash and grab'. Wolves often got as many as six players in and around the Chelsea box. It was a risky tactic which was paying off.

Yes there were scares at the other end, with Willian and Diego Costa going close, but given the respective qualities of the line up Wolves gave a tremendous account of themselves.

The tireless Jack Price excelled in midfield, Helder Costa was a livewire looking to wriggle free when he could and Bodvarsson led the line superbly, while a team they defended manfully.

Considering that many fans were fearing humiliation, this was a very pleasant surprise.

Lambert lived every minute on the touchline, hopping around like a frog on speed. And the fans roared them on at every turn - it was inspiring fare.

And it continued after the break. Wolves came out on the front foot, forcing mistakes and showing a quite remarkable work rate.

To a man they just didn't stop running. Chelsea had not a moment's peace. They resorted to wayward long shots, with Ikeme redundant since that early Willian chance.

At the hour mark it looked like Wolves were tiring. Chelsea were enjoying more of the ball in areas they could hurt Wolves. Diego Costa fired into the side netting and Lambert's team began to struggle to move play upfield.

So it wasn't the biggest of surprises when the Blues took the lead. A lapse of concentration allowed Pedro to head home unmarked from six yards.

Wolves struggled to respond, an excellent Bodvarsson cross which skimmed over Edwards' head aside.

Lambert sent for Donovan Wilson, who made his first team debut and indeed his senior bow (although he did feature for Wolves U21s in the Checkatrade Trophy.

Antonio Conte made two defensive substitutions, sending on Kante and Azpilicueta - they knew they'd been in a game.

And then came Lambert's last throw of the dice - Connor Ronan and Romain Saiss got the last six minutes in place of the spent Saville and Bodvarsson as the boss went for broke with a 3-4-3.

But it was too late - Chelsea were comfortable and the secured victory in the last minute when Costa took advantage of a ricochet off Doherty to fire home.

Molineux spontaneously broke out into applause. Even in defeat their team had done them proud.

Wolves face the Blues again on Friday, in the form of a West Midlands derby against Birmingham City.

That game now becomes the biggest of the season. They all will from now on if Wolves don't start putting some points on the board (wins for QPR and Burton today put them down to 19th, five points off the drop).

Relegation fears must be allayed as promptly as possible. If Wolves showed the heart and desire in their next game against the Blues, they'll be on their way to doing just that.

Key moments

5 - A huge chance goes begging for Wolves as George Saville thumps a shot off the post from 12 yards out after the ball breaks for him in the box. Andreas Weimann fires the rebound over.

12 - Carl Ikeme stands tall to deny Willian one-on-one after Cesc Fabregas’ through ball splits the Wolves defence.

20 - Huge cries for a penalty as Willian appears to bodycheck Weimann. Referee Jon Moss waves them away.

26 - Vital challenge by Weimann to block Victor Moses’ cross after the wideman had cut in dangerously from the right.

35 - Jon Dadi Bodvarsson is inches away from getting on the end of Matt Doherty’s inviting cross from the left.

45 - Diego Costa, with two Wolves defenders in close attendance, volleys Moses’ low cross over the bar.

56 - Pedro and Kurt Zouma both fire well off target from distance as Chelsea struggle to break down a determined Wolves.

62 - Diego Costa slams a shot into the side-netting after latching onto Willian’s pass and twisting and turning in the box.

65 - GOAL Pedro puts Chelsea ahead, arriving at the far post to head home Willian’s cross after an excellent team move.

80 - Willian has a chance to seal it for the visitors but loses his footing as he looks to round Ikeme.

85 - Chelsea break but Fabregas is denied when his shot is blocked by a diving Conor Coady.

89 - GOAL Diego Costa slams home Chelsea’s second from six yards out to seal their passage into the last eight.


Teams

Wolves (4-2-3-1): Ikeme, Coady, Batth, Hause, Doherty, Saville (Saiss 84), Price, Costa, Edwards, Weimann (Wilson 76), Bodvarsson (Ronan 84) Subs not used: Subs: Stearman, Evans, Enobakhare, Burgoyne (gk).

Chelsea (3-4-3): Begovic, Zouma, Terry ©, Ake, Moses, Chalobah, Fabregas, Pedro (Azpilicueta 73), Willian (Kante 80), Diego Costa, Hazard (Loftus-Cheek 85) Subs not used: Cahill, Kenedy, Batshuayi, Eduardo (gk).

Attendance: 30,193 (4,612 Chelsea fans)

Referee: Jonathan Moss (West Yorkshire)



===============

Friday, February 17, 2017

Burnley 1-1



Telegraph:

Burnley 1 Chelsea 1: Robbie Brady freekick cancels out Pedro opener as battling Clarets earn deserved point

Jim White

The Chelsea march has not been derailed. It may have been only a point gained at Turf Moor, but in many ways it was symbolic of the robust nature of Antonio Conte’s pursuit of the title.

If they were not blown off course by the fizzing spirit of a Burnley side who have now acquired 29 of their 30 points at home, if they were not distracted by a corker of a free-kick dispatched by the home side’s new boy, Robbie Brady, then they clearly mean business. Far from the archetypal southern softies, in an arctic swirl they proved themselves a team prepared to roll up their sleeves and graft, even if it was for just a point.

Yet walking into the press room after this whole-hearted tussle, Conte looked oddly deflated. His team may have just extended their lead at the top of the table to 10 points but the manager clearly ­believed they should have been even further ahead.

“I am disappointed,” he said. “It didn’t happen. It’s a pity.”

It is a measure of the Italian’s ­ambition that he should be so downbeat. Others would have been delighted to have emerged ­undefeated from such a huge examination. For this was as evocative a ­challenge as the Chelsea manager can have faced since he arrived from Italy. This sub-zero Sunday lunchtime in Burnley, with sleet falling on the mill chimneys beyond the Bob Lord Stand, made a wet Wednesday in Stoke look tropical by comparison.


It was not just the temperature that stood in the way of Chelsea progress. Burnley are a team comfortable in their own surrounds, a team resolute in the defence of ­local pride. How they tested the league leaders’ resolve, rarely allowing them to settle in a game that fizzed with energy. It was not that Chelsea had misplaced their fluency. It was that Burnley disrupted it with ­deliberate intent.

What most dismayed Conte, though, was that his side began in the kind of mood that suggested nothing would stop them. After five minutes, Eden Hazard was lurking, waiting in midfield, ready to break at pace, seizing possession off a wayward Burnley pass. He glided through the home defence unchallenged. He shot, but Tom Heaton smothered.

It was an alarm not heeded. Two minutes later, a Burnley attack was broken up, the ball played forward at pace to Victor Moses. Evading a despairing sliding tackle from Joey Barton, he strode on and played the ball inside to Pedro, arriving at full tilt on the edge of the area. The Spaniard fired past Heaton for the opening salvo. Only seven minutes had elapsed. It was the epitome of a Conte goal, turning defence into points at breathtaking speed.


Burnley, though, are not easily cowed. Even though they could not match Chelsea’s speed-ball precision, they pushed and harried, fighting for every square inch of Turf Moor’s restricted acreage. A fine bit of build-up involving ­Barton immediately led to Ashley Barnes firing wide.

Burnley kept pressing, bursting into the tackle, chivvied by Barton’s craft and industry. By now he was running the midfield, which will have opened Conte’s eyes. He ­admitted before the game that he had never heard of Barton.

“That surprised me,” said Sean Dyche, the Burnley manager. “I thought everyone in the world knew who Joey was. And if they don’t, he makes sure they soon do.”


Conte will now be aware of him. On 24 minutes, Barton was brought down by a clumsy Nemanja Matic foul about five yards outside the penalty area. But, despite Barton’s ubiquity, he did not ­address the kick. Instead record signing Brady stood over the ball as the wall jostled and shoved, arguing about distance and position. Brady bypassed the row, arcing his shot perfectly into the far corner of the net.

The Chelsea goalkeeper had spent the previous weekend in ­Texas savouring the performance of Tom Brady in the Super Bowl. Now he was left a spectator by a namesake’s excellence.

“There you go,” said Dyche when told that it was the first time Chelsea had conceded from a direct freekick in four seasons. “Shows how much we do our homework.”

Inspired by the goal, Burnley moved into the ascendancy. Andre Gray fizzed a cross through the Chelsea defensive line, but no one could get a touch, then Barton’s cunning ball played in Matt Lowton behind the Chelsea defence, but the full-back’s shot was saved sharply by Courtois.

It was turning into a fine physical, energetic and committed encounter. Chelsea, who have not lost here since August 1973, began the second half as if they really had not enjoyed half-time. They looked ­unusually distracted. Moments ­after the restart they made two uncharacteristic defensive errors. In the same move Gary Cahill then David Luiz misjudged the pace and flight of the ball, setting Burnley flying through, but Gray’s shot was easily smothered by Courtois.

The champions elect, though, are driven by Conte’s urgent determination. Gradually they eased back into the game: César Azpilicueta  shot just wide, Hazard shot over and the substitute Cesc Fabregas screwed a shot wide. Burnley were left to rely on the hopeful hoof. But how they kept trying, Dyche sending on Sam Vokes in the hope of rustling expensive feathers.

It was to Chelsea’s credit that they did not succumb. But then, as was attested to by the huge ovation which greeted the final whistle, neither did Burnley.

==============================

Guardian:


Burnley peg back Chelsea thanks to Robbie Brady’s superb free-kick

Burnley 1 - 1 Chelsea

Daniel Taylor at Turf Moor


Everything has been going so well for Chelsea recently that, having started their latest assignment so impressively, it came almost as a jolt that they could not build on their early lead and increase the sense that it surely cannot be long before the first publicity-ravenous bookmaker announces it is paying out early on the Premier League champions.

It will still happen, almost certainly, but a lot of credit has to go to a Burnley side who gave the impression at times that they genuinely believed they could register a sixth successive top-division home league win for the first time since Harry Potts’s team were defending their title in the 1960-61 season.

Only three teams in the Premier League have superior home records to Burnley this season and as Antonio Conte pointed out afterwards, it is easy to see why when Sean Dyche’s side play with this togetherness. Chelsea happen to be one while Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal, second and third respectively, are the others. In those circumstances it still amounts to a useful point for the leaders, particularly when the game was played in the kind of conditions – driving sleet, biting-cold temperature and a difficult pitch, a long way from home – when champions have to show their durability.

Conte’s men are now 10 points clear and the first chant of “we’re going to win the league” could be heard from the away end shortly after Pedro had given them a seventh-minute lead. Their next five games comprise Swansea City, West Ham United, Watford, Stoke City and Crystal Palace – five teams positioned ninth or below – and unless something dramatic happens Chelsea should have everything virtually sewn up by the time they meet the two Manchester clubs in April.

All the same, Conte’s disappointment was obvious, bearing in mind the amount of second-half possession his team had without managing a single effort on target, together with the way the game had been progressing before Robbie Brady equalised with a peach of a free-kick.


Burnley can also reflect on chances to win the match but there cannot have been many opponents at Turf Moor this season who have moved the ball so quickly and, not that it should bother Conte or his players too greatly, Chelsea demonstrated in the process how absurd it is for their former manager José Mourinho to depict them as a defensive team.

What Chelsea do is break at speed on the counterattack, springing from the back to catch out their opponents. That, however, should not be confused as conservatism. The opening goal was the case in point, originating from deep in their own half and featuring a slick exchange of passes involving Gary Cahill, Marcos Alonso and Diego Costa before Victor Moses was suddenly in possession of the ball and running at the Burnley defence. Pedro was sprinting through the middle and it was a perfectly weighted touch to control the pass and give himself the angle to slide the ball past Tom Heaton.

Pedro’s quick running and directness was a prominent feature during the early parts of a match in which Chelsea managed 730 passes compared with 297 for their opponents. Yet it was a fine response from Burnley once Nemanja Matic’s 24th-minute foul on Joey Barton had given Brady the chance to show off his dead-ball expertise. Chelsea had four players in their wall – Moses, Alonso, Costa and Matic – but Brady’s left-foot shot went round them all to bend into the top corner of Thibaut Courtois’s net. “A sublime free-kick,” Dyche said, “against a giant of a goalkeeper.”

For the remainder of the first half, Burnley matched their opponents and had an outstanding chance to score again when Matt Lowton advanced from his right-back position only for his shot to come back off Courtois’s legs.

Chelsea, true to form, immediately broke upfield to create an opening of their own but Conte’s men were not alone in knowing the benefits of incisive counterattacking and early in the second half, Andre Gray really ought to have done better with his shot after a quick breakaway had led to David Luiz failing to cut out the through-ball from Ashley Barnes.

After that, Burnley had to withstand some concerted pressure, with Barton symbolising what Conte described afterwards as the team’s ability to “destruct”, and seemed reluctant to commit too many players into attack, perhaps wary of leaving themselves vulnerable in the way they had been for Pedro’s goal. This brought Chelsea forward in even more numbers – Conte smiled knowingly when Mourinho’s comments were put to him – and their disappointment must be that they had so much of the ball in and around the home team’s penalty area without creating one outstanding chance.

Burnley now have 29 points at home and if they continue to play with this vigour they will surely beat the 38-point record, set by Ipswich Town and Charlton Athletic in the 2000-01 season, for a newly promoted side over the course of a 38-game Premier League campaign. Chelsea, meanwhile, can look ahead to greater prizes.


==================================================



Mail;


Burnley 1-1 Chelsea: Robbie Brady cancels out Pedro opener with stunning free-kick to halt leaders as the hosts continue impressive run at fortress Turf Moor

By Martin Samuel for the Daily Mail

It would be rather unfair to suggest, after this, that Antonio Conte’s Chelsea team cannot do it in the snow at Burnley. Credit instead should go to Sean Dyche and his players. In resisting the champions-elect, they were quite outstanding.

Chelsea threw it all at them in a bid to secure what many would consider an unassailable 12-point lead at the top. On came Cesc Fabregas for Nemanja Matic, then Willian for Victor Moses, finally joined by a second striker Michy Batshuayi. Most neutral observers probably felt they would find a way through in the end, with that lot.

But, no. Burnley held out for a draw, confirming their status as a Champions League team, if home form only was taken into account. At Turf Moor, Burnley are among the Premier League’s top three sides; away they have recorded a single point. So, it was really no shock that, having been brushed aside at Stamford Bridge earlier in the season, they should regroup and prove to be made of much sterner stuff here. Even so, the roar from the home crowd when Kevin Friend’s final whistle sounded summed up local apprehension.

Burnley have barely faltered at home this season, but lost to Manchester City and Arsenal, and when Chelsea went ahead after seven minutes they would have feared a repeat against a member of the established elite.

Yet Burnley have grown since Chelsea last visited these parts, for the first fixture of the 2014-15 season. Their response was magnificent and a draw by no means flattered them. If Chelsea take solace despite the two points dropped, it will come from the thought that they do not have to come here again in the League this season but Tottenham and Manchester United do.

Anyway, Chelsea’s lead is so substantial now, it is going to take more than the odd draw away from home to faze them. They are now clear in double figures — 10 points separating them from their nearest rivals, although Manchester City could make a small dent in that by winning at Bournemouth tonight to move within eight.

Even then, it is still Chelsea in control, still Chelsea in the clear, and still Chelsea who are surviving tests those around them have failed. Tottenham lost at Liverpool; Chelsea drew. Liverpool lost at Burnley; Chelsea got their point. Yesterday’s results saw Chelsea’s title odds move out from 9/1 on to 8/1 on. Not what any punter would call a value bet.

Even so, the most impressive aspect of the match, more than Chelsea’s sprint out of the gate at the start, was Burnley’s response to going behind after seven minutes. It was the fastest opposition goal scored at Turf Moor this season by 30 minutes, and, as such, could easily have thrown Dyche’s side. Instead, they responded brilliantly — a pair of hopeful, tame shots from Ashley Barnes in the eighth and 19th minutes building to a head of steam that saw Burnley level after 24 minutes and then have chances to go ahead.

The goal was a beauty and made an instant local hero of record signing Robbie Brady. Acquired from Norwich for £13million in the January transfer window, Brady was already well known to Conte, after scoring a header against Italy in last summer’s European Championship, a winning goal that took the Republic of Ireland into the last 16.

This one could not have been more different. Goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois played a sloppy ball out which forced Matic to give away a foul, 25 yards from goal. Brady and Joey Barton stood over it, and it was immediately clear the new man had made a strong impression.

Barton does not give way easily in such situations. Instead he stood by as Brady lifted the ball over the Chelsea wall — admittedly at its shortest point — and out of the reach of Courtois, top left. It was a brilliant strike — the first direct free-kick to go in against Chelsea since Rickie Lambert for Southampton on March 30, 2013, close to four years ago. Fernando Torres and Marko Marin were in the Chelsea team that day. It seems a different age.

Soon after, the ball flashed across the Chelsea six-yard box with no-one to convert, and in the 37th minute Burnley spurned a fine chance to go ahead. Barton, who had an excellent game, found Matt Lowton with a sweetly-threaded through-pass, and for a moment it looked as if he had smashed the ball through Courtois’s legs. An optical illusion. Courtois — watched by Belgium manager Roberto Martinez, who can’t have been brimming with confidence on what he had seen until that point — got them closed just in time, getting the ball away with a scissor motion.

The half-time whistle did not curb Burnley’s momentum either. From their first attack after recommencement, Burnley forced mistakes from Gary Cahill and David Luiz, allowing Barnes to set up Andre Gray, thwarted by a good save from Courtois.

Yet for all this, it was Chelsea who had started the game livelier, looking every bit the champions in waiting. In the sixth minute, Diego Costa picked out Eden Hazard, whose finish was disappointing, offering little challenge to the in-form Tom Heaton.

A minute later, they were ahead: a counter-attacking move started by Pedro and N’Golo Kante ending with an impressive run by Moses on the right and a fine cross to Pedro, now completing a late arrival in the box. His first touch was a delight, creating space, his second left Heaton no chance.

That this did not lead to a walk-over is testament to Burnley and the competitiveness of this league. Incredibly, although Chelsea saw plenty of the ball, the goal was their last shot on target.

For Burnley, Michael Keane was outstanding, keeping Costa as quiet as he has been in any game this season, although Barton did accuse the striker of clumping him off the ball in the first half. Those expecting a brutal sub-plot to follow were disappointed, however, Barton taking late revenge — but on Willian instead. One might call that a sign of maturity; or just common sense.



========================


Independent:


Robbie Brady's stunning free kick denies Chelsea all three points as Burnley's impressive home run continues

Burnley 1 Chelsea 1: The visitors opened the scoring but were unable to extend their lead at the top of league to 12 points as the Clarets fought back for a hard-earned point

Jack Pitt-Brooke


No top team likes draws but do not be fooled into thinking that Chelsea are stumbling their way back into a title race. There will still be no such thing this season, even after Burnley held Antonio Conte’s side to a 1-1 draw at Turf Moor this afternoon.

Even if Manchester City win at Bournemouth tomorrow night, narrowing Chelsea’s lead to eight points, do not expect that gap to get pulled into zero between now and May. It is more likely that Chelsea will regroup and pull further away.

Because Chelsea are still the best team in the country. This game did not undermine that, it proved it. This was, all things considered, one of Chelsea’s hardest trips all season. Not many other sides would have been able to withstand everything thrown at them today, but Chelsea did, and they got out of here alive.

Turf Moor is statistically the fourth hardest away game in the country. Only Tottenham, Arsenal and Chelsea themselves have taken more home points so far this season than Burnley, a point Conte underlined before the match and straight after it. Burnley struggle away but at home their aggressive muscular style, with the crowd behind them, creates a challenge that we see less and less of in English football. They ask problems that teams have forgotten how to solve.

This was a physical bombardment, with plenty of tackles and elbows that are the far side of legal in 2017. Eden Hazard got his usual kicking while Ashley Barnes laid out Cesar Azpilicueta with an elbow which was not even punished with a booking. On top of that the weather was no more welcoming, with the game taking place in a sideways snow-storm that sped up as the afternoon went on.

Plenty of teams would have wilted under all this, and plenty have so far this season. But Chelsea dug in and worked hard. They scored a brilliant opener but were pegged back by an equaliser that was even better. And then when Burnley threw everything at them after that, Thibaut Courtois made two priceless saves to stop them from taking a 2-1 lead.

It only took seven minutes for Chelsea to go in front with an incisive counter-attack, opening up a Burnley side committed to keeping enough men behind the ball. N'Golo Kante and Pedro started the move, passing to Victor Moses who stormed down the right wing, away from Robbie Brady, the man tasked with stopping him. Moses laid a pass inside to Pedro who took it in his stride, firing the ball into the bottom corner.

Many teams would drop their heads when 1-0 down to the champions-elect, but not Burnley, not here. They came hard at Chelsea, always trying to get Andre Gray in behind, forcing David Luiz to be at his very best to stop them.


Gray was a menace but it was Brady, on his home debut, who scored the equaliser. Burnley forced a free-kick 25 yards out and Brady whipped it with his left foot over the wall and into the top corner of the net, swerving too fast for Courtois to keep it out.

It would be harsh to call that a Courtois mistake but the Belgian goalkeeper responded with the determination of a man who was making up for something. He made two vital saves to stop Chelsea from slipping to 2-1 down, which would have made it a very different afternoon. First, 10 minutes before half-time, when Joey Barton put Matt Lowton in and Courtois had to dart off his line to block the shot. Then, two minutes after the re-start, Ashley Barnes played Gray in, and the striker should have done better given the space he had, but he could not beat Courtois either. It was a reminder of just how decisive Courtois can be.


The rest of the second half was never going to be as good as the first half. Chelsea were less assertive although when they brought Cesc Fabregas on they started to create chances again from the edge of the box. Willian and Michy Batshuayi came on too but ultimately they could not pick through Burnley’s massed ranks.

Dyche’s team could not sustain their early intensity and the ferocious match settled into more of a stalemate. Burnley, to look at their manager, players and fans, were clearly the happier side at the final whistle. But Chelsea, for all their quick disappointment, could not be too down-hearted about another small step towards the title.


Burnley (4-4-2): Heaton; Lowton, Keane, Mee, Ward; Boyd, Westwood, Barton, Brady (Arfield, 64); Barnes, Gray (Vokes, 81)

Chelsea (3-4-3): Courtois; Cahill, Luiz, Azplicueta; Moses (Willian, 72), Matic (Fabregas, 66), Kante, Alonso; Pedro (Batshuayi, 86), Diego Costa, Hazard