Sunday, December 04, 2016

Manchester City 3-1



Independent:

Manchester City 1 Chelsea 3

Antonio Conte's side make title statement with brilliant win at the Etihad

The visitors came back from a goal down to secure a excellent victory over Pep Guardiola's side, who saw both Sergio Aguero and Fernandinho sent off late on

Tim Rich at the Etihad Stadium


This was the first time Pep Guardiola and Antonio Conte had ever met as managers and, if this encounter is any kind of benchmark, it might become the Muhammad Ali v Joe Frazier of the Premier League

The match, which took Chelsea four points clear at the top of the Premier League, finished with the kind of brawl that Madison Square Gardens would have recognised. Deep into stoppage time, the contest between Sergio Aguero and David Luiz that had been one of the themes of the afternoon exploded.

The Argentine launched himself into a reckless tackle that provoked a mass confrontation between both sets of players. When the teams were pulled apart, Manchester City were down to nine men. Aguero was shown his second straight red card of the season which will earn him a four-match ban. For pushing Cesc Fabregas over an advertising hoarding, Fernandinho, who was also dismissed, faces any length of suspension. Manchester City finished a match they should have won beaten and embarrassed.


Had this been a boxing match, this would have been a knockout from the ropes. As he contemplated the match, Guardiola remarked that he was “curious” about the outcome. He sounded like a scientist about to conduct a laboratory experiment. You did not have to possess Guardiola’s knowledge of football to analyse the results.

Teams that do not drive home their advantages in possession and chances always risk defeat. Whether at Barcelona or Bayern, Guardiola’s rare defeats have come against teams that have known how to use the counter-attack and here all three Chelsea goals came from breakaways.

This was Chelsea’s eighth straight win and, like the last at home to Tottenham, Conte’s side had to come from behind against one of their title rivals.


This, far more than the Manchester derby in September, appeared like a contest between two clubs most likely to finish up as Premier League champions. Everything about the game from the first tackle by Nicolas Otamendi on Diego Costa that drew the first yellow card of the game to the cold-eyed way Willian put away Chelsea’s second felt intense. The game began at 12.30pm but the deep December gloom made it feel like an evening kick-off.

It was not the usual match at the Etihad Stadium, where the screens normally proclaim statistics showing that Manchester City enjoyed 70 per cent plus possession. This was an in your face encounter with space at a premium.

Injuries had forced both managers to make a change. The involvement of Fabregas, who had last started for Chelsea in September’s debacle against Arsenal, and Jesus Navas, who replaced Raheem Sterling, appeared to weaken both teams. In fact, both were involved in their sides’ respective opening goals while Navas should have had more than just the one assist.

The referee, Anthony Taylor, was surely right to dismiss both Aguero and Fernandinho but the interval had seen him booed off. There were two incidents. The first had come when David Silva had taken the ball past Gary Cahill, who had lost his footing and then appeared to touch the ball in the penalty area with his forearm.


Later in the first half, Aguero seized on a weak pass from Cesar Azpilicueta 35 yards out and then tried to take the ball past Luiz before falling. It appeared that Luiz had fouled him. It was a long way out but Luiz was the last man and Taylor must have considered a red card. To Guardiola’s fury, he gave nothing. The battle between the Argentine and the Brazilian simmered for the remainder of the match before boiling over completely.

Midway through the first half, Manchester City took control of the game with Thibaut Courtois tipping a fierce shot from Aguero over the bar and then, just as the interval beckoned, one of Navas’ less-threatening crosses was diverted past his own keeper by Cahill’s outstretched leg.


The quarter of an hour after the restart was the period when Manchester City ought to have won this game. De Bruyne forced Courtois into one save and then somehow deflected Navas’ cross on to the bar. In between Aguero had seized on a weak pass from Marcos Alonso, taken it past the keeper and only a diving block from Cahill stopped the second.

Almost immediately after De Bruyne’s miss, Chelsea equalised. A long ball from Fabregas was brought under control by Diego Costa, who outmuscled Otamendi, turned and shot. Ten minutes later, Chelsea broke away again. A long pass from Costa found Willian clear on goal and the Brazilian did not miss. Guardiola responded by throwing on every available striker but once more Chelsea waited for the moment to strike and Eden Hazard’s goal was the cue for the stadium to empty. Those who remained saw what was a great footballing contest disintegrate into an open brawl.


Manchester City: Bravo; Otamendi, Stones (Iheanacho 78), Kolarov; Fernandinho, Gundogan (Toure 76); Navas, De Bruyne, Silva, Sane (Clichy 69); Aguero.

Substitutes: Caballero (g), Sagna, Zabaleta, Fernando.


Chelsea: Courtois; Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill; Moses, Kante, Fabregas, Alonso; Pedro (Willian 50), Costa, Hazard.

Substitutes: Begovic (g), Ivanovic, Oscar, Batshuayi, Chalobah, Aina.


Referee: Anthony Taylor



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Guardian:


Chelsea surge past Manchester City as Agüero and Fernandinho see red

Man City 1 - 3

Daniel Taylor at the Etihad Stadium

When the dust settles on a tempestuous match, the finger-pointing stops and the bans are handed out, perhaps this will be the occasion when Chelsea made it clear their title aspirations are authentic. They rode their luck at times – discounting the own goal from Gary Cahill – and their opponents were entitled to be aggrieved about some of the refereeing decisions. Yet nobody could question the endurance of Antonio Conte’s men, their competitive courage and the tactical acumen of their manager.


Unfortunately for them, the occasion will be remembered more for the collective lack of discipline in stoppage time when City, to put it bluntly, lost the plot. Sergio Agüero, having already served one suspension this season, can expect a four-game ban after his scything red-card challenge on David Luiz. That, however, told only part of the story as the two sets of players clashed by the touchline and Fernandinho could be in serious trouble after reacting to some provocation from Cesc Fàbregas by grabbing him by the neck, levering him towards the crowd and eventually pushing him over the advertising hoardings almost into the laps of the front row of spectators.

Fernandinho wanted to prolong the argument even after being sent off and he, and City, might face further action when the Football Association studies the video replays and sees how stewards had to prevent it getting even more out of hand. Chelsea could also be fined given the number of players from the sides locking horns. To put it into context, the managers felt compelled to go on the pitch and Diego Costa, of all people, could be seen trying to calm down Fernandinho. Guardiola did at least recognise it was a shabby way to end the match – “I would like to apologise,” he said – but he was pushing his luck trying to argue that Agüero’s wild, two-footed challenge was not intentional and his own conduct was questionable, to say the least.



At one point, late in the game, Guardiola could be seen sarcastically clapping the referee, Anthony Taylor, for giving City a free-kick, even punching the air and sticking up his thumbs to give his act an extra flourish. Guardiola insisted that he would never be disrespectful about referees in press conferences, but he had already done just that in front of a television audience stretching to millions. As for his apology, it was hardly uttered in the manner of someone who genuinely felt contrition or embarrassment. He was seething, no matter how determined he was not to criticise Agüero or Fernandinho directly.

It was a breathless contest, laced with controversy, and in fairness to City they did have legitimate complaints, in particular the first-half incident when David Luiz could feasibly have been sent off for halting Agüero’s run towards goal. City were also denied two penalty appeals in the opening 45 minutes and Taylor spent large parts of the game with an incensed crowd reminding him of his alleged boyhood allegiances to Manchester United.


Ultimately, though, there was a reminder here that Guardiola’s team are going to find it difficult to win the league when they defend with so little cohesion. City have kept two clean sheets in the league and having taken the lead it must have been startling for their manager to see how they unravelled in the face of Chelsea’s superb counterattacking.

Costa began the comeback on the hour and the next two goals came from the kind of breakaway attacks that have exposed City on several occasions this season. At least there was some form of mitigation for Eden Hazard’s goal, with the clock ticking down and the home side left with no choice but to advance in numbers. Yet, from one penalty area to the other, Chelsea opened them up in a matter of seconds when the substitute Willian ran clear to give the visitors the lead. Chelsea played with the better structure, the clearer heads and a greater understanding of the wing-back system employed by both sides.

Hazard’s late finish confirmed an eighth successive league win, Chelsea’s best run for 10 years in a single season and that made it a desperately disappointing afternoon for City bearing in mind the home team led at half-time and had a golden opportunity, two minutes before Costa’s equaliser, to double their lead. Kevin De Bruyne could not keep his shot down, the ball came back off the crossbar and the remainder of the match merely re-iterated that Guardiola is still to get the balance right between attack and defence.


More than anything, City will look back to what happened on the half-hour mark when De Bruyne’s long pass sent Agüero chasing after two defenders and César Azpilicueta’s attempt to play the ball back to Thibaut Courtois fell short. Agüero would have fancied his chances in a sprint against David Luiz and his opponent seemed to realise it, leaning in with sufficient force to unbalance the striker, but also applying enough disguise to get away with it.

That was a key moment because if the free-kick had been given the next decision for Taylor would have been whether Agüero, running in diagonally 30 yards from goal, had been denied a clear scoring opportunity and, if so, Chelsea would have been down to 10 men.

Taylor had already given Cahill the benefit of the doubt after a handball inside the penalty area and the volume turned up again when N’Golo Kanté got away with a challenge on Ilkay Gündogan. Cahill’s own goal came shortly afterwards and Agüero might consider, on reflection, that Chelsea’s centre-half had suffered enough indignity without rubbing it in by patting him on his head as he ran away in celebration. Jesús Navas had supplied the cross and as own-goals go this one was spectacular – a twisting volley to redirect the ball beneath the joint of crossbar and post.


Costa’s equaliser was another demonstration of his ability to outmuscle opponents, on this occasion Nicolás Otamendi, before delivering a low right-foot shot past Claudio Bravo and from that point onwards it was the players wearing the darker shade of blue who looked like the more rounded side. Chelsea will enjoy the view from the top of the table.



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Telegraph:


Man City 1 Chelsea 3: Hazard completes stunning comeback as Aguero and Fernandinho see red in ugly scenes at final whistle

Chelsea stunned Pep Guardiola's side

Sam Wallace


By the time Pep Guardiola got onto the pitch in injury-time at the end of the game to try and broker peace between warring factions, he had already lost two of his best players to red cards and a bad defeat had metamorphosed into a meltdown of spectacular proportions.

Sergio Aguero’s attempt to put David Luiz into the front row of the Colin Bell Stand resulted in the Argentine’s dismissal and a ban that will see him miss four games, this being his second red of the season. Fernandinho had more luck putting Fabregas in the seats, grabbing the midfielder by the throat and pushing him over an advertising hoarding which meant the Brazilian was also dismissed.

It should be said at this point that Fernandinho completely fell for the trap set for him by Fabregas, a past master at these kinds of things. The Spaniard offered no resistance as his opposite number lost his cool, edging him back off the pitch with several lunges at his throat before depositing him over the advertising boards and ensuring his own dismissal.


Nine men on the pitch and Diego Costa as the unlikely maker of the peace as City reached boiling point – not exactly what the club envisaged when bringing in Guardiola. In a game of quality and drama, it was Chelsea who seized their chances on the counter-attack while City wasted theirs and lingered upon the denial of a red card for Luiz and a later penalty appeal that was rejected.

The City fans that stayed until the end booed Anthony Taylor and his assistants off the pitch although Guardiola himself stoically refused to blame the referee. “We didn’t win because we missed a lot of chances,” he said, not because of the referee.” The ruck at the end, he conceded, was “a pity” and he apologised but there was a lot more of the usual talk about his pride in his players rather than condemning their momentary madness.


There was also a suggestion that Guardiola sarcastically applauded the referee Taylor but the City manager was having none of that either. He is still muttering on about what he seemed to be suggesting was the injustice of the Nolito red card against Bournemouth so it might take him a while yet to get over what happened at Chelsea.

Instead these are the December days of Antonio Conte, whose winning march through the Premier League stands at eight straight games and now takes in the home turf of the most burnished managerial reputation of all the division’s big dogs. For that he can give thanks for a team that defends with the cussedness of the Chelsea of old, and in Costa a man who has been reinvented.

The Brazil-born striker exerted a control over Nicolas Otamendi that was so complete in the second half that you wondered if City would need to ask permission at full-time to have their Argentine back. For the first goal Costa swept past the City defender, for the second he spun him in the centre of the pitch and slipped in the substitute Willian, and on neither occasion was there a damn thing that Otamendi could do.


What a change in Costa, from the raging bull of the Jose Mourinho years to the man who, substituted near the end, climbed out of his seat in the closing stages not to fight Fernandinho but to attempt to calm his compatriot down. Costa tried in vain to establish some reassuring eye contact with his fellow Brazilian and eventually gave up as the midfielder ended up shoving his own club’s staff.

While there were periods of brilliance from City when they moved the ball hypnotically, Guardiola was right about their lack of an edge when it came to finishing. Kevin De Bruyne and Aguero both missed chances in the second half with their team in the lead. Another goal would have made it difficult for Chelsea, who grabbed their last, through Eden Hazard at the very end.


While City have great flair, Chelsea have the confidence of winners under Conte, patient assassins who bide their time, resist panic, and hit hard on the counter-attack. They won without the injured Nemanja Matic and in his place, Fabregas did what Fabregas does: hit some fine long and short range passes and got an opponent sent off. It was his first minutes since the defeat to Arsenal in September.

Alongside him was the ubiquitous N’Golo Kante and Chelsea started the game well. John Stones was trapped by Costa after nine minutes and very nearly embarrassed with a Chelsea goal. But it was Gary Cahill who had the misfortune of ending the half with an own goal as he tried to get a block on Jesus Navas’ cross from the right.

City were most aggrieved at referee Taylor’s refusal to send off Luiz on 30 minutes when a long ball from De Bruyne into the left channel that Cesar Azpilicueta failed to control ran onto Aguero. Luiz stepped into the space between the striker and the ball and the latter went down with much expectation all round that Taylor would give the penalty.


The second appeal looked stronger with Ilkay Gundogan going down in the area as he shaped to shoot and Kante moved to intervene. The crowd and the City bench were unhappy and they were still grumbling as the teams went in at half-time following Cahill’s inadvertent redirection of Navas’ cross into his own goal.

There were chances for City to put Chelsea away in the opening stages of the second half and then came the backlash with the unstoppable Costa at the heart of it. His first goal was of the highest class, taking a Fabregas ball on his chest, cutting back inside Otamendi onto his right foot before sweeping the ball in.

If that was painful for Otamendi the next goal was just as bad, Costa turning the centre-half in the centre of the pitch and slipping a pass into the substitute Willian to run onto and score. In the closing stages a big hit over the top from Marcos Alonso was chased by Hazard who left Aleksandar Kolarov in his wake to hit the third. City’s defence was a smoking ruin, and if there was any question as to their emotions, the injury-time dust-up left no-one in any doubt.



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Mail:


Manchester City 1-3 Chelsea: Diego Costa inspires second half comeback as Blues triumph at the Etihad

Chelsea came from behind to secure a 3-1 victory over Manchester City at the Etihad on Saturday afternoon
City took the lead shortly before the break when Gary Cahill deflected a Jesus Navas cross into his own goal
Cahill cleared Sergio Aguero's shot off the line before Kevin De Bruyne hit the bar from only two yards out
Chelsea hit back through Diego Costa, who controlled a Cesc Fabregas pass and finished low after an hour
Second-half substitute Willian finished off a counter attack before Eden Hazard sealed victory with a third
Sergio Aguero and Fernandinho were both sent off in a late brawl following a challenge on David Luiz


By Rob Draper for The Mail on Sunday


In the end, Manchester City lost their composure and Pep Guardiola lost just a little of that iconic status he brought with him to England.

From afar, he can seem coolness personified. Close up on Saturday, as he sarcastically applauded referee Anthony Taylor, clenched his fists and gave the thumbs up when a decision finally went his way, he seemed anything but.

Guardiola lost four games last season in the Bundesliga; he has lost four in two months here. And maybe that accounts for increased tetchiness and lack of gravitas.



For City were outsmarted on Saturday, as Chelsea increased their lead at the top of the Premier League. 'We aren't strong enough in the box,' said Guardiola, meaning both their defending and their finishing.

In his words, he was diplomatic and poised, apologising for the melee at the end which finished with two of his players sent off and refusing to blame the referee.

Yet his contemptuous actions on the touchline spoke louder. And his team followed the lead disintegrating at the end. Sergio Aguero was first with his awful challenge on David Luiz, for which he received his second red card of the season and a four-match ban.



Guardiola said he believed it was 'not intentional' but that seemed some way off the mark. Fernandinho followed in the subsequent brawl, for pushing Cesc Fabregas over the advertising hoardings and he may yet receive more than a three-match ban given that he had to be manhandled off the pitch.

Fabregas, who had slapped Fernandinho, and Nathaniel Chalobah were also booked but all around the Etihad it was clear City felt bruised, unfairly treated and hard done by.

'We did not lose the game because of the referee,' Guardiola said afterwards. 'And it was pity to finish like that. I apologise. I have to adapt, I have to learn. I am not here to change anything. I'm just in the process of understanding. It is completely different in Italy, in Spain, in England. I have to adjust.'




Certainly there is a sense that, with so many chances and having played so well for so long, City should have won this game. Having matched Chelsea's back three, City created a string of first-half chances for Aguero and a correctly-disallowed goal from Fernandinho.

Yet there was that nagging feeling that Luiz might have been sent off in the 31st minute; that City might have been awarded two penalties. But perhaps the gravest doubt in their minds is that they are all too easily picked off by more worldly-wise players.

Chelsea were that by some distance, a team with the mark of title winners. Playing on the counter attack, they pulled City apart on three separate occasions and that was enough to ensure the Etihad was half empty by the final whistle.

'It was a really important performance because when you have this type of game against a really good team, you have always to show the right attitude and the will to win and fight,' said Conte.

'Today we were losing 1-0 and we showed great character and great determination to find the draw and then to win the game.'



Conte will not acknowledge their title credentials just yet. 'I repeat we have to wait for the first part of the season because we know that this league is not easy. Now we are playing very well and we have good confidence, but it is important to work and improve because there is room to improve.'

Chelsea are well rested, having excused themselves from cup competitions. But they are also more streetwise than the rest. Diego Costa was outstanding again in the second half; Luiz, for all the controversy he would attract, utterly compelling as a leader. And they have quality: Costa, Willian and Eden Hazard's strikes were all excellent while Fabreags, back in the team, produced lovely assists.

'I am pleased for Cesc,' said Conte. 'This game wasn't easy for him. The last game he played was against Arsenal and then he had an injury. Now he has recovered and I am very happy for his performance. He must continue to improve.'

The Luiz incident was key. Kevin De Bruyne played a delightful 40 yard-ball for Aguero, who beat Gary Cahill. Luiz headed him off with a shoulder charge. Referee Taylor, unloved by City fans, looked as though he might award a free-kick to City but seemed to receive advice from his assistant not to. The Etihad erupted, aghast.

Soon Hazard almost scored on the counter. City were forewarned yet they did take the lead their performance merited on 45 minutes, when a poor cross from Jesus Navas saw Cahill inexplicably divert the ball over his own goalkeeper's head in a forlorn attempt to block.


Otamendi looks to the heavens after seeing a decision go against him during the first half on Saturday afternoon

At the start of the second half Thibaut Courtois saved from De Bruyne and Aguero stole in to steal Marcos Alonso's loose pass, but Cahill recovered to clear off the line.

Then came the sweeping, glorious move on 58 minutes which ended with De Bruyne six yards out with an open goal. He hit the bar — and Guardiola clutched his head in despair.

Two minutes later, Chelsea finally reacted. Fabregas produced a lovely, lofted ball for Costa. The striker took it perfectly on the top of the chest, rounded Nicolas Otamendi and shot decisively home.

From being overwhelmed, Chelsea suddenly looked as though they had a plan. Even more so on 71 minutes with another stunning counter-attack. City were pressing for the winner, but Guardiola's system leaves his sides extraordinarily open.

Chelsea cleared, Hazard found Costa who simply spun Otamendi with ease and played in Willian, racing goalwards. His finish was superb, his celebration initially ecstatic and then muted as he held up a black armband to pay tribute to his compatriots who died in the Chapecoense plane disaster.

City went on searching but Chelsea would have the last word, Alonso feeding Hazard, who sprinted away and finished clinically.



MANCHESTER CITY: Bravo 5; Stones 5 (Iheanacho 78 , 5.5), Otamendi 4, Kolarov 5, Fernandinho 6, Gundogan 5.5 (Toure 76, 6), Navas 7, Sane 5.5 (Clichy 69, 6), Silva 6.5, De Bruyne 5, Aguero 5.

Subs not used: Caballero, Zabaleta, Sagna, Fernando

Goals: Cahill OG (45)

Yellow cards: Otamendi (17), Navas (81)

Red cards: Aguero (90+7), Fernandinho (90+7)


CHELSEA: Courtois 6.5; Azpilicueta 6, David Luiz 6, Cahill 5.5; Moses 6, Kante 6, Fabregas 7, Alonso 6; Pedro 5 (Willian 49, 7), Diego Costa 8 (Chalobah, 81), Hazard 7 (Batshuayi, 90+4).

Subs not used: Begovic, Aina, Ivanovic, Oscar

Goals: Costa (59), Willian (70), Hazard (90)

Yellow cards: Kante (50), Chalobah (90+7), Fabregas (90+7)

Referee: Anthony Taylor


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Mirror:

Manchester City 1-3 Chelsea: Antonio Conte's side mount stunning comeback - 5 things we learned

Goals from Diego Costa, Willian and then Eden Hazard flipped a wild game on its head at the Etihad - but it could have been very different


BY DAVID MCDONNELL


Chelsea came from behind to emerge victorious in the top-of-the-table clash with Manchester City and make it eight Premier League wins in a row.

City took the lead just before half-time when Chelsea defender Gary Cahill put the ball beyond Thibaut Courtois and into his own net.

But the visitors levelled through Diego Costa on the hour, the striker then turning provider for William, who scored after a counter-attack at breakneck speed from Chelsea before Eden Hazard's late goals secured all three points.

City star Kevin De Bruyne missed an open goal from point-blank range with his side leading 1-0, with the midfielder's miss proving costly as Chelsea staged their smash and grab win.

The home side paid the price for some inept defending, particularly from Nicolas Otamendi, and have now failed to win any of their last four Premier League home games.

In an appalling finale, City had Aguero and Fernandinho sent off, as a mass brawl broke out following the former's late lunge on David Luiz.

Both sets of players became embroiled in an ugly melée, with ref Anthony Taylor dismissing both City men as the ugly scenes unfolded.

Aguero could now be looking at a four-game ban, having already been sent off once this season.

The City forward will be hit with a straight three-match ban, which could be extended because of his earlier dismissal against West Ham, a retrospective punishment following trial by TV.



Here are five things we learned from the lunchtime kick-off at the Etihad Stadium...


1. City need to strengthen in January


With skipper Vincent Kompamy plagued by injury, and Nicolas Otamendi and John Stones looking uncertain and vulnerable with every game, City have to buy a defender in January.

Stones was caught out defensively on a couple of occasions early on, while Otamendi was at fault for both of Chelsea's goals.

Guardiola must accept he has to buy in January if City are to have any chance of winning the title.


2. Luiz lucky to stay on


David Luiz knew exactly what he was doing when he body-checked Sergio Aguero as the City forward chased down Cesar Azpilicueta's under-hit back-pass just before the half-hour.

Somehow, Luiz got away with the blatant foul, which could have earned him a red card as he looked to be the last man.

Ref Anthony Taylor looked to go to his pocket for a card, before seemingly changing his mind.

Aguero was dismissed in stoppage time after exacting his revenge on the defender - revenge, perhaps, for their 2013 meeting?


3. Fabregas peripheral until key assist


With Nemanja Matic out with a muscle problem, Cesc Fabregas was handed his first appearance since Chelsea's 3-0 drubbing at Arsenal back in September.

It was a chance for Fabregas to show he can still perform when called upon, but he struggled defensively, although it was his his fine ball through to Costa that saw Chelsea equalise.



4. Cahill atones for own goal.


No player has scored more Premier League goals against Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois than team-mate Gary Cahill, who turned the ball into his own net here.

Cahill has netted twice against Courtois, along with nine other Premier League players.

But Cahill did atone for his blunder by clearing an Aguero shot off the line just after the break, which kept the game alive for Chelsea.


5. De Bruyne miss proves costly


Kevin De Bruyne has been arguably City's player of the season, with his goals and assists, but he produced a contender for miss of the season in the 56 minute.

After a wonderful counter-attack involving David Silva and Jesus Navas, all De Bruyne had to do was steer the ball in, but he managed to miss, clipping the bar.

That miss was compounded moments later when Costa levelled, followed by Willian's winner.


Player ratings


Man City: Bravo 5, Otamendi 4, Stones 5 (Ineanacho 78, 5), Kolarov 4, Fernandinho 4, Gundogan 6 (Toure 76, 5), Navas 6, Silva 6, De Bruyne 6, Sane 6 (Clichy 69, 5), Aguero 4

Chelsea: Courtois 7, Azpilicueta 6, Luiz 6, Cahill 6, Kante 6, Moses 6, Fabregas 7, Hazard 8 (Batshuayi 90), Alonso 6, Pedro 6 (Willian 50, 7), Costa 8 MOTM (Chalobah 85)




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Star:


Man City 1 Chelsea 3: Blues come from behind to stay top

LOVE him or hate him – you simply cannot ignore Diego Costa.

By Paul Hetherington at the Etihad


And how the Chelsea fans adore their rough-house striker, who turned this superb heavyweight contest on its head to keep Antonio Conte’s side top of the league.

The visitors bounced off the ropes to make it eight wins in a row thanks to Costa.

The Premier League’s top scorer struck for the 11th time this season to equalise, despite City boss Pep Guardiola claiming he handled the ball in bringing it under control.

Costa then set up substitute Willian for a classic breakaway goal, before Eden Hazard drove in the third in the final minute from Marcos Alonso’s long ball.

And all that after a Gary Cahill own-goal had put City ahead before the home side then squandered a series of chances.

The match then ended in chaos as both teams clashed following a Sergio Aguero foul on David Luiz.


In shameful, spiteful scenes, both Aguero and Fernandinho were sent off leaving City with nine men for the final few seconds.

For Guardiola’s side it is now four home league games without a win.

Despite that stat, City’s Spanish boss said: “Congratulations to Chelsea, of course, but also congratulations to my players for the way they played.

“I am proud of my team, because you have to remember who we were playing against.

“We created so many good chances and in the end it’s a case of, wow, how has that happened?”

Guardiola’s attention to detail saw the colour of the netting changed from black – as it had been for almost 10 years – to white.


But if that was designed to make the goals clearer, it did not work at first.

There was not a shot on target until the 21st minute when Aguero’s effort was turned over the bar by Thibaut Courtois.

City, playing three at the back like their opponents , then looked for a penalty but it was a case of the ball rolling into Cahill’s arm rather than deliberate handball.

City did get the better of Courtois in the 25th minute but Fernandinho was offside when he headed home Kevin De Bruyne’s right-wing free-kick.

There was controversy when referee Anthony Taylor took no action against Luiz after he appeared to obstruct Aguero, who was poised to break clear.

And there was more frustration for the City striker when Leroy Sane set him up with a close-range chance which he failed to convert.



The Argentina ace then headed wide from De Bruyne’s cross and City were denied a penalty after a challenge by N’Golo Kante on Ilkay Gundogan.

Despite their growing frustration, City finally managed a goal before the break.

In the final minute of the first half, Jesus Navas crossed from the right and Cahill put the ball into his own net past Courtois.

The defender will not have appreciated the pat on the head he got from Aguero.

Chelsea’s main threat on the break came from Hazard, who went round City keeper Claudio Bravo but failed to find a team-mate.


City, though, had chances at the beginning of the second half to kill the game off.

De Bruyne failed to get the better of Courtois, who blocked his effort.

Aguero seized on a back-pass from Alonso, went wide of Courtois but saw his shot cleared away by Cahill.

Then De Bruyne, amazingly, hit the bar from three yards out.

And it was almost inevitable Chelsea would equalise with their first shot on target. Cesc Fabregas found Costa with a long ball in the 60th minute.

           
 
The striker controlled the ball, cut inside and drove the ball home.

And after Courtois had denied Aguero again, Costa created Chelsea’s second goal.

He turned Otamendi and sent substitute Willian clear for a low right-foot finish.

In the aftermath of the Chapecoense tragedy, the Brazilian marked the goal by lifting his black armband aloft to display the message ‘Forca Chape’.

Hazard then finished expertly as Chelsea continued to look like potential champions.



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Sun:


WHERE THERE'S A WILL

Manchester City 1 Chelsea 3: Diego Costa, Willian and Eden Hazard score as game ends in an ugly brawl with Sergio Aguero and Fernandinho sent off

Argentine's horror lunge on David Luiz sparks fight on the field of play as Blues run out winners in crucial six-pointer

BY MARTIN BLACKBURN AND DAVE FRASER

DIEGO COSTA, Willian and Eden Hazard spared Gary Cahill’s blushes as Chelsea battled back from behind to beat Premier League title-rivals Manchester City at the Etihad.

Fernandinho had the ball in the back of the net in the 25th-minute, only to have his thumping header from a curling Kevin De Bruyne free-kick chalked out for offside.

But City eventually took the lead on the stroke of half-time as Gary Cahill deflected a dangerous Jesus Navas cross beyond the despairing Thibaut Courtois to send the Etihad crowd into raptures.

Keep up to date with ALL the Chelsea and Manchester City news, gossip, transfers and goals on our club page plus fixtures, results and live match commentary.

De Bruyne missed the easiest chance of the season, smashing the bar from four yards despite the open goal and Chelsea quickly made them pay as Diego Costa out-muscled Nicolas Otamendi following a sublime ball Cesc Fabregas to smash home an equaliser.

Ten minutes later substitute Willian rubbed salt into the wound, as Chelsea launched a clinical counter attack, with the Brazilian rifling the ball into the far corner to take the lead for the first time and stun the home support.

Things went from bad to worse for Pep Guardiola’s men with just minutes left on the clock.

With City piling men forward, Hazard was lethal on the break firing behind a desperate Claudio Bravo to seal the most vital of three points in Chelsea Premier League title hunt.


With seconds left on the clock Sergio Aguero sparked a mass brawl with a horror tackle on David Luiz for which he saw red, while Fernandinho was also sent off for grabbing and shoving Cesc Fabregas in a bitter end to what was otherwise a stunning game.

STATS, FACTS, GOALS & LOLS

ANTONIO CONTE made a big call to put Cesc Fabregas into his starting line-up for this one – the Spaniard had only played 87 minutes of Premier League football before Saturday.

YOU couldn’t argue with those who predicted goals – the last three meetings between these sides last season had produced 12.

THIS has not been a happy hunting ground for Chelsea – they’ve won just one of their last seven Premier League visits to the Etihad.


THIS was the first time that the nets at the Etihad have been white for nine-and-a-half years. City insist it was nothing to do with Pep Guardiola being superstitious, more to bring them in line with the rest of the league.

REFEREE Anthony Taylor did nothing to dispel the theories about him having a soft spot for Manchester United – with a series of decisions against City in the first half

NO player has scored more Premier League goals against Thibaut Courtois than – his own defender Gary Cahill. He now has two – the same as nine other players.


DIEGO COSTA’S equaliser put him one ahead of Sergio Aguero in the race for the Premier League Golden Boot – 11 to 10.

WHAT a lovely moment for Brazilian sub Willian to score the second goal and then show his black armband for his countrmen who died in the Colombian air disaster.

YAYA TOURE got a nice welcome back from the home crowd when he came on as a second half sub – his first appearance at the Etihad since his exile.



MAN CITY: Bravo, Stones (Iheanacho 78), Otamendi, Kolarov, Fernandinho, Gundogan (Toure 76), Navas, Sane (Clichy 69), Silva, De Bruyne, Aguero.

Subs not used: Caballero, Sagna, Zabaleta, Fernando.

Goals: Cahill og (45).

Booked: Otamendi.

Sent off: Aguero, Fernandinho.

CHELSEA: Courtois, Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill, Alonso, Moses, Kante, Fabregas, Pedro (Willian 50), Hazard (Batshuayi 90), Costa (Chalobah 85).

Subs not used: Begovic, Ivanovic, Aina, Oscar.

Goals: Costa (60), Willian (70), Hazard (90).

Booked: Kante.



WHAT THEY SAID

Chelsea captain Gary Cahill: “We gave everything on the pitch. It was a test for us.

“It shows another side to our football. That’s eight wins now, which we can build on.”

Blues scorer Eden Hazard: “It’s a good game for us. We did well, it is not every year you can [win] eight in a row.

“To come here, [losing] at half-time 1-0, we did very well. The guys gave everything, the whole team gave everything.”

Chelsea defender David Luiz: “I don’t like to speak about these type of things [Aguero tackle].

“I want to dedicate this win to the people who died in Brazil. It was difficult to get my head together as I had some friends there.

“We just need to pray for the victim’s families.”



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


Express:


Man City 1 - Chelsea 3: Hazard puts nail in coffin as Aguero and Fernandinho see red

CHELSEA kept their nerve and their discipline, and they have gone clear at the top of the Premier League table with a stunning and remarkable eighth consecutive victory.

By JIM HOLDEN


Manchester City could noit maintain cool heads or hearts --- and in the fury of defeat manager Pep Guardiola is facing the first crisis of his time in English football.

Having two players, Sergio Aguero and Fernandinho, sent off in a frenzied finale was bad enough for the celebrated Pep.

What will trouble him even more was how City crumbled in the heat of pressure during Chelsea’s second half revival.

If City had taken any one of a string of chances when they were 1-0 ahead and clearly in command of the match with some magical skills, they might have won at a canter.

The moment Chelsea fashioned an equaliser from Diego Costa in the 60th minute, the whole game altered.

Guardiola lost his cool too.

He remonstrated fiercely with the fourth official that Costa had handled the ball before scoring. Television replays showed that was not the case, and surely it wasn’t coincidence that City’s players lost their discipline just as their manager did.


Guardiola hinted at that, merely hinted, when he spoke afterwards, saying: “We played quite well against a good team, and it’s tough to lose.

“We missed so many chances and when Chelsea made it 1-1, my players thought, ‘Wow, how did that happen?’

“In our box we weren’t strong enough. But we cannot forget who we played today.

“Chelsea’s approach was really different, but that is part of the game. You don’t expect Chelsea to create 25 chances. They created three and scored three.”

Wow was the word that betrayed Guardiola’s dismay. His players could not cope with adversity, and they will need to regroup quickly if they want to sustain a title challenge this season.

For Chelsea it was just the opposite. They have huge resilience, and this was further evidence of the power of the revolution of spirit and tactics that has been delivered by manager Antonio Conte.


They had gone behind in the first half to an own goal just before the break, when Gary Cahill sliced a cross from Jesus Navas into the net.

There might have been many more City goals, as Aguero missed three decent opportunities in the first half alone and more in the second period.

Kevin De Bruyne was even more culpable, firing one weak shot straight at the keeper at the end of a swift counter-attack, and then somehow contriving to fire against the bar from three yards range when in front of an open goal.

That was in the 57th minute with City 1-0 ahead. Another goal would have finished off Chelsea.

Here was the reason City lost this game --- their own mistakes; missing simple chances to score.

Instead, fans and players wanted to blame referee Anthony Taylor who they felt gave wrong decisions against their side in contentious incidents.


The greatest anger was when Aguero tumbled dramtically after going shoulder to shoulder with Chelsea defender David Luiz chasing a through ball on the half hour.

Was it a foul? If so, it would have meant a red card for Luiz.

Was it strong clever defending or a sly cynical block by Luiz? Was it a real foul or a theatrically cynical tumble by the attacker?

You could see it either way --- and referee Taylor waved play on.  And don’t blame the official when there is so much routine cheating and deception by players in all teams.

Chelsea equalised on the hour when Costa chested down a long pass from Cesc Fabregas, playing instead of the injured Nemanja Matic, and scored smartly with a low shot.

Ten minutes later they took the lead with a thrilling counter-attack goal. Eden Hazard took possession on the edge of his own box and fed Costa, who turned his marker Nicolas Otamendi with ease and sent Willian flying forward. The Brazilian scored with calm precision.


Hazard grabbed the third on another classy break, sprinting clear of Aleksandar Kolarov to shoot home.

The game finished in chaos when Aguero lunged two-footed at Luiz, caught him just below the knee, and was correctly sent off. Anger spilled over.

Chelsea substitute Nat Chalobah was booked for pushing Aguero, but the greater folly came from Fernandinho, who grabbed Fabregas by the throat and pushed him over the advertising hoardings.

A red card for him was equally inevitable.

It confirmed a first home defeat for Guardiola as manager of Manchester City, yet he was still talking about having “pride” in his players last night.

A more accurate comment came from Luiz, who said: “We showed our power, and it also shows our character that we didn’t lose our heads.”

Exactly.


MANCHESTER CITY: Bravo; Otamendi, Stones (Iheanacho 78th), Kolarov; Fernandinho, Gundogan (Toure 76th); De Bruyne, Silva; Navas, Aguero, Sane (Clichy 69th).

CHELSEA: Courtois; Cahill, Luiz, Azpilicueta; Moses, Fabregas, Kante, Alonso; Pedro (Willian 50th), Costa (Chalobah 85th), Hazard (Batshuayi 93rd).


Man of the match: DIEGO COSTA --- changed the match decisively with first goal for Chelsea and the creation of the second; the work of a supreme striker.

Referee: Anthony Taylor.

Attendance: 54,457

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Tottenham Hotspur 2-1



Independent :

Chelsea 2 Tottenham Hotspur 1

Pedro and Victor Moses spoil Spurs' unbeaten record
Mauricio Pochettino's men were good value for their lead after Christian Eriksen's early strike but the tables turned after the hosts equalised

Glenn Moore at Stamford Bridge

The year 2016 has brought shock after seismic shock, but not a Tottenham win at Stamford Bridge. Margaret Thatcher was prime minister, Nelson Mandela in prison, and football fans still behind fences when Gary Lineker secured their last win here.

On Saturday, they looked on course to finally break the 26-year hoodoo, toying with Chelsea for 40 minutes and taking a lead through Christian Eriksen’s superb 10th-minute goal. Then, in a six-minute spell either side of half-time, Chelsea struck twice, through Pedro and Victor Moses. This restored the Blues to the Premier League summit, a position briefly surrendered to Liverpool in late afternoon, and inflicted Spurs’ first top flight defeat of the season.

It was a match which answered some questions about Chelsea, who had not previously had to come from behind since moving to a three-man defence with wing-backs, but raised further doubts about Spurs. They did not fall apart as badly as they did here last year, but they again looked short of gamecraft when under pressure.

Not that this seemed likely to be a concern in the opening period. The old line about form going out of the window in derby matches is not usually backed up by results but it was the case for the first half. Tottenham arrived off the back of a midweek misadventure in Monaco and with one win in nine games. Chelsea had not conceded in six Premier League matches, all of them won. Yet it was Tottenham who made the confident start, knocking the ball around with arrogant ease as Chelsea chased shadows. 

The home club were offering 25 per cent off in the megastore to mark Black Friday weekend but the concessions were not supposed to extend to the pitch. But with ten minutes gone Dele Alli was allowed to drive forward to the fringe of the Chelsea penalty box before being challenged. When David Luiz did engage Alli popped the ball off to Eriksen who had drifted, untracked, off the right flank. The Dane took full advantage of the space granted him, unleashing a 20-yard shot which swerved away from Thibaut Courtois and inside the left-hand post.

It was the first goal Chelsea had conceded in 600 Premier League minutes, and the first in seven matches since switching to a three-man defence. Bolstered by it Spurs became even more dominant. Uncharacteristically Chelsea struggled to gain, or retain, the ball. Diego Costa was isolated, Eden Hazard anonymous, a frustrated Luiz was booked for a hack at Harry Kane. On the touchline Antonio Conte was in turns furious and bewildered.

For all Spurs’ control, however, clear-cut chances were few. Victor Wanyama, Eriksen and Moussa Dembele shot over from range, from a similar distance Kane at least tested Courtois, but not enough to concern him. And, as so often, the superior team paid for their failure to convert possession into goals. Shortly before the break Pedro was picked out on the edge of the box. He created space by dummying to pass inside, then outside, then used that space to curl an exquisite shot past Hugo Lloris.

Spurs still looked shocked when they went into half-time. Whatever Mauricio Pochettino said to them failed to restore their equilibrium for they conceded again early in the second period. Caught in possession in midfield they were then drawn to Costa’s run down the inside left channel. This left Moses completely unmarked to run in from the right and onto Costa’s cut-back and drill the ball in via the legs of Lloris and Jan Vertonghen.

The reversal of fortunes brought back bitter memories for the visitors of the tempestuous match here in May, their last visit, when they lost a two-goal lead, their heads, and title hopes. Had Marcos Alonso put the match beyond them, as he should have before the hour, they may have lost their discipline again. 

Instead they regrouped, and gradually began to press. After Kane carved out a half-chance for Eriksen Conte decided it was time to dig in. Willian came on for Hazard, Branislav Ivanovic for Moses. Chelsea circled the wagons. Spurs did not lack for desire but they had neither the nous nor, after a draining week, the energy, to pierce the blue blanket.

Chelsea (3-4-2-1): Courtois; Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill; Moses (Ivanovic, 79), Kante, Matic, Alonso; Pedro (Oscar, 83), Hazard (Willian, 76); Costa.
Subs not used: Begovic, Fabregas, Batshuayi, Chalobah.

Tottenham (3-5-2): Lloris; Walker, Vertonghen, Dier, Wimmer; Wanyama, Dembele (Janssen, 83); Eriksen, Alli (Nkoudou, 73), Son (Winks, 65), Kane.
Subs not used: Vorm, Trippier, Onomah, Carter-Vickers.

Referee: M Olive

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

Guardian:

Victor Moses seals Chelsea comeback as Tottenham lose unbeaten record

Chelsea 2 - 1

Amy Lawrence at Stamford Bridge

The team who are already developing an air of Antonio Conte’s Undroppables cruise on. After fielding the same Premier League selection for the sixth successive – and successful – time, Chelsea continued their revival as they saw off Tottenham, showing the mettle to muster a comeback after going a goal behind in the first half. Two of the players who have thrived most from the Conte redesign, Pedro and Victor Moses, supplied the goals to settle a riveting local tussle. After Manchester City and Liverpool had plundered points earlier in the day, nothing less than three would suffice to return to the top of the table. Chelsea reacted ruthlessly.

It left Conte with the air of a contented manager. He acknowledged the evolution that makes his team a different proposition in the high-intensity games to the side who capitulated against Liverpool and Arsenal. “Now we are another team compared to the Liverpool and Arsenal games,” he said. “If we were the same team we would lose this game, for sure. Now we have another type of confidence. I liked our reaction a lot. We won and I am pleased because it wasn’t easy.”

For Tottenham, defeat here to a long-term bogey side is nothing new but what must hurt is that for a spell their performance showed them at their best, with a refreshed appetite for the style that had them unbeaten in the Premier League until the winter chill had set in. History suggested that Stamford Bridge might be a test too far and what felt like a week of reckoning duly delivered two heavyweight blows. After tumbling out of the Champions League in midweek, Mauricio Pochettino’s men were punctured in the league.

The Tottenham manager managed to be frustrated and philosophical at the same time: “If you want to analyse the result, Chelsea win, congratulations. If you want to analyse the 94 minutes, Tottenham had a lot of positives. But in football you need to score. In football sometimes it’s difficult to explain but this is not difficult. They were clinical in front of the goal and we weren’t.”

After the smouldering volcano of this fixture last season, he had called upon his team to be “brave” and his players began as if that instruction was still ringing in their ears.

Keeping a semblance of self-control was imperative and they started by exerting important authority in midfield, pegging Chelsea back and keeping confident possession. Ten minutes in they soared in front. Mousa Dembélé worked the ball up the left and it was moved via Dele Alli to Christian Eriksen. The Dane saw a chink of goal to aim at. His thunderous shot was laced with curl and flew into the net. It was the first time Chelsea’s defence had been beaten in 600 minutes.

Conte looked exasperated as his team could not get a foothold. The muscle in Tottenham’s midriff, with Dembélé and Victor Wanyama patrolling in front of Eric Dier and Jan Vertonghen, proved a meaty barrier. David Luiz mustered Chelsea’s first shot just before the half-hour mark, a whack of a free-kick that Hugo Lloris caught comfortably.

Tottenham’s dominance was such that they continued to create strong chances. After efforts from Kyle Walker, Harry Kane and Eriksen the visitors wondered how they were not even further in front as half-time approached.

What more devastating time for Chelsea to summon some inspiration. A minute before half-time all Tottenham’s hard work was speared by a moment of glorious individual skill. Pedro picked up possession 20 yards out and wrong-footed the Tottenham defence with a touch that had a dash of Cruyff turn about it. The Spaniard bent his shot into the top corner with a flourish.

Off the hook after a pretty uncomfortable first 44 minutes, Conte delivered some choice words at half-time. Chelsea came out with enhanced determination and were soon ahead. They pressed the ball off Tottenham and broke with intent. Eden Hazard invited Diego Costa to drive forwards and he capped a bullish and clever run with a killer pass to Moses, whose shot squirted off Lloris and Vertonghen on the way in. The pendulum had swung. Chelsea’s energy levels suddenly made Tottenham look ponderous. It spoke volumes about how the balance of the game shifted that both Chelsea’s wing-backs had so much more room to get involved.

Although Tottenham tried to manufacture a comeback of their own, Chelsea’s second-half solidity was a far tougher nut to crack. Conte’s Undroppables cherished their win. Tottenham’s pain was palpable.

Conte tried hard to deflect any title talk at this stage. “It is not right to talk about this,” he said. “We have a long way in front of us. It’s important to stay humble and continue to trust in our work. Today we won a game against a really strong team. Tomorrow it’s important to think about the next game, against City, another very strong team. We have to continue to work. We don’t forget that against Arsenal and Liverpool we lost.”

In attitude and application, Conte’s Chelsea are a force to be reckoned with.


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


Telegraph:

Chelsea 2 Spurs 1: Moses puts Blues top of the table as Conte's men fight back from early Eriksen goal

Sam Wallace

They are back at the top of the Premier League and it should be said that Chelsea’s most-capable manager, Antonio Conte, burnished his reputation for tactical mastery a little further with a half-time fix that proved decisive in his team’s seventh straight league victory.

Dreadful for long periods of the first half, Chelsea came roaring back after the break to win a match that Tottenham Hotspur’s players had previously come to regard as payback for the way in which their hopes of the title last season were finally extinguished at Stamford Bridge in May. No payback, just more pain and the first league defeat of the season for the club that have not won in the league at Stamford Bridge since February 1990.

Conte acknowledged that Pedro’s late first-half equaliser unexpectedly changed the complexion of the game but it was notable that his side were sent out for the second half re-energised and in hot pursuit of a second goal, which came from Victor Moses within six minutes.

They were a different side after half-time. As for Spurs, the second half was the kind of performance that got them knocked out of the Champions League group stages within five games, with a bad reaction to the Chelsea equaliser after Christian Eriksen had given his side the lead.

There was no staying power from a side who had the game in their grip but allowed it to slip away. It seemed to get to their manager, Mauricio Pochettino, who allowed himself to be riled by the constant appeals and demands of Conte’s staff and ended up deep in conference with his opposite number with a few minutes left, making his complaints known. He was defiant afterwards but it felt like a manager trying to stick up for his players, no matter what.

“If you analyse the whole game then we deserved, at a minimum, the draw,” he said. “In football it can be difficult to explain when you conceded two goals and you play better than your opponent. They were clinical in front of goal and we were not. I am not concerned about anything. After a game like that you only have to feel proud.”

He stuck to his guns that his side had been the better team in spite of the result. Conte was prepared to concede that Spurs had begun the game with much greater intensity and then after that he said he “liked the reaction” of his players.

“In the second half we exploited the situations we didn’t exploit in the first half,” he said.
Those previously unexploited situations? For a start he got his wing-backs into the game after the break, Moses scoring the winner and Marcos Alonso missing a chance for the third. He also seemed to reset the balance in midfield where Spurs outnumbered the home side at all times in the first half and when the chances came, Chelsea took two of their three.

“They needed fewer chances than us to score twice,” Pochettino said. “We created many and only scored one. Maybe we were a little bit better but on the result, they were better. When we conceded the goals it is true we lost a lot of control of the game.”

It was all Pochettino’s boys before the first Chelsea goal and for the first time since his team lost to Arsenal on Sept 24, Conte had looked out of his depth at times in the first half, in charge of a team that could not get on the ball, could not threaten their opponents, and did not know how to change it. In the centre of midfield, Dele Alli was active at all times, and effective in the goal that Eriksen scored after 11 minutes.

It was not the first time that Alli had bowled forward, straight at the Spurs defence and on this occasion there was a collision of sorts with David Luiz and the ball broke to the Dane.  His goal was struck ferociously with the left foot and beat Thibaut Courtois inside his near post. It had been coming, with Spurs in control of the match and nothing of any note from key figures like N’Golo Kanté, Eden Hazard and the two wing-backs.

As for the Chelsea defence, it was the first time they had conceded in the league since the Arsenal game and the first time in 600 minutes and more than six games of league football. The team were trapped in their own half with Mousa Dembélé and Victor Wanyama particularly strong at closing the home team down high up the pitch.

Chelsea had barely created a chance until late in the half when Pedro found himself in an extraordinary amount of space in the left channel just outside Spurs’ area. The winger was at first unaware how much time he had and instinctively looked wide but he detected the space, span inside and curled the ball past Hugo Lloris.

It was a wonderful finish, albeit assisted by some poor defending, but it takes a very a good footballer indeed to punish an opponent as clinically as that. The goal gave Chelsea a parity they barely deserved and also the opportunity for their manager to reorganise at half-time which he did well.

Chelsea moved the ball more quickly from the start of the second half and Alonso and Moses were back in the game at last. Moses scored the second on 51 minutes and Alonso should have got the third shortly after that but blew a great chance laid on to him by Diego Costa’s cut-back into the area.

Before then, Chelsea had turned over possession quickly for their second, Dembélé losing out in midfield and then the ball going from Pedro to Costa down the left wing. His ball into the area went through a group of players to Moses, coming in late on the far side and with no one near him.

His shot clipped Lloris and struck Jan Vertonghen on the line but was moving so quickly that the defender was unable to react in time to keep the ball out.

Pochettino sent on Harry Winks and Georges-Kévin Nkoudou whose one insurgence down the left past Branislav Ivanovic left the poor old Serb, himself a substitute, with his hands in the air in supplication. As it was, Chelsea saw this one out comfortably. 

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

Mail:

Chelsea 2-1 Tottenham: Victor Moses fires Antonio Conte's side top of Premier League in comeback at Stamford Bridge

Christian Eriksen opened scoring with thunderous drive as Chelsea conceded for first time in over ten hours
The hosts drew level just before half-time as Pedro fired in a curling effort from outside the box
Victor Moses ghosted in at the back post to smash his side into the lead via a deflection on the line
His goal proved to be the winner as Antonio Conte's side made it seven wins on the trot
Spurs haven't won at Stamford Bridge since 1990, extending the dismal run to 30 games

By ROB DRAPER

Right now, no team surpasses Antonio Conte and this Chelsea side. They can win with a swagger, as they did against Manchester United and Everton; they can tough it out on inhospitable away trips, as they did at Middlesbrough; and they can come from behind, redressing the balance of play when asked serious questions, as they did yesterday.

Where the floundered a year ago, now they blossom; where egos were crushed in the past, now they flourish. Pedro wilted last season amidst the heat of dysfunctional Chelsea, seemingly unable to bloom out of Catalan soil; Victor Moses was in exile, condemned to another loan spell, unwanted by the previous manager.

Yet both goal-scorers were excellent, reborn by the warm embrace of Conte’s love and nurture.

And Chelsea, right now, appear to have it all. In Diego Costa, who was outstanding in the second half, and David Luiz, they have a worldliness that secures victories, even after wholly indifferent first halves, which is what they produced yesterday.

Luiz lingered yesterday on the pitch, mixing with fans, receiving their embrace, giving back not just a shirt to a fan, but a repaired relationship between players and crowd. Not only is he defending well; he brings charisma and a character to a side that was beginning to look short of both.
It is seven successive wins since the 3-0 calamity at Arsenal and just one goal conceded since Conte’s back three was introduced. The early-season loss here to Liverpool is also forgotten. In a competitive Premier League, this is some run.

Antonio Conte was fired up by Pedro's strike and joined in the celebratory scenes on the sidelines at Stamford Bridge

‘Now we are another team compared to Liverpool and Arsenal games, for sure,’ said Conte. ‘If we were the same team we would lose the game for sure. Now we are another team. And I am pleased for the players. We have another type of confidence. We are working a lot and enjoy this type of football. Today we won and I am pleased because it wasn't easy.

‘It was a big test for sure. Spurs is a really good team. Today they started better than us but I liked a lot our reaction. It wasn't easy. After the first half we spoke. I always speak with my players and we found together the right solution to try to win the game. In the second half we exploited the situations we didn't exploit in the first game.’

For Tottenham, twenty-nine fruitless visits to Stamford Bridge becomes thirty; 1990 remains the benchmark performance here for a Tottenham side, the last time they won. They scored and, in current form, that counts as a small victory against Chelsea.

But it was hard to shake off the memory of meltdown Tottenham had when they lost both the league and their heads here last season. It felt that the hard lessons learnt that night were underscored yesterday evening: that this Tottenham side remains a little short of know-how and quality.

Not far short; they have it in moments and in the first half they demonstrated that the quality which exists in the side. But re-enforcements look necessary if they are to be the side that becomes a regular Champions League participant.

Mauricio Pochettino chose to dwell on the positives, of which there were plenty. ‘There is no worry,’ he said. ‘After that game, I feel proud; the effort was brilliant. We come from Monaco and it was tough to be out of the Champions League, but the answer of the players was clear. The right mentality, good performance, we were better. But we lost. If you want to analyse the result, Chelsea win, so congratulations. If you want to analyse the 94 minutes, Tottenham had a lot of positives.’

Tottenham were undoubtedly better early on. Where there had been inertia in Monaco, there was energy unbounded here, with Victor Wanyama muscling his way to domination in the midfield, Christian Eriksen and Dele Alli making darting, creative runs, Harry Kane a constant nuisance and Kyle Walker indefatigable.

They confirmed their momentum in the 11th minute, when Eriksen picked the ball out 20 yards out from a Dele Alli pass. It seemed harmless but Eriksen saw a gap which Chelsea hadn’t covered. He unleashed a ferocious strike, off the edge of his boot, spinning away from Thibaut Courtois, to open the scoring.

Chelsea couldn’t wrest back control of the game. They were confined to a David Luiz free kick on 30 minutes and Eden Hazard cleverly intercepting a Lloris clearance and almost embarrassing the keeper on 42 minutes. Still, when their equaliser came, it was exceptional; wholly against the run of play, but a joy to watch nonetheless.

Pochettino will be agitated at the amount of space Pedro was afforded, but the control, little drag back, turn and exquisite strike, curling into the top corner from 20 yards out, was outstanding.

Pochettino would have been even more concerned about Chelsea took the lead early in the second half. With Tottenham losing the ball cheaply in midfield, Chelsea swept up-field with Costa charging down the left and cutting the ball back to Moses.

In their dash to defend, Spurs ignored the spacious gaps on the opposite flank, so Moses had time and space to make his strike and though Lloris got a foot to it, he could only deflect into Jan Vetonghen, who in turn could only help the ball over the line on 54 minutes.

Chelsea were suddenly ascendant and with Costa now a bundle of trouble, they should have extended their lead. Costa burst down the right this time and pulled the ball back for Marcos Alonso, who lifted his clear striker from close range wastefully over on 54 minutes.

Tottenham, as last season, looked a little stunned but responded, Harry Kane picking up a loose ball on 64 minutes and managing to pull it back into the path of Eriksen, but he could only volley into the arms of Courtois. And they rallied somewhat at the end; the roar which greeted victory was an indication of certain degree of relief.

But, for now Chelsea remain their master; Tottenham will have to find something more before this particular bridge can be crossed.

Chelsea: Courtois, Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill, Moses (Ivanovic), Kante, Kante, Matic, Alonso, Pedro (Oscar), Costa, Hazard (Willian) Subs not used: Begovic, Fabregas, Batshuayi, Chalobah
Goals: Pedro, Moses
Bookings: Luiz

Tottenham: Lloris, Walker, Dier, Vertonghen, Wimmer, Wanyama, Dembele (Janssen) , Eriksen, Alli (Nkoudou), Son (Winks), Kane Subs not used: Vorm, Trippier, Onomah, Carter-Vickers
Goals: Eriksen
Bookings: Dembele

Referee: Michael Oliver
Attendance: 41,515

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

Mirror:

Chelsea 2-1 Tottenham: Blues come from behind to return to the top of the Premier League
5 things we learned

Spurs started strongly with Eriksen firing them into the lead, but the Blues proved they're the real deal with a win that takes them back to the summit

BY JOHN CROSS

Victor Moses completed a memorable fightback to put Chelsea back on top of the Premier League.
Chelsea scored twice in six minutes either side of half time as Tottenham’s wretched run at Stamford Bridge continued.

Tottenham have not won at Chelsea since February 1990, a run which stretches back 30 games and yet they looked as if they might end that jinx.

Christian Eriksen fired the visitors into an 11th minute lead with a stunning 25 yard shot which flew past Thibaut Courtois and Tottenham were in complete control right up until just before the break.
But Chelsea’s Spanish winger Pedro scored a stunning equaliser in the 45th minute before Moses completed the win by winning a 51st minute winner.

Here are five things we learned at Stamford Bridge this evening:

1. Moussa Sissoko has been a disaster

He was Tottenham’s big money summer buy, a £30m deadline day panic purchase without a hint of Black Friday value for money.
Sissoko has yet to produce a single memorable or half decent performance. After questioning whether they should carry on playing at Wembley in midweek, Sissoko did not even make the bench at Stamford Bridge.
Maybe, just maybe, Mauricio Pochettino is making a point here.

2. Pre-match lights show

Chelsea put on a pre-match lights and music show just before kick off to try and turn up the atmosphere at Stamford Bridge.
They did it before the Everton game, they won well, and so maybe it was done out of superstition.
But I quite like it. For years, Stamford Bridge and the atmosphere has been a major issue. At least they’re trying to improve it. But, ultimately, only results and wins really help…

3. Chelsea’s defence breached - and their tactical code cracked

Chelsea conceded their first goal in the Premier League in exactly 600 minutes.
So much for Antonio Conte’s tactical genius. The defence breached and the 3-4-3 system being found out by Mauricio Pochettino.
The Tottenham boss, somehow, found a way to completely outfox Chelsea in midfield. Dele Alli was central, Moussa Dembele dominant and powerful while Victor Wanyama controlled from deep.
It was a fabulous tactical battle by two of the Premier League’s best managers and tacticians.

4. Chelsea curse continues

Tottenham have now not won at Stamford Bridge in their last 30 visits, a stretch that runs back to since February 1990.
They were in such complete control in the first half that it looked as if that run was coming to an end.
But the way Chelsea came back in the second half says much about Antonio Conte’s ability as a coach to inspire his players, reshuffle and get them going again.
Make no mistake, Chelsea are title contenders and they have that wonderful knack of digging in to get a result.

5. Tottenham found wanting again

They set such high standards last season that we expected Mauricio Pochettino to spearhead another title challenge.
Tottenham were great first half but when things went wrong the squad was horribly exposed.
And just a look at the bench tells you where the problem lies. Vincent Janssen, Georges-Kevin Nkoudou, Kieran Trippier, Josh Onomah, Harry Winks and Cameron Carter-Winks. Plus sub keeper Michel Vorm.

Good young talent in there, but not big game changers. Tottenham’s squad looks wafer thin and short of title-winning depth.


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

Star:

Chelsea 2 Tottenham 1: Victor Moses makes it seven straight wins for brilliant Blues

IT was torture for Tottenham again as Chelsea made it a magnificent seven wins in succession to climb back to the Premier League summit.

By Paul Hetherington at Stamford Bridge

Last season, a draw here in the Battle of the Bridge cost Spurs their chance of winning the title.
And tonight, after leading through an early Christian Eriksen strike, they lost the only unbeaten record in the top flight.
Chelsea, inspired by Diego Costa, hit back to win with goals from Pedro and Victor Moses.

That was enough to see Chelsea overtake Liverpool, who had briefly gone top with their win a few hours earlier against Sunderland.

The bitter rivalry between the clubs, and explosive nature of their last meeting in May, saw both managers make pre-match calls for calm.
But Chelsea were too calm for manager Antonio Conte’s liking at the start.

Tottenham dominated possession and had the ball in the net after only five minutes.
Harry Kane applied the finishing touch to Eriksen’s free-kick but his effort was disallowed for offside.

But Spurs did take the lead six minutes later, when Eriksen hammered the ball home with a left-foot strike after Dele Alli’s run and pass, to end Chelsea’s run of 611 minutes without conceding a goal.
Chelsea didn’t have a shot until the 29th minute, when David Luiz’s free-kick was comfortably saved by Spurs keeper Hugo Lloris.

In contrast, Spurs took every opportunity to fire at goal.

One effort from Kane had to be turned over the bar by Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois.
Tottenham might also have had a case for a penalty when Marcos Alonso caught Alli inside the box.
Spurs, though, made surprisingly little of that in terms of an appeal.

Chelsea, however, finally came to life in the closing stages of a first half which brought only two yellow cards for fouls by Luiz and Mousa Dembele.
A poor clearance by Lloris offered Chelsea hope when it travelled only as far as Eden Hazard.
But the Belgian star’s shot was neatly held by Lloris.
Chelsea, though, came again to equalise in the final minute of the opening half.

Nemanja Matic found Pedro, who turned well when given space by the Spurs defence and then superbly curled home a right-foot equaliser from the edge of the box.

It was galling for Tottenham boss Mauricio Pochettino, who had seen his side dominate the first half.
And he was feeling even worse six minutes into the second half when Chelsea took the lead.
Costa produced a fine run and cross from and Moses was in the clear to strike an on-target shot which hit Jan Vertonghen on the line before ending up in the net.

Chelsea should have scored again two minutes later, after more good work by Costa, but from 12 yards the unmarked Alonso shot high over the bar.
And in what was always a close contest, Courtois had to save sharply from Eriksen to prevent a Tottenham equaliser.


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

Sun:

CAPITAL GAINS Chelsea 2 Tottenham 1

Victor Moses strike sends Blues top after tense London derby
Mauricio Pochettino's Spurs lose unbeaten record days after crashing out of the Champions League

BY MIKE MCGRATH

CHELSEA looked like chumps for 45 minutes. By full-time they looked like champs.
It is the mark of potential Premier League winners that they could get played off the park for a half and STILL end up winning.

Tottenham had the whiff of a first win at Stamford Bridge for almost 27 years.

Fans were ready to party like it was 1990 when Christian Eriksen smashed into the top corner early on.
They were branded The Unconvincibles for playing poorly and staying unbeaten but this was Spurs best spell since beating Manchester City at the start of October – and there looked like no danger of a first league defeat of the season.

Then came the sucker punch on the stroke of half-time from Pedro and the miracle completed by Moses.

Within six minutes Spurs had gone from total control to staring at another defeat at Chelsea thanks to Victor Moses’ goal.
It was nothing like the thumpings Chelsea dished out against Leicester, Manchester United and Everton here when they scored 12 without reply.

But winning in this fashion – and returning to the top of the table – is every bit as impressive.
It was billed as Grudgement Day after last season’s brutal battle.

By the final whistle, the two teams looked a world away from that end-of-season clash in May.
Spurs were chasing the title on that night of bitterness – when Mousa Dembele scratched Diego Costa– but a top-four place now appears to be a battle.

Chelsea are completely different too. Antonio Conte’s three-man defence, unchanged for a sixth game, came through their toughest test since he changed system.

That meant no Cesc Fabregas, who was accused of slapping Spurs players in the nuts in the last encounter. And Danny Rose, who went nuts himself during that game, missed out through suspension so Kevin Wimmer stepped in at left-back.

Jan Vertonghen was a more natural fit but the thinking was to make sure the Belgian could keep Costa quiet. And it worked a treat for 45 minutes.
They offered a warning early on when Harry Kane had the ball in the net, latching into Eriksen’s free-kick before getting pulled back for offside.

But Spurs fans were not made to wait long before they were celebrating – and dreaming of finally winning at Stamford Bridge.

Dele Alli made the goal with a typical lung-busting run forward, drawing David Luiz into a tackle before slipping the ball past the big-haired Brazilian.

There didn’t look like much danger to Chelsea’s goal from 25 yards out but Eriksen tried his luck. And the Dane’s half-volley was a beauty, arrowing into the top corner and giving Thibaut Courtois no chance.
Mauricio Pochettino punched the air in delight after his side’s stunning start.

Conte, though, was kicking every ball in the technical area and appealing every offside, waving his arms manically after conceding a first goal after 601 minutes of Premier League football.
Instead of allowing Conte’s lads to play, Spurs pushed right up and gave them no time. Even in the full-back areas, Spurs were all over them like a rash.

It was Courtois doing the hard work. The Belgian tipped around the post when Kyle Walker raided into the penalty area, then tipped over from Kane.

They were made to rue the miss as Pedro curled in a stunner of his own before the break.
The Spaniard looked odds-on to lay the ball out wide when he picked up the ball on the edge of the area. But he produced a Cruyff-turn instead before taking aim and finding the top corner.

He celebrated by kissing his hand and touching his right boot – it was an absolute peach from the Chelsea winger.
It was also against the run of play and Spurs players looked totally deflated going into the break.
After such a devastating blow, Cheslea were inevitably on top after the break.

Costa created the winner with a surging run that saw him breeze past his old nemesis Dembele.
His cross found Moses at the far post with time to unleash his finish, which flew in off Vertonghen on the line.

Kane teed up Eriksen for a chance that Courtois did well to save, but the stuffing had been knocked out of Spurs already.
It was not as devastating as losing the title like they did last May but it was another deflating experience, especially with Conte whipping up the crowd like he loves to do.
It could have been a bigger win when Costa teed up Marcos Costa but the wing-back blazed over the bar.

WHAT THEY SAID

Chelsea forward Pedro: “It was a very difficult game for us but we are happy for the win. This is the way, game by game. There’s good feelings. I scored and it’s good. The team has a good mentality and stability. We are high on confidence.”

Tottenham boss Mauricio Pochettino: “If we analyse the game we were better. We competed very well and we were a bit unlucky to concede.

“The second half we conceded a goal very early. We are disappointed but we need to be pleased for the performance and the way we competed against a very good team.”

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

Express:

Chelsea 2 - Tottenham 1: Moses winner ends Pochettino's unbeaten league run to go top

THE ecstasy for Chelsea was plain to see and hear as they leapt instantly back to the top of the Premier League table. The agony for Spurs was even more vivid as their Stamford Bridge jinx haunted them once again.

By JIM HOLDEN

When will Tottenham ever break free of the hoodoo that has seen them fail to win away to Chelsea since 1990?
Defeat yesterday in a demanding and compelling London derby also ended their unbeaten run in the League this season.

Spurs are now eight points adrift of the leaders in fifth place --- yet in the first half here they were the team who played like potential champions, taking the lead with a stupendous goal from Christian Eriksen.

It is a measure of the revolution instigated by Chelsea manager Antonio Conte that his side fought back with brilliant verve and claim victory thanks to strikes from Pedro and Victor Moses.

For a few hours Manchester City and Liverpool had claimed top spot. But this Chelsea will take some budging.

The intensity of the match was never-ending, but only in a sporting sense. Thankfully, there was no hangover from the furies of the match at the end of last season that ended Tottenham’s title challenge then.

This time it was all football --- and in the opening period Chelsea were severely discomforted by the intense pressing tactics of Spurs, who refused to allow them easy possession at the back.
An early free-kick almost brought a goal for Kane, but he was flagged offside. No matter, the visitors took the lead in the 10th minute with a blistering left-foot drive from Christian Eriksen.

It had been exactly 600 minutes, or ten hours if you prefer, since the previous Premier League goal conceded by Chelsea in their rise to the top.

All good things come to an end, and it had taken a magnificent goal.
There was nearly another when Kane ran with menace at the Chelsea defence only to see his powerful shot was pushed over the bar by Thibaut Courtois.

The passing of Spurs was crisp and precise --- as vital to their control as the high energy closing down of their opponents.

Chelsea took half an hour to make any impression on this game, when David Luiz sent in a free-kick saved by Spurs keeper Hugo Lloris.

It’s impossible, of course, for any team to maintain a constant pressing tempo for a whole game, and gradually the home side began to create a threat themselves.

Just before the break Lloris sent a goal-kick straight to Eden Hazard, and redeemed himself by saving the subsequent shot from the Belgian.

But there was nothing the Spurs keeper could do about the stunning equaliser from Pedro right on half time. The little Spanish ace received the ball on the edge of the box, made space with an exquisite trick, and curled a gorgeous shot perfectly into the top corner.
The mood of the stadium was transformed; the library now a raucous concert hall.

Chelsea were ahead six minutes into the second half. They won the ball pressing in midfield and Diego Costa went on a superb driving run down the left flank before crossing low for Victor Moses to shoot home at the far post.

Suddenly, the home side were rampant, and Spurs trying to cling on.
Another cross from Costa swiftly followed; this time Marcos Alonso launched a wonderful chance into orbit high over bar.

In the end it didn’t matter for Chelsea as they captured a sixth straight victory.

CHELSEA: Courtois; Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill; Moses (Ivanovic 80th), Kante, Matic, Alonso; Pedro (Oscar 83rd), Costa, Hazard (Willian 76th).

TOTTENHAM: Lloris; Walker, Dier, Vertonghen, Wimmer; Wanyama, Dembele (Janssen 83rd); Son (Winks 65th), Alli (N’Koudou 73rd), Eriksen; Kane.

Man of the match: PEDRO --- His magnificent goal turned the match, and the skills on the ball of the former Barcelona star were a delight to watch.



Monday, November 21, 2016

Middlesbrough 1-0



Independent:

Middlesbrough 0 Chelsea 1

Diego Costa fires Blues to the top of the league in firm title warning
Costa continues his brilliant run of form as he unlocks a stiff Boro defence to maintain Chelsea's winning streak

Michael Walker Riverside Stadium

Scoring freely, conceding nothing, Chelsea’s perfect storm of form rolls on. Antonio Conte’s emerging team have now won six in a row and sit top of the Premier League as they prepare to face Tottenham at home and Manchester City away in the next two games.

It was 1-0 here, but it is 17-0 over the past six league matches. It is now ten league goals for Diego Costa, while it is approaching ten hours since someone scored past Thibaut Courtois.

The last player to do so was Arsenal’s Mesut Özil, who made it 3-0 before half-time a week after Liverpool had won at Stamford Bridge. But that was in September. It feels a long time ago.
In the second half of that Arsenal match, Conte switched his side to 3-4-3 and Courtois has not been beaten since.

Against a determined, if offensively limited Middlesbrough, it was 78 minutes before Courtois was forced into serious activity. He fell to his left to parry an improvised volley from Alvaro Negredo, who was otherwise isolated and ineffective.

Boro puffed a bit at other moments – Adama Traore and Gaston Ramirez firing over when well-placed - but Chelsea came through relatively untroubled.

Four minutes before half-time, Costa gave them the points with a sharp volley, a predator’s goal. This was the third consecutive game he has scored and, tellingly, Costa is scoring away from home – at Watford (the winner), Swansea (equaliser), Hull, Southampton and now Middlesbrough (winner).

No wonder Conte is calling Costa “one of the best strikers in the world” and “our reference point”. The Italian is also delighted that the Brazilian-Spaniard’s behaviour has improved. Costa has not been booked in this six-game run.

So there were reasons for Conte to smile afterwards, and he did, not least when asked if he could have foreseen this run when trailing 3-0 at Arsenal.

“It wasn’t simple to believe,” Conte said, “after two defeats against Liverpool and Arsenal, that we’d win six in a row and without conceding any goals. Chelsea weren’t favourites to fight then, so it’s difficult now to completely change opinion.”

He then continued to talk his way out of questions about title challenges, but he knows his team is thriving.

Chelsea have played better than they did here, and a 1-0 lead is always vulnerable. But then Victor Valdes in the Boro goal has settled in on Teesside and provided a barrier to repel Eden Hazard, Victor Moses and Pedro.

Had Valdes not also thwarted Marcos Alonso 22 seconds into the second half, then it could have been a much more convincing victory in terms of goals.

Valdes parried Alonso’s low drive and Calum Chambers nipped in to clear before Pedro could slide in the rebound.

Boro could not have recovered from a second then. Ultimately, they could not cope with Costa’s strike just five minutes earlier.

It stemmed from a disputed Hazard corner. Alonso jumped with a clutch of red shirts and in the crush, the ball hit Chambers’ back. Spiralling into space and dropping, all stood and watched apart from Costa. He was on the move and smacked a tasty six-yard volley beyond the hesitating Valdes.

Boro were winded. Had Aitor Karanka’s team got to half-time at 0-0 they would have felt very much involved. Conte praised Boro’s defensive organization and frequently the home side had ten men behind the ball. Their aim was clearly to stay competitive as long as possible.

Yet Hazard and Moses made headway down the flanks nevertheless as Chelsea probed and probed, and in the second half, as the game expanded, further chances came. From one delightful and unselfish headed Costa knockdown on 63 minutes, Pedro crunched a volley against the crossbar with Valdes beaten.

Middlesbrough tried to engineer some forward thrust but as Conte was to say: “In this period, it is difficult to play against Chelsea.”

“This period” now extends to Spurs at Stamford Bridge on Saturday. It could well be a defining period for Chelsea.

Teams

Middlesbrough (4-1-4-1): Valdes; Barragan, Chambers, Gibson, Fabio (Downing 71); Clayton (Fischer 73); Traore, De Roon, Forshaw (Leadbitter 89) Ramirez; Negredo. Subs not used: Guzan, Bernardo, Rhodes, Nsue

Chelsea (3-4-3): Courtois; Azpilicueta, Luiz, Cahill; Moses (Ivanovic 89) Kanye, Matic, Alonso; Pedro (Chalobah 80) Costa, Hazard (Oscar 90). Subs not used: Begovic, Fabregas, Terry, Batshuayi
Referee: J. Moss

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

Guardian:

Ruthless Diego Costa sees off Middlesbrough and sends Chelsea top
Middlesbrough 0 - 1 ChelseaPremier League Riverside Stadium

Antonio Conte pleased as Chelsea make it six wins in a row
Louise Taylor at the Riverside Stadium

Goodness knows how high on the scale Antonio Conte’s blood pressure might have registered had he nipped out at half-time and visited the NHS health bus in Middlesbrough’s carpark offering fans mini check-ups.

Watching the Italian’s technical-area histrionics it would have been easy to imagine his side were locked in a desperate relegation struggle rather than en route to going top of the Premier League courtesy of a sixth successive win.

Considering Chelsea have failed to concede a single goal during that sequence Conte generally has cause for serenity but on this occasion at least, his extreme agitation was at least partially justified by an ultra-determined, sporadically dangerous Middlesbrough.

No matter that Diego Costa’s winning volley from a badly defended corner reignited Teesside’s relegation worries, Adama Traoré’s pace and the midfield steel of Aitor Karanka’s two Adams, Clayton and Forshaw, left Chelsea looking slightly relieved to escape with all three points.

Karanka’s switch from his beloved, if sometimes rather rigid, 4‑2‑3‑1 formation to a much more flexible version of 4‑3‑3 helped a recent mini-renaissance featuring draws at Arsenal and Manchester City. It did not serve him too badly here either but Boro’s problem is that while they never look in danger of a thrashing they have won only twice all season and have a costly habit of making one unfortunate error per match.

The Teesside side started well with Gastón Ramírez troubling Victor Moses, the right wing-back in Conte’s transformative 3-4-3 system, and helping create an early chance which saw Álvaro Negredo – seeking his first goal since the season’s opening day – slice over from six yards. Unfortunately it proved to be the cue for a disappointing, less than mobile afternoon for the Spanish centre-forward which must have made Jordan Rhodes, once again sidelined, wonder precisely what he has to do to get a game.

If only Negredo had shown some of Ramírez’s ambition. Later, some woeful decision-making would let the Uruguayan down but, initially, he briefly looked capable of eclipsing even Eden Hazard – although it hardly helped the latter’s cause that he appeared to be singled out for some rough stuff by Karanka’s midfield.

After seeing Hazard clattered by a trio of early challenges, Jon Moss, the referee, finally booked Clayton for a particularly ruthless late lunge at the Belgian’s ankle.

If Hazard’s targeting cannot have been a shock, Conte looked affronted by Boro’s surprisingly effective amalgam of caution and aggression. Superbly compact as Chelsea advanced, with Clayton and Forshaw intelligence personified, Karanka’s players were not frightened to counterattack, utilising Traoré’s blistering, if ill-disciplined, pace to, at times, perturb the visiting back three.

It meant, until Costa’s goal, Victor Valdés enjoyed a fairly peaceful first half. Admittedly the former Barcelona and Manchester United goalkeeper made one outstanding save when he diverted Pedro’s goalbound shot for a corner following exemplary approach work from Hazard and Moses, but he was largely well protected.

As half-time approached Costa had been largely anonymous, with Ben Gibson and Calum Chambers keeping him uncommonly quiet but then, in the 41st minute, a chance finally fell the centre-forward’s way and, typically, he was in the right place at the right time to seize it.

Hazard sent a corner looping high into the raw November air and no Boro player reacted properly. Valdés, who had just received lengthy treatment for an injury, should arguably have come for the ball as it looped up, while Gibson and Marten de Roon were among those who seemed to lose concentration. It left Costa free to meet a deflection, extend his left foot and volley his 10th goal of the season into the bottom corner from six yards.

As befits a world-class striker, he needed only a single opening to score but Costa had already caught the eye courtesy of some radically improved discipline. Hats off to Conte for eliminating the frequent am-dram theatrics which so annoyed opponents and officials when the striker served under José Mourinho.

With Chelsea galvanised, the second half began with Moses and Hazard creating an opening for Marcos Alonso – guilty of an earlier bad miss – repelled by Valdés, with Chambers then doing well to block Pedro’s attempt to pounce on the rebound.

By now Moses was increasingly influential as he delighted in reminding everyone that Fábio da Silva was deputising for the injured George Friend at left-back and it was his first appearance of the season. Sensibly Karanka replaced Da Silva with Stewart Downing after an hour.

As icy rain poured down Clayton and De Roon began reasserting themselves against N’Golo Kanté and co, and Ramírez shot over the bar.

Chelsea’s minds seemed to be suddenly wandering and it took some extreme touchline gyrations from Conte – cutting an infinitely livelier, more agile figure than Negredo – until they refocused and Pedro’s shot hit the bar following fine work from David Luiz and Costa.

Deep into the second half Thibaut Courtois had still to make a significant save but when the call to arms eventually came Chelsea’s goalkeeper proved equal to it, saving Negredo’s shot superbly after Traoré’s pace caught his defence cold.

Middlesbrough are unlikely to be the last team similarly thwarted by Courtois, Costa and co.


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

Telegraph:

Middlesbrough 0 Chelsea 1: Diego Costa scores his 10th of the season to send Antonio Conte's side top 

Jason Burt

This is a Hazard warning. Chelsea are on the rise. Diego Costa’s 10th goal of the season gave them their sixth straight Premier League victory, during which they have scored 17 goals without reply, and put them top of the table – a point ahead of Liverpool and Manchester City. The magnetic striker has his desire, hunger and discipline back.

But it was a hard-fought victory over Middlesbrough, halting their recent rally, which included impressive away draws against City and Arsenal, and it was Eden Hazard who helped make the difference; Hazard, Costa and the revitalised Victor Moses joined with the Chelsea manager, Antonio Conte, on the pitch at the end in exuberant celebration.

Arms raised in triumph, the Italian showed just how much it meant and, afterwards, he spoke warmly of how Chelsea had found a different way to win after their swashbuckling swatting aside recently of the likes of Everton and Manchester United.

In fact the tenor of it even had some similarities to Jose Mourinho’s first title triumph at Chelsea when he swaggered onto the turf away to Blackburn Rovers after another slender 1-0 win, back in 2005, which opened up an 11-point lead at the top. Except this time everyone kept their shirts on at the final whistle.

No team are expected to run away with it as Chelsea did back then but, remarkably, they have eaten up City’s eight-point advantage over them and are now one point ahead of Pep Guardiola’s side. Chelsea’s next two matches? At home to Tottenham Hotspur and then away to City. It is beautifully set up.

After those games we may really know where Chelsea are at but it already feels a long time ago that they were humiliated by Arsenal and Liverpool. Not that Conte has forgotten.

That different way of winning in this game included throwing on defensive substitutions, such as Nathaniel Chalobah and Branislav Ivanovic, and eventually switching away from a back three to a four-man defence as Middlesbrough, roared on by their raucous support refused to give up. There is an incredible spirit and organisation in Aitor Karanka’s team typified by captain Ben Gibson and even if they sit just a point above the relegation zone Conte’s switch of tactics was a compliment to them.

Swap Álvaro Negredo for Costa, one Spanish striker for another, and there may have been goals also. As dynamic as Costa was, Negredo was docile.

Chelsea missed chances, they struck the woodwork, they were brilliantly denied by goalkeeper Victor Valdes but Middlesbrough could not, as Conte said, be “killed off” and came back time and time again, even if their hard work often broke down when it reached their lumbering centre-forward.

In Adama Traoré they have a quicksilver and skilful attacker, but they needed more from him than the ability to beat a man – or three – while they also showed an extraordinary appetite to simply just try and stop Chelsea.

That meant stopping Hazard. By fair means or foul. The Belgian was targeted, reasonably enough, but he is in that delicious groove right now when every time he gets the ball there is an audible, collective intake of breath from the opposition’s supporters. Philippe Coutinho and Sergio Agüero can have a similar effect.

Hazard created opportunities – aided by Moses, who remorselessly ran at Fabio da Silva, making his first start of the season, with George Friend injured, and clearly identified as a weak link in defence.

There was a clever reverse pass from Hazard, with Moses slicing wide from six yards, and then an even cleverer chip which Moses cut back into Pedro’s path. Valdes wonderfully tipped over the powerful first-time shot.

Then the Boro keeper was beaten. The nature of the concession rightly infuriated Karanka as Costa’s header, from Hazard’s corner, struck Calum Chambers on the back and spun up into the air. No Middlesbrough defender, nor Valdes, reacted quickly enough – but Costa did, keeping a hawk-like eye on the ball to crash home a close-range volley.

Valdes denied Marcos Alonso, twice, from strong angled shots but Chelsea should have gone further ahead. First, David Luiz stepped forward to pick out Costa with a curling cross that the striker headed back into the path of Pedro whose side-footed shot crashed back off the underside of the bar. Then Costa dinked the ball through to Moses who – clear on goal – slashed over.

Would Chelsea pay the price? On the touchline Conte grew ever more animated, Hazard’s influence eventually began to wane and the manager sensed the danger which was signalled as Negredo dummied and Gaston Ramirez wastefully shot over before Traoré set off on yet another dribble – there were a remarkable 12 in total – only for his cross to fall behind Negredo.

Finally the striker showed some nimbleness to bring the ball down and draw a save from Thibaut Courtois. It was, however, Middlesbrough’s only shot on target and that tells its own story.

Chelsea ran down the clock, gained the win, took the points and yet another clean sheet as they made it 590 minutes without conceding a goal. Their fans, their players, their manager celebrated. This time last season the then champions were in 16th place, just three above the relegation zone, and imploding under Mourinho. Now they are back on top of the pile for the first time since they won the title in May 2015. They are contenders again.


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

Mail:

Middlesbrough 0-1 Chelsea: Diego Costa's first-half strike puts gloss on a Blues masterclass and sends Antonio Conte's men top of the Premier League

Victor Valdes produced a sublime first-half save to keep the scores level, turning Pedro's shot over the bar
Diego Costa continued his fine goalscoring form by opening the scoring for Chelsea in the 41st minute
Middlesbrough failed to clear from a corner and Costa was alert to volley home from close range
David Luiz and Costa combined to set-up Pedro, but the Spain winger's effort cannoned off the crossbar

By IAN LADYMAN FOR THE DAILY MAIL

Chelsea are in a groove that allows them to make attacking football look easy.

Pace, directness, good passing and nice angles. It all adds up to a potency that has propelled Antonio Conte’s team on a six-game winning run in the Premier League and taken them past Liverpool to the top of the table.

A side who looked ordinary not long ago look special at the moment. They played some lovely football here and the understanding between a group of players who are also prepared to work very hard was evident throughout. The only mystery was how they didn’t win by more goals.

Middlesbrough were plucky and committed and backed by a terrifically vocal home support. They are working hard to get things right on and off the field on Teesside.

Aitor Karanka’s team were not on the same level as Chelsea in terms of the football, though. A couple of chances came their way late in the game, but on the whole they simply couldn’t do what Chelsea could do.

The usual suspects starred for the London club. Eden Hazard and Pedro were like ghosts, appearing out of the gloom right across the Chelsea front line. At times Middlesbrough couldn’t track them and when they could they couldn’t catch them.

Diego Costa, meanwhile, scored the winning goal and led the line manfully like a proper No 9. Costa can be a nasty, sly footballer but here the Spaniard showcased only the admirable side of his game. He was brilliant and maybe the penny has dropped. He doesn’t need to indulge his dark side to get where he wants to be.

And there were other shining lights. Both wing backs, Victor Moses and Marcos Alonso, were a nuisance all afternoon, for example. It was a complete Chelsea performance, one that should have been illuminated by a wider winning margin.

The winner was rather scruffy and unmemorable. But it still highlighted some of the league leaders’ most important attributes.

Coming just before half-time, it originated at a corner. Costa seemed to win the aerial battle but his header struck a defender and ballooned into the air. With four Middlesbrough defenders and goalkeeper Victor Valdes within swiping distance of the ball, there should have been no danger.

But as the players in red hesitated fractionally, Costa never took his eyes off the falling ball. To use a cliche, he seemed to want to reach it just a little bit more than his opponents and this desire, allied to perfect technique, allowed him to take a stride forwards and volley it into the net from an angle at the near post.

Costa has been involved in 13 goals for Chelsea in the league this season, scoring 10 and assisting three. This time last season he had been involved in just four - scoring three and assisting one.
His 10th goal of the season, this one won’t win any beauty pageants. It was important, though, as prior to that Chelsea had found Valdes to be in obdurate form and some of their own efforts in front of goal did not often match their build-up play.

Valdes has reinvented himself impressively since his disastrous time at Manchester United. He played very well here and produced one of the saves of the season to deny his former Barcelona team-mate Pedro shortly before the goal. The build-up to that chance was typical of what Chelsea did best. All afternoon, Conte’s attacking players passed the ball sharply and simply, creating angles and overlaps with the intelligence of their running.

On this occasion, Hazard — clattered crudely and dangerously by Adam Clayton early on — ran laterally across the top of the penalty area to play the ball into the path of Moses on the right. The ensuing pass back towards the penalty spot was perfect and Pedro struck his shot true only for Valdes’ fingertips to touch the ball over the bar.

There were other impressive moments from Valdes in the first half. He saved sharply at his near post from Alonso, for example, while his first contribution of the second period was to drop sharply to his left to turn away another shot from the same player.

That the Chelsea wing-backs were able to progress so regularly was indicative of the way Conte’s new 3-4-3 formation works for him. However, it also pointed to Middlesbrough’s problem with tracking runners.

Karanka’s team never gave up and the crowd did not lose hope. Boro struggled to command possession but when they did move forwards they caused Chelsea some problems.
Late on, for example, Adama Traore broke to shoot over and then set up Alvaro Negredo for a sharp volley that Thibaut Courtois did well to save.

Still, though, it was Chelsea who threatened more regularly. One super move that saw a diagonal David Luiz pass headed back by Costa ended with Pedro rattling the bar. That would have been a memorable goal.

Then, soon after, Moses and Costa led a charge from deep that ended with the former lifting the ball over the bar when it looked easier to score.

So this was not a perfect Chelsea performance. There are things on which Conte will wish to work. But this is a Chelsea team moving forwards on the back of sound principles and lovely, expressive football. They will get better, too, and that is an ominous thought.



MIDDLESBROUGH (4-1-4-1): Valdes 8; Barragan 6, Chambers 6, Gibson 6, Fabio 6 (Downing 70mins 6); Clayton 5.5 (Fischer 73mins 6); Traore 6.5, De Roon 6, Forshaw 6.5 (Leadbitter 88mins 6), Ramirez 6.5; Negredo 6
BOOKED: Clayton, Chambers
MANAGER: Aitor Karanka 7

CHELSEA (3-4-3): Courtois 6.5; Moses 7, Azpilicueta 6.5, Luis 6.5, Cahill 6.5, Alonso 7; Kante 7, Matic 7; Pedro 8 (Chalobah 80mins 6), Costa 8.5, Hazard 8 (Oscar 90mins 6).
GOAL: Costa 41
BOOKED: Azpilicueta, Kante
MANAGER: Antonio Conte 8

REFEREE: Jon Moss 7
MAN OF THE MATCH: Diego Costa

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Mirror:

Middlesbrough 0-1 Chelsea: Diego Costa strike sends Blues top of the table - 5 things we learned
Costa scored the only goal of the game as Antonio Conte's side moved to the top of the Premier League

BY HAMISH MACKAY

Diego Costa scored the only goal of the game as Chelsea beat Middlesbrough to move top of the table.

The Blues came into this fixture having won their previous five Premier League matches without conceding a goal, and were ahead before half time thanks to Costa's volley.

Both sides had chances to score after the break with Pedro crashing a shot against the bar and Gaston Ramirez rushing a good chance from the edge of the box.

Unlike their last league game, though, there were no late heroics for Boro.
Chelsea have now kept six consecutive clean sheets for the for the first time since 2010, and move a point ahead of Man City and Liverpool at the top of the table.

Here, our man Hamish Mackay takes you through the game's talking points...

1. Conte's winning formula

There's more to Antonio Conte than this formation, and it'll take more than a formation change to turn a team into Chelsea, but it won't be long before more Premier League managers set their sides up in a 3-4-3.
Since their mauling at the Emirates, Conte has switched to his preferred formation and won every league game.
Now they're top of the table.

2. Traore lively, but lacking end product

A Barcelona academy graduate that cost £7million as a teenager, it's no secret Adama Traore is talented. But after a miserable debut season in England that saw him fail to start a single Premier League game, whether that talent could be converted into an effective player seemed in doubt.
His move to the North East, however, has galvanised him. He has noticeably bulked up in recent months and is putting that strength to good use. Traore provides pace, agility and flair to a workmanlike Boro side. End product is still an issue, but he's improving.

3. Chelsea on course to beat record

Chelsea notched up 10 consecutive clean sheets between December 2004 and February 2005. After another organised display at the Riverside their current run sees them on six games without conceding.
The Blues face Tottenham at home before travelling away to Manchester City in their next two games, but they're still on course to beat their record.

4. Costa set for best season at Chelsea

Costa became the first Premier League striker to reach double figures for the season when he volleyed past Victor Valdes on Sunday.
The former Atletico Madrid forward endured patchy form last season but was prolific in his debut campaign in England.
On 20 November 2014 he was also on 10 goals for the season. He dropped off after Christmas — going seven games without a game at one point — so if he can avoid a repeat the 28-year-old could be set for his best season at Chelsea.

5. Third time unlucky for Boro

Aitor Karanka's side have taken on three of the league's top four teams since last month. They held Arsenal to a draw at the Emirates before taking a point off of Pep Guardiola's Man City at the Etihad.
Against Chelsea, though, they came unstuck. The hosts had chances to equalise at 1-1, most notably through Gaston Ramirez, but left the field with nothing.

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Express:

Middlesbrough 0 - Chelsea 1: Diego Costa sends Blues top of the Premier League

WHISPER it, but this was very much a Jose Mourinho-like performance from Chelsea as they returned to the top of the Premier League. No thrills, few spills, just three points safely secured and on to the next game.

By JASON MELLOR

Protected only by a thin, though of course effortlessly stylish suit, Antonio Conte shunned the sanctuary of a warming jacket for a bitter Teesside evening in very much the same way his side weathered the early Middlesbrough storm, before slowly but surely sucking the life out of Aitor Karanka’s outclassed troops.

Diego Costa’s 10th goal of the season was enough to return them to the summit courtesy of a sixth consecutive win as they sealed a victory that was far more comfortable than the scoreline suggests, underlining their title credentials by posting a sixth clean sheet in a row.

Only the woodwork prevented them from winning by a more handsome margin as Pedro hit the bar midway through the second half, when the midfielder met Costa’s knockdown from a David Luiz cross as Middlesbrough were forced to hang on for long spells.

Karanka’s shadow-chasing side side retained hope while their deficit remained at a single goal but the gulf in class between the sides was clear as the Blues sealed a seventh successive victory in all competitions against the Teessiders, condemning them to a first defeat in four games.

The impressive Costa rewarded Chelsea’s dominance as the Spaniard put the visitors, who were unchanged for the fifth consecutive league game, ahead four minutes before the end of a tight first-half.

From a disputed corner – Middlesbrough argued that debutant full-back Fabio Da Silva had not touched the ball as it ran out of play – Eden Hazard’s in-swinging set-piece looped into the air as Calum Chambers and Gaston Ramirez challenged Marcos Alonso at the near post.

Despite the hosts having numbers back to defend, Costa reacted first to volley the loose ball home from inside the six-yard box to reach double figures for the season.

Victor Valdes was partially at fault for failing to come off his line as his side fell behind, his indecision in stark contrast to earlier in the half when the Middlesbrough goalkeeper produced a stunning fingertip save to deflect a first-time Pedro shot over the bar, after Hazard and Moses had combined to carve the hosts open just before the half-hour mark.

It was one of few clear-cut chances before the interval as Boro were largely successful in their attempts to negate the threat of Conte’s side by packing midfield and looking to hit their visitors on the break. It saw them pose a minimal attacking threat, the out-of-touch Alvaro Negredo wasting their two main openings, first firing across the face of goal from a Marten de Roon-inspired counter and then heading wide as he met Antonio Barragan’s deep cross.

Ramirez fired over early in the second half after Negredo’s dummy created space on the edge of the box for the Uruguay international, but it was a rare threat as Karanka’s side were forced to concentrate largely on how to stifle their opposition.

Middlesbrough had forced draws away at both Arsenal and Manchester City this season but, after falling behind, they rarely looked like troubling a three-man Chelsea backline that last conceded a league goal on September 24 – almost 10 hours’ football – for their best defensive run for six years, one cemented late out when Thibaut Courtois beat out a powerful Negredo volley as the hosts belatedly pushed bodies forward.

The majority of chances arrived at the other end and Alonso almost doubled the advantage within seconds of the re-start, the Spaniard forcing a fine low save from Valdes after Hazard helped on a cross from Moses to the unmarked full-back to fire an angled drive towards the bottom corner.

It came a something of a surprise that the second goal failed to materialise but it mattered little. Middlesbrough could have played until midnight without posing a serious threat as Chelsea closed out their latest victory in a no-nonsense style of which the Special One would no doubt greatly approve.

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

Sun:

COSTA TOP UP Middlesbrough 0 Chelsea 1

The Spain striker reacted quickest in a packed Boro penalty box to grab his 10th league goal of the season

BY CHARLIE WYETT 

CHELSEA took control of the Premier League title race by going top of the table thanks for a Diego Costa strike.
The Spain striker sank the home side at the Riverside with an instinctive first-half strike that took him to 10 in the league already this season.
The hulking forward reacted quickest in the packed Boro box four minutes before the break to put his side ahead.
And, at the other end of the water-tight Antonio Conte team, Thibaut Courtois pulled off a couple of fine saves to put his side at the head of the pack.

FACTS, STATS, GOALS AND LOLS
This was Chelsea’s first visit to the Riverside since February 27 2013 when they won 2-0 in the fifth round of the FA Cup. The only player from both sides who appeared in that match – and started this one – was Chelsea’s Victor Moses who scored. After that win, Rafa Benitez hammered Chelsea’s fans for having an “agenda” against him and also criticised the club for giving him the title of interim manager.

Chelsea went into this game with a stunning defensive record. Since switching to a three-man defence at half-time against Arsenal – while trailing 3-0 - they had not conceded a single goal – a run of five-and-a-half games. This was also the first time Chelsea have named the same starting XI for five games in succession.

Aitor Karanka was celebrating his third year in charge at Boro. This makes him the fifth longest-serving manager currently in the Premier League.

Boro defender Fabio Da Silva made his first Premier appearance since May 2014 when he was at Cardiff. It was a 2-1 defeat . . . against Chelsea. And he was not much better this time around.

Eden Hazard certainly knew he was in a game. He had his shirt pulled by Marten De Roon then after getting past his opponent, suffered a nasty challenge from Adam Clayton who was booked.
Pedro had the first decent chance of the game but was denied by a fine fingertip save from Victor Valdes.

After all that fine work, Valdes should have been quicker to react for Chelsea’s goal. Maybe he was still suffering from that bang on the head. Boro made a complete mess of clearing Hazard’s corner after the ball came off Calum Chambers’ back and Costa reacted first. Valdes should have tried to come for the ball but Ramirez, Gibson and De Roon all dithered.

For Costa it was his 10th Premier League goal in 12 games. He has also delivered three assists. That’s pretty decent.

Just 20 seconds into the second half Valdes did well to keep out an effort from Alonso. Pedro then hit the bar and Moses wasted a great chance.

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Star:

Middlesbrough 0 Chelsea 1: Deadly Diego Costa sends Blues top

CHELSEA occupied top spot for less than 24 hours before being overhauled by Liverpool last month.
By Ian Murtagh

You can expect a much longer residency this time after Diego Costa’s opportunist 41st minute goal took them back to the Premier League summit.

They’ll take some shifting following their sixth successive league win over a Middlesbrough side who were outclassed but never outfought.

Antonio Conte’s side have the mark of potential champions running through their team right now.
Yet another clean sheet means it’s now just 10 minutes shy of six hours since an opponent – Arsenal’s Mesut Ozil – scored against them.

With Eden Hazard pulling the midfield strings and wing-backs Marcos Alonso and Victor Moses charging down the flanks, Chelsea aren’t just effective, they are a joy to watch too.

And up front, Costa is in the form of his life.

It’s now 10 goals for the Spanish international who’s thriving in the 3-4-3 system which has taken Chelsea to the top.

Rarely can a switch in formation have paid such dramatic dividends.

Boro carved out just one decent chance but in goal Thibaut Courtois is proving as formidable as those in front of him.

The otherwise disappointing Alvaro Negredo tested him with a meaty 78th minute volley which Courtois pushed away with contemptuous ease.

It’s Tottenham and Manchester City next for Chelsea and to stretch their run, they won’t want to go into the closing stages of those games defending a slender lead like today.

They had plenty of chances to finish off Boro after Costa pounced.

Alonso tested Victor Valdes within seconds of the restart, Pedro struck the bar after being wonderfully set up by Costa.

And Victor Moses somehow blasted over the top from point blank range after another unselfish assist by the matchwinner.

Aitor Karanka is earning himself a deserved reputation for his organisational skills, showcased in Boro’s recent draws at Arsenal and City.

Little wonder therefore the Spaniard looked aghast when Costa broke the deadlock four minutes before half-time.

If the goal highlighted the striker’s predatory instincts, it was also a very un-Boro-like goal to concede.

When Alonso flicked on Hazard’s corner, the ball struck Calum Chambers on the back and with his team-mates failing to react quickly enough as it dropped, Costa was in like a flash to volley home left footed from six yards out.

This presented Karanka with a dilemma because up until this point, Boro’s gameplan has been containment and little else.

It worked – up to a point. Just twice in the opening 40 minutes was their backline breached.

Moses should have at least hit the target when Hazard found him with racing into the box on 19 minutes but sliced horribly wide.

And then four minutes later, Valdes produced a world class save to deny his former Barcelona team-mate Pedro.

The Chelsea man thought he had scored when he met Moses’ perfectly weighted pull-back with a clean connection only for Valdes to fling himself to his right and push the ball away with a strong left hand.

Boro had started brightly enough with Gaston Ramirez and Adama Traore producing two early bursts to encourage the sell out crowd.

But the nearest they came to testing Courtois was in the 36th minute when Negredo met Antonio Barragan’s cross at the far post only to head wide.

Boro stayed in the game without ever looking capable of rescuing a point. They may have tamed Arsenal and City but Chelsea proved a very different proposition.

MIDDLESBROUGH (4-1-4-1): VALDES 7; Barragan 5, Chambers 6, Gibson 7, Fabio 5 (Downing 71); Clayton 6 (Fischer 73); Traore 6 , De Roon 5, Forshaw 6 (Leadbitter 89), Ramirez 5; Negrego 5. Subs: Guzan, Bernardo, Rhodes, Nsue.

UP NEXT: Leicester (a) Premier League, Saturday

CHELSEA (3-4-3): Courtois 6; Azpilicueta 6, Luiz 7, Cahill 7; Moses 7 (Ivanovic 89), Kante 7, Matic 7, Alonso 7 Pedro 7 (Chalobah 80), Costa 8, HAZARD 8 (Oscar 90). Subs: Begovic, Fabregas, Batshuayi, Terry.

UP NEXT: Tottenham (h) Premier League, Saturday

Referee: Jon Moss 7

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