Sunday, January 07, 2018
Norwich 0-0
Telegraph:
Norwich 0 Chelsea 0: Toothless performance leaves Antonio Conte with unwanted replay
Antonio Conte faces another 90 minutes of football this month
Sam Dean, at carrow road
Who would have thought, barely 48 hours ago, that Antonio Conte would end the weekend with a pair of rather pressing problems? The first of those is a certain Jose Mourinho who, as we learned on Friday night, is hellbent on waging a campaign of media warfare against the Chelsea manager. The second is an unexpected addition to Chelsea’s already congested fixture list, as a dogged Norwich City side held the Premier League champions to a deserved draw at Carrow Road.
Having lost just one game in 15, a trip to face a mid-table Championship side seemed unlikely to pose too much of a challenge. But, then again, neither did a Manchester United press conference following a routine FA Cup victory over Derby County. So here we are, with Chelsea needing to find time for an unwanted replay and Conte having to deal with an escalating conflict with the master of footballing feuds.
Conte’s side never found their groove here, and rarely troubled Daniel Farke’s impressive Norwich outfit, who will perhaps consider themselves unfortunate not to have turned their first-half dominance into a memorable victory. Against a desperately poor Chelsea team, Norwich were the more energetic, creative and exciting side, and frankly, deserved more than this stalemate.
With Chelsea set to face Arsenal on Wednesday in the first leg of their League Cup semi-final, Conte made nine changes to the side that had featured in that thrilling 2-2 draw at the Emirates in midweek. The rotation meant that David Luiz was selected for only the second time since October, while backup goalkeeper Willy Caballero and the Brazilian Kenedy made just their fourth appearances of the season.
There was also space for Michy Batshuayi, who has largely failed to impress his manager in a turbulent first half to the season but boasts an impressive record against lower league opposition. In four matches against sides below the Premier League before this trip to Carrow Road, the Belgian had scored seven goals and created two others.
The wholesale changes appeared to take their toll in the first half as Conte’s unimaginative side struggled for fluidity and coherence in possession. Norwich, meanwhile, looked threatening through electric winger Josh Murphy, their top scorer this season, and the highly-rated attacking midfielder James Maddison.
It would, though, be an exaggeration to say that Daniel Farke’s side looked particularly close to breaching that Chelsea defence in what was a tentative start to proceedings. Maddison had the first glimpse of goal but was blocked by a mass of Chelsea legs, while Murphy curled well over after another of those jinking runs down the Norwich left.
In truth, the home side’s best opportunity in the first half appeared to be to give the ball to Luiz in the hope that he might implode. It certainly looked a viable plan after 25 minutes, when Luiz was unnecessarily caught in possession twice in the space of a few seconds. The first occasion was in his own penalty area, and nearly allowed Norwich forward Alex Pritchard the easiest of openers. The second, just a moment later, gave Pritchard an opportunity to bustle his way towards goal, where his shot was blocked as the overlapping Murphy screamed for a pass.
A difficult return to the side for Luiz, who has been overtaken by Andreas Christensen in the defensive pecking order this season, was then made worse by a yellow card he was awarded for a late challenge on the turning Maddison.
With his speed and weaving runs, Murphy was the game’s stand-out attacking player, and Chelsea defender Antonio Rudiger could have been forgiven for needing a brief lie-down at the break. One particularly explosive burst sent the Norwich winger clear in the penalty box as his side continued to dominate, but his final ball was neither shot nor cross.
Murphy’s twinkling feet contrasted sharply with the stodginess of Willian, Pedro and Batshuayi in the Chelsea attack, where the absence of Alvaro Morata, Eden Hazard and Cesc Fabregas was clearly having a telling impact.
As the game wore on, Norwich grew in confidence. Suddenly, they very much did look like scoring, as Maddison curled over from range and a threatening cross from Pritchard forced Chelsea’s Davide Zappacosta into a crucial clearance.
Thankfully for Chelsea, Willian was a man reborn after the break, dipping between challenges and firing shots on goal. Danny Drinkwater and Pedro also had attempts from range, while Norwich were for a time too preoccupied with defending to overly worry about the other end.
But they were able to regroup, just at the point it looked like the game may be slipping away from them. Pritchard and Murphy went close again, while Timm Klose headed wide. At this stage, though, both sides became frightened of over-committing, and a draw ultimately proved inevitable, even if Zappacosta nearly won it at the death with a strike from range.
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Observer:
David Luiz makes rusty return as Norwich take Chelsea to FA Cup replay
Norwich 0 - 0 Chelsea
Nick Ames at Carrow Road
On this evidence Antonio Conte will have multiple subjects at which to direct his anger this weekend. The buildup to this largely sterile, listless affair had been dominated by the Italian’s mutual antipathy with José Mourinho, a long-brewing feud now unfolding at a rate of knots. If only events here had moved at anything like that kind of speed: Chelsea barely created a clear chance to speak of against a brighter Norwich side that, although toothless, fully merited its replay. The fixtures continue to mount up and so, surely, will Conte’s frustration that his squad lacks the depth to compete capably on all fronts.
David Luiz’s return from a six-week injury absence was the most notable of nine changes made by Conte from the rollercoaster ride at Arsenal. Essentially, the Chelsea manager brought in a number of his less-used senior squad members; the bench, though, was a different matter and alongside Álvaro Morata sat six players with barely 10 appearances between them.
If the away side could be forgiven for other priorities, the same could hardly be said for Norwich, who lie nine points and seven places shy of the Championship play-off spots. Their coach, Daniel Farke, had pronounced himself a “deep believer in cup competitions” and kept alterations to a relative minimum, the main interest being the lack of an out-and-out striker in a fluid front three.
One of them, James Maddison, had a shot blocked within four minutes and it was Norwich who fizzed with intent. Josh Murphy had a go at Antonio Rüdiger down the left and Alex Pritchard, a playmaker of similarly deft touch to the vaunted Maddison, served notice that he would not be limited to a perch on the opposite flank.
Under Farke, Norwich have had few problems retaining possession; that was proved amply in an opening quarter when Chelsea, struggling for both shape and initiative, failed to produce a move of note.
They were almost punished when David Luiz, dithering in his own area, was caught on the ball by Pritchard and fortunate to see it rebound out for a goal-kick. Murphy then cut inside and curled over; in between, the response had been an attempted through ball by Tiémoué Bakayoko that ran harmlessly out of play.
A shot from Kenedy that deflected two yards wide off Christoph Zimmermann was notable mainly because it was Chelsea’s first real moment of threat. That was after 31 minutes and shortly afterwards the Brazilian lost a battle of strength with the diminutive Pritchard in an episode that said plenty for the teams’ respective appetites.
Norwich were keen to set Murphy against Rüdiger, although it was a fair match for pace. When Murphy appeared to have burst beyond him, the defender’s recovery pulled him wide enough to drag a cross-shot out for a throw-in. It was the cue for Murphy to swap flanks in search of a more profitable dig at Gary Cahill; it was the rusty David Luiz, though, who erred again with a foul on Maddison that brought a deserved booking.
Chelsea could hardly have been less incisive and emerged for the second half with more vigour and Zimmermann was forced to clear ahead of the poised Willian almost instantly. Bakayoko and Danny Drinkwater missed the target and Willian finally forced Angus Gunn into a sharp save down to his left. He followed that with a driving run into the area and an effort that was gathered rather more comfortably.
There was less rhythm to Norwich now although a clumsy foul by Cahill on Pritchard, again penalised with a yellow card by Stuart Attwell, was a reminder of their variation in the opposing half. Pritchard, seemingly re-energised, watched a shot loop over off Drinkwater as the half’s midway point loomed but the game had yet to stretch out in the manner that both managers – neither enamoured with the prospect of a replay – might have preferred.
If Murphy had kept his cool rather than volleying wide after a fluffed punch by Willy Caballero, Norwich might have had their victory. Their lack of a centre-forward had brought a lack of authority at the sharp end. Michy Batshuayi had, damningly, had a similar effect for Chelsea and was replaced for the final 15 minutes by Morata. But there was no late charge; a winner rarely looked likely.
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Mail:
Norwich City 0-0 Chelsea: Blues held by Championship side in disappointing performance as they are forced into FA Cup third round replay
By Riath Al-samarrai for The Mail on Sunday
Too bad that after all the fighting talk from their manager in the build-up, Chelsea’s second string rocked up in Norfolk without anything like the same appetite for a scrap.
They were weak, lacking in edge, spite and purpose — just about the opposite of Antonio Conte in his controversial performance on Friday, when he didn’t just light the touchpaper on a feud with Jose Mourinho but rammed it into his mouth as well.
While the finer points of Conte’s rant crossed a line in taste, there can be no doubting his side needed some of the fire of his wider message here. It was a mess of a performance, from a flat first half that bordered on the inept to the second, when time and again they were limited to half-chances by the 13th-ranked side in the Championship.
Conte was back on the anti-Mourinho beat straight after the game, saying: ‘We know him very well from the past, but it is always the same. This is his way, which isn’t surprising to me.
‘When you insult another person I think you are a little man. That’s what I think, he is a little man. Life will go on, I’m not worried about him, but for sure, there is an opportunity when we play Manchester United to clarify this in a room.’
As for this game, take nothing away from Norwich City — they did a brilliant job of containment and showed more ambition going forward than most Premier League sides when faced with the bigger creatures of the top flight. Josh Murphy, in particular, had chances to win this game.
Chelsea will now run into extra fixture congestion and for that can blame themselves, because the performance was generally lousy. It was a drastically changed side to the one Conte prefers in the league.
On the specifics, Conte made nine changes, with only Gary Cahill and Tiemoue Bakayoko retained from the side that drew at Arsenal. Most notable among the incoming was David Luiz, playing for the first time since November 22 and still rusty after recovering from a knee injury.
He was caught in possession twice in dangerous areas and each time allowed Alex Pritchard a look at goal.
It is hard to recall a half from Chelsea’s season so far when they have made so many individual errors, sent so many passes to the wrong shirt and delivered so many long punts on purely a whim. Danny Drinkwater, Davide Zappacosta, Antonio Rudiger — none of them found any traction in that first 45 minutes. It didn’t help that Michy Batshuayi again struggled to serve as a meaningful target man.
That shouldn’t detract from Norwich’s effort. They controlled the half, forced plenty of the errors and made the only decent openings, such as they were in a period where no shots went on target.
Most of what was good came from Murphy, who repeatedly got the better of Rudiger and might have made a tangible difference with sharper finishing.
Chelsea were better in the second half. Almost immediately the chances came, with Christoph Zimmermann blocking a goalbound Zappacosta header before Bakayoko drilled wide and Willian drew a pair of saves from Angus Gunn.
Still Norwich wouldn’t lie down. Pritchard had a shot deflected over and Murphy had a volley touched wide by Luiz with Willy Caballero stranded, which concerned Conte sufficiently to bring on Alvaro Morata. Nice option from the bench, but it altered nothing.
Norwich (3-4-3): Gunn 6.5; Hanley 6, Zimmermann 7, Klose 6; Pinto 6.5, Tettey 6.5, Trybull 6, Lewis 6; Pritchard 7 (Wildschut 87), Murphy 7 (Oliveira 83), Maddison 6
Unused subs: McGovern, Husband, Vrancic, Hoolahan, Watkins
Booking: Hanley 77, Tettey 86
Chelsea (3-4-3): Caballero 6; Rudiger 5.5, Luiz 5, Cahill 6; Zappacosta 6, Drinkwater 5, Bakayoko 6.5, Kenedy 7 (Musonda 78); Willian 7.5, Batshuayi 5 (Morata 74, 6), Pedro 6 (Sterling 89)
Unused subs: Eduardo, Ampadu, Clarke-Salter, Hudson-Odoi
Bookings: David Luiz 41, Cahill 62
Ref: Stuart Attwell 6.5
MOM: Willian
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Independent:
Impressive Norwich City hold Chelsea to goalless draw and force FA Cup third-round replay
Norwich City 0 Chelsea 0: Antonio Conte mixed up his team selection but fresh legs failed to find a way through the Canaries' stubborn resistance
Derren Howard Carrow Road
An excellent Norwich City earned a deserved replay against Premier League Champions and last year’s FA Cup finalists Chelsea. Norwich were much better than many expected while a lacklustre Chelsea simply didn’t show enough ambition or aggression to break through Daniel Farke’s well-organised team, who are hovering around mid-table in the Championship.
A replay was the last thing Chelsea manager Antonio Conte would have wanted but his team didn’t deserve any better.
Norwich, who are unbeaten in their last three games in the Championship, have been knocked out in the third round of the FA Cup for the last four seasons. The last time they advanced into round four was a 3-0 win against Peterborough in 2013 when Norwich had Harry Kane, on loan from Tottenham, as an unused substitute.
Conte didn’t risk the likes of Eden Hazard and Cesc Fabregas but left Alvaro Morata as an option from the bench. Michy Batshuayi started up front and defender David Luiz contested his first match for six weeks following a knee problem.
Norwich are at something of a cross roads. They sit 13th in the Championship and nine points adrift of the play-off places and their Premier League parachute payments end this season. Last campaign, the Canaries ran up a wage bill of £55m, the second-highest recorded in Championship history. Head coach Farke is rebuilding the team while preparing for departures of high earners. The visit of Chelsea reminded home supporters of what they are missing following relegation under Alex Neil two seasons ago.
The hosts started well and enjoyed decent spells of possession. Alex Pritchard and James Maddison, their two best attacking players, looked lively without seriously troubling the Chelsea back three of Luiz, Gary Cahill and Antonio Rudiger or goalkeeper Willy Caballero, in for Thibaut Courtois.
Norwich’s first attempt on target came from Josh Murphy. The 22-year-old winger advanced down the left, beating Rudiger, and his cheeky near-post effort was well gathered by the alert Caballero. Murphy also wasted a half-chance on 35 minutes as once again he made good progress on the left but lost his composure in the box and dragged his effort, neither a shot or cross, well wide. Norwich were expanding plenty of energy, playing at pace while Chelsea were composed, held their positions without offering too much going forward. They were waiting for Norwich to blow themselves out and then exploit the gaps – it never happened, Norwich were to good and didn’t allow it while Chelsea were too passive to make it happen.
With Premier and Champions League commitments looming, the last thing Chelsea wanted was an FA Cup replay. Conte’s team showed a touch more ambition after the break and Willian had their best effort on 59 minutes when he tested Angus Gunn with a fierce drive from 18 yards after Tom Trybull had lost possession.
Cahill was booked for clattering Pritchard but the former Spurs man was soon back on his feet. He wriggled free in the box and his effort looped off Luiz and dropped narrowly over the cross bar. Still Norwich came forward. Jamal Lewis’ freekick was tamely punched by Caballero but Murphy’s shot once again lacked accuracy – he should have done better.
Last year’s beaten finalists Chelsea have advanced from 20 of their last 21 FA Cup ties against sides out of the Premier League. Morata came on for Batshuayi with just under 20 minutes to go but not even the former Real Madrid man could find a way through well-drilled home defence.
The closest they came was in the 92nd minute when Davide Zappacosta walloped a volley wide of the post.
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Sun:
FEELING BLUE Norwich 0 Chelsea 0 match highlights: FA Cup replay forced by Canaries as second-string Blues fail to make an impression
The likes of Kenedy, Michy Batshuayi and David Luiz were given a chance to stake their claims for a place in the main starting XI
By Anthony Chapman
CHELSEA'S multi-million pound stars were forced into an unexpected FA Cup third round replay after drawing with a plucky Norwich City side this evening.
The Canaries held their own at Carrow Road as Antonio Conte's first-team hopefuls failed to make an impression in East Anglia.
Given Antonio Conte's regular fixture complaints, he would not have wanted a replay, but Championship Norwich frustrated the Blues, who came closest when Willian's effort was turned round a post by Angus Gunn.
And Chelsea, Premier League champions and FA Cup finalists last season, will now host Daniel Farke's men at Stamford Bridge in 10 days' time.
Conte, as promised, rotated his side, with Wednesday's Carabao Cup semi-final first leg with Arsenal in mind.
Nine changes were made following the midweek Premier League draw at Arsenal as Conte reverted to his cup side.
David Luiz played his second game since October after a rumoured fallout with Conte and a subsequent knee injury.
The Brazil defender is not the only person to get on the wrong side of Conte this season, with the Italian's feud with Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho escalating on Friday.
Conte says he is "ready to fight...with everyone". And he was as animated as ever in his technical area, despite the "clown" comment from Mourinho which the United boss had insisted was self-deprecating, rather than aimed at the Italian.
Norwich troubled their visitors. Murphy's runs made Antonio Rudiger uncomfortable and Pritchard pounced on two Luiz lapses.
Pritchard stole the ball when Luiz received a Willy Cabellero pass, but his heavy touch saw the ball go out for a goal kick.
Next Luiz's mis-kick was seized upon by Murphy and Pritchard created a chance, but Luiz recovered to block.
This was not to be as straightforward as Luiz's last appearance, a 4-0 win over Qarabag in Baku on November 22.
Chelsea were seeking an outlet, but Michy Batshuayi's control continually let him down, up against imposing pair Christoph Zimmermann and Grant Hanley.
Willian and Pedro, under pressure to perform following the arrival of Ross Barkley, offered little support, while Tiemoue Bakayoko and Danny Drinkwater could not get a foothold in midfield.
Murphy again ran at and beat Rudiger, but appeared caught by indecision as his final ball was neither a shot nor a cross. The ball went out for a throw in.
Luiz was booked for catching Maddison late and Batshuayi made his frustration clear by squabbling with Hanley at half-time.
Batshuayi's tame effort early in the second half was Chelsea's first on target. There were plenty off target.
Chelsea's best chance was fashioned by Willian, but Gunn turned his shot around a post. The goalkeeper held another effort from the Brazilian soon afterwards.
Norwich continued to cause problems and Conte had seen enough.
With 16 minutes remaining Alvaro Morata was on, with Batshuayi withdrawn.
Charly Musonda was also sent on, for Kenedy, but Davide Zappacosta's stoppage-time volley wide from distance was the closest Chelsea came to breaking the deadlock.
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Mirror:
Norwich 0-0 Chelsea: Antonio Conte's B-team held by Canaries in FA Cup third round - 5 talking points
A much-changed Chelsea side were unable to break down the Canaries' defence at Carrow Road
By Darren Lewis
B team were outplayed by battling Norwich as they were taken to a replay.
The defending Premier League champions put in their worst display since their October Champions League defeat to Roma in Italy.
Conte sent out just two starters from the line-up that drew 2-2 with Arsenal last Wednesday night. But the Blues were still expected to see off a Norwich side 13th in the Championship.
Instead last season’s beaten finalists failed to register a shot in the first half. David Luiz - expected to leave this month after being frozen out by Conte - was poor while striker Michy Batshuayi, another out of favour, struggled throughout.
Norwich, meanwhile, impressed with midfielders Alex Pritchard and James Maddison - both targets for Premier League clubs putting in eye-catching displays.
Daniel Farke’s men remain on course to make it past the past third round for the first time in six years.
1. Do Conte's reserves have the fight?
He’d led from the front with his pre-match tear up with both Jose Mourinho and Arsene Wenger. Now Antonio Conte wanted to find out whether his Chelsea fringe players could match him for willingness to fight when the going gets tough. On a day when the Championship clubs showed elsewhere that they were not to be taken lightly, Chelsea could take no chances against Daniel Farke’s Norwich team. The Canaries had come into this contest pumped up courtesy of a win over Millwall last week..Chelsea’s B team had to prove they could cope.
2. Maddison shows what the hype is all about
He is the bright young thing about whom there is a big noise at the moment. Here it was easy to see why. Against superior players in midfield he showed little fear, good distribution and the craft to help create chances. His clever movement rattled David Luiz so much that the fed-up Brazilian eventually hacked him down to earn a yellow card. Late in the first-half, Maddison beat his man to send an effort over the Chelsea bar from the edge of the box. He’d already had a growing army of admirers before this TV game. He’ll have added a few more after this game - and a couple more quid to his rising price tag.
3. Batshuayi put in the show window
If this was to be the last time that we see Michy Batshuayi in a Chelsea shirt then he had to make it count. Conte quite clearly doesn’t fancy the Belgian. Despite the noises to the contrary in his press conferences, the Italian has made that quite clear with his team selection (or lack of it). So this was a rare chance for Batshuayi to remind prospective buyers (or loan clubs) that he still does have it. It didn’t go well during the first half. He struggled to get on the ball and when he did, he couldn’t hold it up. To be fair the Chelsea first-half display was shocking, their worst for some time. But he is the one who needs the regular first team action to get a chance of the World Cup. At the moment it is touch and go.
4. Pritchard shows why he's in demand
Huddersfield want to sign him in this window and it easy to see why. Pritchard is neat and tidy on the ball and produced one of the moments of the first half when he left Gary Cahill for dead on the right before sending the ball into the six-yard box. Terrier’s boss David Wagner will know already that he will have to improve Pritchard’s decision-making if he does land the ex-Spurs man. But he’ll have seen here that there is a lot to work with.
5. Luiz does his cause no favours
If he was trying to put himself into the shop window he wasn’t making a very good job of it. The speedy Norwich forward line ran rings around him in the first half. He very nearly gifted Alex Pritchard a golden opportunity in the 22nd minute when he failed to control a pass from keeper Willy Caballero. He was booked for taking out the promising James Maddison and he kept giving the ball away in dangerous areas. If Arsene Wenger had been watching from the warmth of his living room he’d have probably switched over to The Voice and Will.I.Am after 20 minutes.
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Express:
Norwich 0 - Chelsea 0: Canaries force FA Cup replay at Stamford Bridge with goalless draw
JAMES MADDISON wouldn’t look out of place in the Premier League.
By PETER OAKES
Norwich ground out a 0-0 draw at Carrow Road
And Norwich will be expecting the phone to ring with big clubs asking them how much they want for the 21-year-old wonder kid after he lit up the FA Cup.
The Canaries reckon he’s the most talented Englishman outside the top flight – and you can see why.
The cool-headed youngster wasn’t at all fazed facing the likes of Brazilian defender David Luiz and England international Gary Cahill.
And, at times, the Blues had to chop him down to stop him, Luiz getting a yellow for one tackle.
Maddison, who was spotted at Coventry City, joined Norwich for £3million two years ago this month but has only established himself in the side this season after loan spells back with the Sky Blues and at Scottish Premiership Aberdeen.
He’s already scored seven goals and, on his first-half showing, would have walked into this misfiring Chelsea midfield.
It wasn’t until after the break that the champions woke up after what must have been a big dressing room dressing-down from manager Antonio Conte, who looked more and more disgruntled as the Canaries bossed the first half.
But you always had the feeling that the Canaries had missed their opportunity while they dominated the first half without seriously troubling keeper Willy Caballero.
And it was a different Chelsea in the second half as they carved out several chances but never looked like a team 30 rungs higher up the league ladder.
Tiemoue Bakayoko fired wide, Willian, getting a start as Conte made nine changes from the midweek spectacular against Arsenal, forced Angus Gunn to push his shot around the post and the Brazilian star then shot straight at the keeper.
And Davide Zappacosta almost decided it in stoppage time, his long-range effort fizzing beyond Gunn but the wrong side of the post.
But Chelsea still had their scares over 90 minutes. A rusty-looking David Luiz almost let in ex-Spurs winger Alex Pritchard, who closed him down quickly and got a toe on to the ball.
With a little bit of luck it could have found the target but it went wide.
The Canaries’ attacking trio of Pritchard, the highly-rated Maddison and Josh Murphy were a real handful without being able to supply a finish.
Murphy wasn’t scared of reputations and let fly from well outside the box but couldn’t find the accuracy to match his invention.
A clever turn by Pritchard, which forced Antonio Rudiger into a hasty clearance, had Cahill remonstrating with his midfielders who hadn’t tracked his run.
Despite having history on their side – the Londoners have gone through from 20 of their last 21 ties against teams from a league below them – Conte was a frustrated figure.
The last time City went beyond the third round was five seasons ago but there was no sign of an inferiority complex. Murphy again exposed the Chelsea defence but fi red harmlessly across the face of the goal.
It was that sort of day.
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Thursday, January 04, 2018
Arsenal 2-2
Telegraph:
Arsenal 2 Chelsea 2: Hector Bellerin scores in 92nd minute to seal draw in Emirates thriller
Ben Bloom
The ‘xG’ – expected goals – for this encounter would have been extraordinary. Five-all? It was entirely possible as there were so many clear-cut chances traded in this capital clash.
There were thrills, spills and, afterwards, inevitable belly-aches with an edgy Arsene Wenger renewing his war on refereeing after an amazing draw that was an incredible advert for the Premier League. It was also an indictment as to why neither of these two teams will win the title this season.
There was controversy, as there always is, with Jack Wilshere claiming his first league goal since May 2015 – a superbly determined strike to open the scoring – after he probably should have been sent off when appearing to dive in attempting to earn a free-kick on the edge of Chelsea’s penalty area, as he anticipated a challenge from Andreas Christensen. He had already been booked for a foul on Cesc Fabregas.
Meanwhile, Arsenal raged at the penalty award that drew Chelsea level, just four minutes after Wilshere’s goal, when Hector Bellerin was judged to have fouled the other No 10 – Eden Hazard – as they vied to reach a loose ball.
Having expressed his anger at the penalty given against Arsenal in the draw away to West Bromwich Albion on New Year’s Eve, Wenger was at it again. The Arsenal manager had a case then, though badly expressed, but not so much here.
Bellerin clearly kicked Hazard’s foot. It was a penalty – maybe the only possible accusation against Hazard is that he exaggerated his fall – and Wenger needs to drop his conspiracy theories.
If sport at the highest level is about fine margins, then it was caught in the 90 minutes of this full-throttle match. Chelsea striker Alvaro Morata could have had a hat-trick, missing three one-on-ones that a forward of his calibre should have finished, and it is hard to imagine Diego Costa, who opened his account for his new club, Atletico Madrid, as this game was being played, spurning them.
Then, after Bellerin’s 92nd-minute equaliser, cancelling out Marcos Alonso’s goal following yet more appalling Arsenal defending, Chelsea should still have won it when Morata erred for the third and final time. Even then the ball broke to substitute Davide Zappacosta, who thumped his half-volley against the crossbar.
The wing-back should have scored but so should many other players. Both goalkeepers were outstanding, making a string of improbable saves, to add to the misses, with maybe the pick of them being a brilliant one-handed stop by Chelsea’s Thibaut Courtois to turn away a poked shot by Alexis Sanchez. Even then the ball struck one post and then ran across the goal-line, rebounding off the other before Courtois eagerly grabbed it.
It means that Arsenal remain frustratingly in sixth place while Chelsea, in third, missed the opportunity to leapfrog Manchester United and return to second spot.
Chelsea will – marginally – be the happier, with Arsenal five points adrift of fourth-placed Liverpool. Given the absentees in their back-line it was, evidently, and maybe as ever with Wenger, a case of attack being the best form of defence.
But it meant they were as chronically vulnerable to conceding as they were likely to score. The fact it remained goalless at half-time was the biggest surprise, given how both sides simply went for it. And made mistakes.
Morata missed the easiest of his chances early on, allowed to run onto a hopeful long ball by Victor Moses, which Shkodran Mustafi completely misjudged and Calum Chambers left, both believing it would run through to Petr Cech, only for Morata to collect.
But Morata got his angles horribly wrong as he side-footed the ball wide. It was then end to end and back again. The xG – the new measure used by statisticians to show how many goals should have been scored – went through the roof.
Arsenal claimed a penalty, arguing Moses had clipped the heels of Ainsley Maitland-Niles. Courtois denied Sanchez and Alexandre Lacazette, and was relieved to see Mesut Ozil’s shot drift narrowly wide. At the other end, Cech pushed Tiemoue Bakayoko’s shot over the bar and Fabregas side-footed wildly over from Hazard’s clever back-heel.
There was no let-up. If anything it became more intense. Cech denied Hazard, with an outstretched leg, and then turned away Alonso’s header before Courtois was again called into action, thwarting Lacazette from close range.
He was finally beaten. The breakthrough came and the Emirates erupted as Rob Holding’s first-time pass rebounded off the hapless Morata to Wilshere, who had instigated the move, with the midfielder’s powerful, rising first-time effort cannoning off Courtois’s near post and into the net. They pressed on and only another save from Courtois denied Lacazette.
Would Wilshere grab the headlines? Hazard did not allow it. He won the penalty and dispatched it, steering the ball to Cech’s right as the goalkeeper dived left. The momentum swung.
Morata missed again, lifting the ball over when through on goal before Zappacosta easily beat Maitland-Niles down the right and fired in a cross. Alonso stole in ahead of the dozing Mustafi and turned it home, right-footed.
The mood shifted. Would it be another game of recrimination for Arsenal? To their credit, they responded valiantly. The pressure built and Bellerin latched onto Alonso’s clearing header to steer a crisp half-volley beyond Courtois’s grasp. Honours even? Zappacosta should have won it but did not.
It was a fair result, even if Wenger cried foul, again.
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Guardian:
Hectór Bellerín makes late amends for Arsenal after Chelsea comeback
Arsenal 2 - 2 Chelsea
David Hytner at the Emirates Stadium
Arsène Wenger strode purposefully towards the fourth official, Craig Pawson. The Arsenal manager was a long way from his technical area and there was steam coming out of his ears. His team were in the lead, thanks to Jack Wilshere’s goal, which, after all the midfielder’s injury misery, was a beautiful moment for him.
But the referee, Anthony Taylor, had pointed to the penalty spot and all of Wenger’s conspiratorial pre-match fears had seemingly been realised. Wenger had railed against poor officiating against his team this season and Taylor always stood to be a central character. Wenger had clashed with him last January to earn a four-match touchline ban.
There was no injustice here. Hectór Bellerín’s lunge at Eden Hazard inside the area was not just ill-advised, it was reckless. He caught Hazard’s foot, the Chelsea forward went down and, if the fall seemed exaggerated in real time, Taylor’s decision was vindicated with every replay.
Hazard beat Petr Cech from the penalty spot and things came to look even more bleak for Wenger and Arsenal when the Chelsea substitute, Davide Zappacosta, rinsed the inexperienced wing-back, Ainsley Maitland-Niles, to cross for Marcos Alonso, who touched home in front of the flat-footed Shkodran Mustafi.
Enter Bellerín, again. In stoppage time, at the other end. After Alonso had only half-cleared with a header, Bellerín crashed a half-volley goalwards and it was still rising when it ripped into the net. On this occasion, his timing was glorious.
Arsenal did their best to throw it away. Not for the first time their patched-up back-line evaporated into the night sky and there was Álvaro Morata, running on to a simple long ball, with only Cech to beat. He could not do so – the goalkeeper stood up to make his most important save of the game – and Zappacosta rattled the rebound against the crossbar.
Wenger looked shot to pieces at full-time, overtaken by the emotion, and he saw conspiracy at every turn. He wanted to talk about the spectacle and how entertaining it had been, which was certainly true. Why could we not discuss the football alone? In the next breath he was throwing around some pretty serious accusations about how he knew his team would be punished by the referee. Again.
This was the latest harum-scarum Emirates Stadium ride – after the 3-1 loss to Manchester United and the 3-3 draw against Liverpool. The common denominator has been Arsenal’s defensive looseness and their desire to engage their opponents in a toe-to-toe slugfest. Wenger’s team have played with so little control and structure that it has been difficult to argue their wounds have not been self-inflicted.
It would have been worse had it not been for Morata, who endured a torrid evening. The Chelsea striker’s first one-on-one chance came on 14 minutes after Calum Chambers had inexplicably ducked underneath Victor Moses’s hopeful punt forward and Mustafi had melted away.
Suddenly Morata was in and he opened up his body for a side-footed finish. He botched it horribly. Morata would also shoot high after brushing past Chambers in the 68th minute. The angle was tighter than his other openings but it remained a glaring miss.
Wenger’s hand had been forced by the injuries to Laurent Koscielny, Nacho Monreal and Sead Kolasinac, and his callow replacement back-line was jittery throughout. But Wenger is not the sort of guy to dwell on defending. His focus, as usual, was on what his team could create.
They enjoyed a purple patch leading up to the midway point of the first half and they would have led were it not for the reflexes of Thibaut Courtois. He tipped Alexis Sánchez’s shot on to the inside of his right-hand post and watched the ball run across his line, kiss the other post and spin to safety. The Chelsea goalkeeper then saved from Alexandre Lacazette after the striker had spun sharply away from Gary Cahill.
The thrills and spills were plentiful – together with the belly laughs. Maitland-Niles provided one of the latter when he clipped his own heel inside the Chelsea area on 16 minutes and went down. He was lucky to escape a yellow card. Wilshere, who was booked for a foul on Cesc Fàbregas, flirted with a second caution when he went to ground too easily from a challenge by Andreas Christensen. He might not have been on the field to score his goal – a thumping, first-time, left-footed drive.
Hazard shimmered with menace while Fàbregas twice teed up Tiémoué Bakayoko before the interval with sumptuous passes. From the first Bakayoko saw Cech tip over while he did not read the second. Fàbregas shot high when well placed on 45 minutes but he was otherwise excellent. When he was substituted some of the Arsenal supporters rose to applaud him.
Fàbregas played in Hazard early in the second half only for Cech to save while Courtois denied Lacazette at the other end. Mesut Özil had gone close before Wilshere bludgeoned Arsenal into the lead, after Rob Holding’s low pass had flicked off Morata. Lacazette promptly worked Courtois but the game would turn sharply on the Chelsea penalty.
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Independent:
Arsenal's Hector Bellerin snatches draw in thrilling finale against Chelsea to deny Marcos Alonso's winning moment
Arsenal 2 Chelsea 2: The right wingback slammed in a half-volley from just inside the box at the end of a helter-skelter second half full of incident
Miguel Delaney Emirates Stadium
It was another ludicrously entertaining if imperfect top-six match at the Emirates that somehow, but somewhat fairly, ended up perfectly balanced at Arsenal 2-2 Chelsea.
One of the key figures appropriately characterised this. Hector Bellerin was responsible for the foul that brought Eden Hazard’s penalty and a distinctive change in momentum, but then scored the sensational last-minute equaliser. It further summed up the game that many might dispute the penalty, not least an irate Arsene Wenger. Then again, given the already booked Jack Wilshere appeared to dive just before his goal, Antonio Conte might well have a response. And this was the thing. Both Arsenal and Chelsea could complain about refereeing errors, both could complain about their team’s errors, but no one could really complain about the final result.
The watching audience meanwhile couldn’t complain about an ending like that, as Marcos Alonso’s 86th-minute strike was cancelled out by Bellerin, and Davide Zappacosta even hit the bar after that. If the game finished so supremely, though, Alvaro Morata did not. The match won’t do much for his confidence, and the final result won’t do much for either side’s season beyond Arsenal just about keeping pace in the race for the top four but it will do a lot for the Premier League’s marketing – even if they weren’t here selling perfection.
This was an epic yet error-strewn match to go with Manchester United’s trip here as well as Liverpool’s, but thereby not one that went with the recent history of this London rivalry.
This is a fixture that, perhaps more than any in the Premier League, has followed distinctive patterns over long periods of time. There was over a decade of almost singular Arsenal dominance between 1993 and 2004, before over a decade of almost singular Chelsea dominance between 2004 and 2016, with both of those spells characterised by a control and calculation that comes from just knowing how to beat the other side. There was none of that here, just colour and chaos.
It was as if both sides realised how vulnerable the other was after the Christmas period, with that first signalled by – well – a clear lack of signalling between Shkodran Mustafi and Calum Chambers in the centre of the Arsenal defence on 15 minutes. That allowed Morata a clear run at goal, except he just produced something seen much more recently. As happened twice against Stoke City on Saturday, he showed this remaining and frustrating lack of ruthlessness in his game, badly squandering a one-on-one. It was also a signal of what was to come.
In the meantime, more action kept coming. Thibaut Courtois brilliantly turned an Alexis Sanchez onto the post only for it to also hit the other, before getting down low to save from Alex Lacazette as Cesc Fabregas then shot too high.
The way Hazard set up that chance did reflect that there was maybe a greater vulnerability to Arsenal’s makeshift centre-half pairing, and the constant concern for them throughout the game was when – rather than whether – the playmakers excellence would expose them. He should really have done so just after half-time, but a low and slightly lax shot was diverted by Petr Cech.
Errors were hardly confined to Arsenal’s defence, or Chelsea. There was then the decision from referee Taylor, too, as he missed a dive from Wilshere when the midfielder was on a booking.
It was to be instantly influential. On 65 minutes, after yet another attacking move was disrupted, a defensive touch from N’Golo Kante didn’t have enough on it and fell to – inevitably – Wilshere. He lashed the ball past Courtois to make it 1-0.
Within moments, however, Wenger was shouting about the ref himself. Hazard naturally had the ball in the box, Hector Bellerin went in on him, and the Belgian went down. A penalty was given and Hazard himself naturally took the opportunity to make it 1-1.
It wasn’t just the opportunity for an equaliser, but an opportunity to eke out proper control of the game. That was how affected Arsenal were, how emboldened Chelsea were. Morata had two more chances to score and missed, before Alonso showed him how it was done. Ainsley Maitland-Niles was also done – but his team weren’t.
Bellerin made it 2-2, in a match that still had too much to come.
As to what it says about what is to come from either side? There was Morata’s misses, Wenger’s complaints, character from both and errors from both, but sometimes there’s not much that can be read it into it. Sometimes there’s no extra meaning. Sometimes it’s just chaos. That was this, albeit in beautifully entertaining fashion.
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Mail:
Arsenal 2-2 Chelsea: Hector Bellerin nets injury time equaliser after Marcos Alonso looked to have secured late winner in pulsating Emirates clash
By Martin Samuel for the Daily Mail
It was one of those games. Marcos Alonso looked to have won it for Chelsea, then made the mistake that gave Arsenal their injury-time equaliser.
Hector Bellerin gave away the penalty that brought Chelsea back into the game, then earned Arsenal a point with almost his last kick. And Jack Wilshere scored his first Premier League goal since May 24, 2015, a momentous occasion Arsenal celebrated by holding that lead for all of four minutes.
In other words, a mess. An exhilarating, entertaining, lovely mess — but a mess nonetheless for two teams angling to secure places in next season’s Champions League.
The result probably suited Chelsea more as they are higher up the table and were away from home, but there were still grounds for concern. When a striker has three one-on-one chances and misses all of them, a manager should worry. Alvaro Morata was supposed to replace the intimidating presence of Diego Costa. On Wednesday night he appeared to be channelling the spirit of Fernando Torres at Stamford Bridge. And not in a good way.
We have come to expect games like this against the elite at the Emirates Stadium this season. Losing to Manchester United, drawing with Liverpool, it was very much the same. Knockabout; no structure. Manchester City can concede goals, we know that, but they have a clearly defined game plan. Arsenal have a go, then the other lot have a go. It finished 2-2, it could have been 5-5.
Thibaut Courtois and Petr Cech made excellent saves. Morata and Alexandre Lacazette missed plenty. Even after Bellerin had made it level, Davide Zappacosta had time to hit the bar. It is thrilling, but will it get Arsenal back in the Champions League next season? Probably not via domestic qualification.
If Tottenham beat West Ham tonight, Arsenal will be four points and at least 10 goals adrift of them in sixth place — and they are already five points off Liverpool in fourth. This was great fun for the neutrals, but it lacked the precision required to nail down Arsenal’s future. They may have to take the Europa League route pioneered by Jose Mourinho at Manchester United last season. Watch UEFA get the vapours if England get five clubs into the Champions League, back to back.
That’s for another day, though. For now, what a game. Four goals in the last 27 minutes and every one changed the balance of power. Arsenal led, Chelsea equalised. Chelsea led, Arsenal equalised. Both sides will feel as if they won, and lost.
Chronologically, the action begins with Wilshere’s first league goal since the final game of the 2014-15 season, a 4-1 home win over West Bromwich. This, most certainly, should have made a bigger splash. A significant intervention. Wilshere has been in lovely form since finally getting his chance again, but the goals do not come. Just one, in a 6-0 Europa League victory over BATE Borisov. Not what one might call crucial.
This would have been different. A finish that belied close to a three-year goalscoring drought. Mesut Ozil cut the ball back, Rob Holding vied with Morata on the edge of the area, the Chelsea man getting a fateful touch. Wilshere collected the scraps and, outstripping none other than N’Golo Kante, defeated Courtois with a superb, powerful, first-time shot.
It would have capped an excellent spell in the first team for Arsenal’s prodigal son. Instead, his side gave the lead away at the first opportunity.
The moment Chelsea tried to force a way back, Arsenal blinked. Bellerin had no need to make the challenge on Eden Hazard, clipping the bottom of his foot as they jostled for the ball in the area. The home fans cried dive, but it was a foul. Hazard stepped up, waited for Petr Cech to commit and, cool as you like, brought Chelsea back into the game.
Three minutes later, Morata missed his second one-on-one of the match. In the first half, he had let Arsenal spectacularly off the hook after their naivety had presented him with a gift.
A long ball hit in hope from the back was allowed to drop by Calum Chambers, who cannot have appreciated the position occupied by team-mate Shkodran Mustafi. Either he didn’t see him, and presumed Morata was offside, or he saw Mustafi and presumed he was already dealing with the loose ball.
So Chambers stopped and let it roll, and Morata ran on, somewhat surprised, and now with only Cech to beat. Instead he flopped, embarrassingly so, missing at the far post, just as he did when set clear by Cesc Fabregas in the 70th minute, Chambers in pursuit.
It remained for a full back, Alonso, to show Chelsea’s striker how it should be done. The goal was simplicity itself. Zappacosta, brought on to test Ainsley Maitland-Niles with fresh legs, did exactly that, turning the young man inside out before crossing for Alonso, who got in front of Mustafi for his sixth goal of the season. He has 12 in the Premier League since the start of the last campaign, five more than any other defender. Wilshere would kill for such a return.
And that looked like Arsenal done. But are they ever? Leicester, Liverpool, how many times at the Emirates this season have they been written off, only to rally? Alonso’s poor headed clearance put Chelsea under pressure, substitute Danny Welbeck got a touch, Bellerin met the loose ball just inside the area, rifling it past Courtois. What remained? Another Morata miss. One-on-one again, straight at Cech, Zappacosta off the bar with the rebound.
Earlier, Alexis Sanchez contrived to hit both posts — Courtois tipped it on to his right, it travelled across the goal-line and hit the left — Morata missed his kick at the near post, and Lacazette let a couple of sitters go to waste.
Tiemoue Bakayoko should have scored at least two, Ozil came close, and Wilshere escaped a second yellow for diving having already been booked for a late tackle on Fabregas.
Phew. And now breathe. The players, apparently, have been left absolutely exhausted by this holiday schedule. What this match would have looked like had they been properly at it, then, heaven knows.
Arsenal (3-4-2-1):
Cech 8.5; Chambers 6 (Walcott 88), Mustafi 6, Holding 6.5; Bellerin 6.5, Wilshere 7, Xhaka 6.5, Maitland Niles 6.5; Ozil 7, Sanchez 7; Lacazette 6 (Welbeck 80).
Subs not used: Mertesacker, Ospina, Iwobi, Coquelin, Elneny
Manager: Arsene Wenger 7
Goals: Wilshere 63, Bellerin 90
Yellow cards: Wilshere 31, Holding 53, Ozil 67
Chelsea (3-5-2):
Courtois 7; Azpilicueta 7, Christensen 7, Cahill 6.5; Moses 5.5 (Zappacosta 56, 7), Bakayoko 6.5, Kante 7, Fabregas 7 (Drinkwater 70, 6), Alonso 7; Hazard 8 (Willian 81), Morata 4
Subs not used: Caballero, Rudiger, Pedro, Batshuayi
Manager: Antonio Conte 7
Goals: Hazard (pen) 67, Alonso 84
Yellow cards: Fabregas 42, Courtois 89
Ref: Anthony Taylor 6.5
Att: 59,379
MOM: Cech
RATINGS BY SAMI MOKBEL
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Express:
Arsenal 2 - Chelsea 2: Hector Bellerin bags dramatic leveller after controversial penalty
IT WAS two-and-a-half years since Jack Wilshere last scored a Premier League goal but it took an injury-time volley from Hector Bellerin to secure even a point.
By MATTHEW DUNN
Even then the Emirates crossbar was left vibrating long after the final whistle by an even fiercer Davide Zappacosta effort that could yet have snatched the win for Chelsea.
But while the late equaliser saw Arsenal fans head into the night largely happy, it cannot hide the fact they are 23 points off the pace and desperately need to tie down at least two of their three best players before they head off into the sunset.
Wilshere they hope to get chained down in the coming days. But increasingly, the recent improvement in performances from Mesut Ozil look at best a negotiating ploy and at worst a share of the determination that Sanchez seems to have to use this month to put himself in the shop window.
With so much focus on Arsenal’s want-away stars at the top of the formation, it did at least distract attention from the very flimsy foundation Wenger had constructed behind it at the back.
Calum Chambers, Shkodran Mustafi and Rob Holding had just 16 Premier League starts between them in the season so far and it took just one giant punt upfield from Victor Moses to highlight that lack of experience after just 14 minutes.
The ball bounced between the three of them, Chambers pointed forlornly to suggest Petr Cech might to dash 30 yards from goal and suddenly Alvaro Morata was 10 yards clear with only the Arsenal goalkeeper to beat.
More than enough time to pick a spot; inexplicably, the one he chose was several feet wide of Cech’s far post – the glaring miss not enough to spare Arsenal’s defence a classic Wenger rant from the touchline.
Further forward, at least Arsenal were looking much brighter with – that’s right, you’ve guessed it – Alexis Sanchez leading the way.
A sublime one-two with Ozil teed Sanchez up for a 12-yard shot which not only hit the inside of one post but agonisingly trickled along the goalline to strike the other before bouncing away to safety.
In the 23rd minute, the Germany international picked out Alexander Lacazette around the penalty spot as only Ozil can. For once, the disappointingly goal-shy France striker picked the perfect spot but Thibaut Courtois somehow got his paw down to the ball just inside the post and turned it away.
A similarly inventive defence-splitting pass from Cesc Fabregas gave Tiemoue Bakayoko an opening, only for Cech to palm the ball over the bar.
After moaning about so many soft penalties conceded, Wenger would not have minded if referee Anthony Taylor had pointed to the spot when Ainsley Maitland-Niles fell with Victor Moses close behind – quite rightly, the Cheshire official was having none of it.
Instead, the match remained evenly poised, so much so that when Wilshere scythed through Fabregas to pick up the game’s first yellow card, the former Arsenal player felt it only right he should even up the bookings with a similar challenge just before the break.
Chelsea were quickest out of the blocks in the second half, Cech saving well from Hazard and then turning aside a Morata header when Bakayoko quickly launched the ball back into the danger area.
Lacazette’s frustrating season continued when in the 52nd minute a world class turn bamboozled Cahill but then his shot arrowed straight at Courtois, who saved with his heel.
Then came the moment the Emirates had waited so long for. Holding’s pass took a deflection off Morata but Wilshere did not mind that - his stretching, left-foot effort flying in off the post to spark emotional celebrations by the corner flag.
They were to be short-lived. Within minutes, Bellerin made a mess of trying to tackle Hazard, kicked his foot and the Belgium international did the damage himself from the spot.
Alonso’s easy tap-in from Zappacosta’s low cross was another defensive horror-show and although Bellerin’s rescue will lead to talk of character and never-say-die attitude, going forward Arsenal would swap that for Chelsea’s more genuine collective strength in a heart-beat.
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Star:
Arsenal 2 Chelsea 2: Hector Bellerin scores last-gap equaliser in Premier League thriller
HECTOR BELLERIN struck in extra-time to earn a thrilling draw for Arsenal.
By David Woods, Chief Football Writer
His amazing goal came on a night when Arsene Wenger’s referee conspiracy dossier grew even fatter.
Jack Wilshere’s first Premier League goal since May 2015 gave Arsenal the lead in a cracking game of attacking football.
But their 63rd minute advantage was to last just four minutes when Bellerin made his first big impact on the game.
He stuck out a foot and caught Hazard on the leg, and the Belgium ace went down like a stack of waffles, provoking ref Anthony Taylor to point to the spot.
Taylor was the fourth official who Wenger abused and pushed at Burnley in January of last year following the awarding of a spot-kick, earning the Frenchman a four-match touchline ban.
Hazard himself made no mistake at The Emirates, sending the ball straight down the middle as Petr Cech dived to the left.
Wenger’s foul mood grew even worse when Marcos Alonso pounced in the 84th minute.
But Bellerin raced to the rescue in the second minute of added time, smashing a shot high into the net to calm Wenger a little.
The Frenchman’s nerves, though, were tested even after that as his dopey defenders allowed Alvaro Morata to race clean through.
His tame shot was beaten away by Petr Cech and Davide Zappacosta struck the rebound against the bar.
England midfielder Wilshere hadn’t scored in the top flight since a home goal against West Brom in May 2015.
But he ended his drought when he smashed home a rocket.
Wilshere pounced when Morata inadvertently deflected a Rob Holding pass straight into the Arsenal No.10’s path and his powerful drive flashed in off the near post.
Before all the goals Chelsea’s former keeper and their current one had taken centre stage at The Emirates.
Arsenal’s Cech and his successor at Stamford Bridge did everything in their powers to stop another goalfest in north London.
Liverpool drew 3-3 with Arsenal on the Friday before Christmas and this clash with also packed with incident.
Cech was chasing a 200th Premier League clean sheet, something no other keeper has done before, whereas Courtois was bidding to make it five in a row in the top flight this season.
The Gunners had a massively lucky escape in the 14th minute. Right wing-back Victor Moses punted a ball upfield with his left foot and Calum Chambers allowed it to drop over his shoulder.
Morata was away from him in a flash and looked set to score as he bore down on goal. But he overdid his sidefooted attempted finish and put it wide.
In the 17th minute the Blues had an even bigger dose of fortune. First referee Taylor waved away claims for a penalty when Ainsley Maitland-Niles fell in the box, with replays showing the youngster had tripped himself after being brushed by Victor Moses.
But the ball still broke to Alexis Sanchez in the box, the Chile striker poked a right-foot shot which hit Courtois brilliantly pushed onto his right post, the watch it roll along the line and struck the other one before he gratefully collected.
Courtois and Cech then took it in turns to pull of smart saves. But then Wilshere struck and Hazard bagged that controversial penalty.
Alonso pounced after sub Zappacosta got past Ainsley Maitland-Niles - who had been excellent up until then. Alonso nipped in front of Shkodran Mustafi to bury a right foot shot.
A Wenger red rage looked on until Alonso headed out poorly and Bellerin whacked his half-volley - and even Courtois could got near it.
It ensured the Arsenal boss went off without waiting for Taylor.
But with his team 23 points off leaders Manchester City he has little to be cheerful about.
As for Antonio Conte he will wonder how star striker Morata fluffed those two great chances ensuring Chelsea stay third.
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Mirror:
Arsenal 2-2 Chelsea: Hector Bellerin strikes in stoppage time to secure dramatic draw - 5 talking points
The Gunners took the lead through Wilshere but were pegged back when Bellerin was judged to have brought down Hazard
By Darren Lewis
Hector Bellerin struck in stoppage time to secure a dramatic draw for Arsenal against Chelsea.
Arsene Wenger was left fuming after Eden Hazard and Marcos Alonso staged what had appeared to be a stunning smash and grab raid for Chelsea.
Jack Wilshere had shot Arsenal to within 25 minutes of only their third victory in their last eight Premier League games.
The strike was the midfielder’s first goal in 43 Premier League matches, with his last against West Brom in May 2015.
But referee Anthony Taylor ruled Hector Bellerin had fouled Eden Hazard in the box just two minutes later. The Belgian then netted from the spot.
With six minutes left Alonso rifled in from close range from substitute Davide Zappacosta’s cross.
But with the clock ticking, Bellerin struck for the Gunners.
Here are five key talking points from the thriller at the Emirates.
1. Wilshere tremendous once again
He has been terrific in his bid to win friends and influence people, namely Wenger, the man who makes the decisions over a new deal.
The question marks over his ability to influence a high-intensity game, however, remained. Not any more. What tremendous character he showed here.
At times he was given the runaround by Cesc Fabregas who was offensively more astute and defensively more productive.
Wilshere’s 33rd-minute yellow card, for clattering into his Spanish counterpart, looked to be frustration.
Smashing in that 64th minute sizzler was a far better way of expressing it. Wilshere is back - and he means business.
2. Sanchez has exploded into life again
Fascinating how he has suddenly exploded into life again after a subdued four weeks or so.
There have been times over the past month or so when Sanchez has looked as though he has been marking time as he runs his contract down.
Now, with the window open, Chelsea and Manchester City in need of reinforcements and Liverpool about to lose Coutinho, Sanchez is on fire again.
Just to refocus a few minds that might have forgotten what he brings to the party.
He is in a win-win situation of course - a big club this month, big money if he leaves on a free in the summer.
But if you didn’t know better, you’d think someone was angling to get out of north London before February.
3. Clean sheets could help Chelsea's charge
If any one can put together a run to get anywhere near City at the moment it is Chelsea.
They have had their injuries and (as always) their political problems, but right now they are back in the zone.
We all know what they can do going forward but at the back they are as solid as a rock.
They’d come into this match hunting their fifth successive league clean sheet.
They rode their luck here for sure when Alexis Sanchez’s shot was pushed onto one post, rolled across the goal line and hit the other.
But overall during their current run, they have made their own luck with their ferocious work rate.
4. Courtois kept Chelsea in the game
He might not have signed a new deal just yet, he might still have some who pine for the glory days of Petr Cech, but Courtois showed here just why he is so important to Chelsea. The brilliant Belgian kept them in it.
He was smartly down to his left to save one-handed when Alexandre Lacazette span his defender in the box and fired goalward.
Before that Courtois was simply outstanding to push Sanchez’s shot onto the post when the Chilean looked for all the world as if he had opened the scoring. And what a tremendous block that was, minutes after half time, from Lacazette.
He has no chance with that Wilshere strike but he'd been let down for that by his defence. Courtois is still the man for the big occasion for Chelsea.
5. Cech matches the Chelsea keeper
Anything Courtois can do, Cech can do just as well.
The former Blue is always fired up against his former club and this occasion was no exception.
He made himself big in the 14th minute to worry Morata out of a one-on-one from which the Spaniard looked certain to score.
He saved again, a minute later, from Morata at his near post. He parried Bakayoko’s shot on the 28th minute.
He saved superbly with his legs from Hazard five minutes after the break.
From the follow-up Cech pushed away Marcos Alonso’s header. There is life in the old dog yet. His old club will bear witness to that.
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Sun:
SAVED BY THE BELL Arsenal 2 Chelsea 2: Hector Bellerin strikes in injury time to earn point for the Gunners after stunning London derby
Marcos Alonso thought he had secured a stunning comeback for the Blues as his late goal looked to have sealed victory for the champions after Eden Hazard had levelled Jack Wilshere's opener
By Neil Ashton
IN the end, it was a belter.
It is the sort of goal, deep into injury time, that will be talked about down the years at Arsenal.
That somehow Hector Bellerin’s stunning equaliser will transform Arsenal’s fortunes and take them into the top four again.
That their miserable Christmas form — three draws and a win at Crystal Palace — can be forgotten.
That this is the new Arsenal taking shape, reborn after showing incredible fighting qualities to somehow scrap out a draw.
They deserve a pat on the back — but that is where it ends.
This was a ridiculous game, played at a furious tempo between two teams with very different ambitions these days.
Chelsea thought they had won it, with Eden Hazard equalising from the penalty spot and Marcos Alonso nosing them in front six minutes from time.
Arsenal still had a big say in it.
They had been ahead, with the feel-good factor filling the nostrils of nearly 60,000 Arsenal fans when Jack Wilshere fired in.
It was a scorching strike, screeching Arsenal into a 1-0 lead the moment it pinged off his left boot 63 minutes in.
Arsenal, this being Arsenal, could not hold on to the lead.
Bellerin, thrown one way and then the other by Hazard, could not resist chopping him down.
Hazard, a touch subdued, equalised from the spot.
It sent poor old Arsene Wenger into meltdown, screaming into the face of fourth official Craig Pawson. Thing is, the referee got it right. This time.
Chelsea, their opponents in next week’s Carabao Cup semi-final, are durable, obstinate and damn well difficult to beat.
The biggest chance of the first half went Chelsea’s way.
Calum Chambers and Shkodran Mustafi managed to let a hopeful, looping ball drop behind them. Alvaro Morata raced clear, only the keeper to beat, to put Chelsea in front. Instead he missed, poking his effort hopelessly wide of Petr Cech’s left-hand post.
Arsenal responded, playing like a team with a lot of work to do to bridge that gap between Ropey League and Champions League football.
For a time they looked good for it.
Mesut Ozil, Alexis Sanchez and Wilshere were the driving force as Arsenal got about these Chelsea boys.
Thibaut Courtois was a towering presence every time Arsenal got in behind Chelsea’s defence. It almost turned into his night.
He got a glove to Sanchez’s chance that rebounded off both posts, turning on to the paintwork before it rolled across the line and against the other.
Arsenal grew in confidence, with Ozil and Wilshere matching Cesc Fabregas and Hazard for the fancy footwork.
Ozil provided the next chance, with Gary Cahill sliding all over the penalty area when Alexandre Lacazette turned him in the area.
The striker swivelled, shooting at Chelsea’s goal, but Courtois came to the rescue again.
Chelsea turned a corner, with Cech tipping Tiemoue Bakayoko’s chance over the bar, after a clever combination between Hazard and Fabregas.
From the corner, Morata headed over the bar.
Both teams were coming to the boil, with Wilshere cautioned after taking Fabregas clean out. The Spaniard soon got him back and he, too, was booked.
Hazard came alive at the start of the second half, with Cech down to his right to claw away his effort.
From the follow-up, he got down to his left in time to flip Morata’s header away for a corner.
Ozil and Sanchez combined again to set up Lacazette for another big second-half chance. Instead he fluffed it, failing to get the solid connection that would have put Arsenal ahead.
Courtois stopped Ozil next, throwing out a leg to prevent Arsenal’s magic man putting them in front.
They got there eventually.
Wilshere got it, rifling his effort into the top corner after starting the move off on the edge of the area.
It did not last long. Chelsea got a penalty, awarded when Bellerin clipped the bottom of Hazard’s boot.
The Chelsea man scored from the spot, drilling his effort beyond Cech to level.
Alonso thought he had the winner as he turned in a Davide Zappacosta cross.
But Bellerin beat Courtois from distance to earn Arsenal a point. Somehow, they just about deserved it.
Stoke City 5-0
Mail:
Chelsea 5-0 Stoke: Antonio Conte's side run riot and leapfrog Manchester United into second in the table
By Oliver Holt For The Mail On Sunday
The dystopian vision of the Premier League articulated by Jamie Carragher last week, the 'joke league' where the gap between the top and the rest is embarrassingly wide, took fresh form at Stamford Bridge in a match that was over as soon as the team-sheets whirred out of the photocopier in the Chelsea press room.
This was not about a team massing its defence, as Newcastle had done against Manchester City. This was about a team who didn't even get to that point. This was about a team which effectively conceded defeat before the match began because they knew they would be hopelessly outmatched.
Stoke, sucked unexpectedly into a grim fight against relegation and facing a Chelsea side in fine recent form, were missing Kurt Zouma, Ryan Shawcross and Bruno Martins Indi through injury anyway.
Their beleaguered manager, Mark Hughes, also left Xherdan Shaqiri, Joe Allen and Eric Choupo-Moting on the bench, saving them for a match he thinks they have a chance of winning, against Newcastle on New Year's Day. So we knew what was coming.
We knew it was coming and it took a little over 120 seconds to arrive. That was when Antonio Rudiger scored Chelsea's opening goal. Danny Drinkwater added a second a few minutes later. Game over.
The rest of the match was a glorified kick-about. It was only ever a question of how many Chelsea would score and how much Stoke could limit the damage.
There was still plenty to admire in Chelsea's display. The performances of Pedro and Willian were a joy to watch and it was good to see Drinkwater approaching the form that made him such a mainstay of Leicester City's title-winning team the season before last.
But sometimes it felt almost as if the champions were playing in a vacuum. Stoke played with the demeanour of sacrificial lambs. That was the worst of it: they knew what was coming, too.
Stoke are now hovering perilously above the bottom three and speculation about Hughes' job is increasing. He made it plain afterwards that he is staking much on the game against Newcastle and that it could be a pivotal moment in his team's campaign.
'We were stretched today,' Hughes said, 'And they had the quality to hurt us even with our best available XI. I made decisions I thought would help us with our game on Monday. If we can get the win against Newcastle that we hope we can get, it will be a good return for the Christmas period. It would mean we'd have two wins, a draw and a defeat against Chelsea.'
Chelsea's win took them temporarily, at least, above Manchester United into second place and ended what has been a fine year for Antonio Conte on a high note. Any notion of a pursuit of Manchester City may be forlorn but Chelsea are beginning to look like the best of the rest.
'To finish this year in this way is great for me and the club and the fans,' Conte, who guided the club to the title last May at the end of his first season in English football, said. 'It was a fantastic year. To win the title in England is not easy and to be able to do this in your first chance…I will remember this year forever.'
This was probably the easiest game of Chelsea's year as well as the last. Only two minutes had gone when Moses skipped past his man on the right wing and was brought down. Willian curled his free kick in with pace and purpose and Rudiger soared above Stoke's central defenders and guided his header past Jack Butland. It was well created and well executed but it was also way, way too easy.
Stoke struggled to get any kind of foothold in the game. They could not keep possession and they were a shambles at the back. Chelsea looked like they were going to score every time they attacked and before 10 minutes had elapsed, they were two ahead.
This time, the goal was created by Pedro. He teased his man on the Chelsea left and made space for a cross. His centre was deflected but it looped to Drinkwater who was waiting on the edge of the box and he smashed a stunning volley into the top corner of the Stoke net with the outside of his right foot. Butland did not move.
It was Drinkwater's first goal for Chelsea in the 13 appearances he has made for the club since his injury-blighted move from Leicester and he was playing with the kind of style and control that made him such a crucial member of Claudio Ranieri's title-winning side.
Chelsea should have gone three ahead when Alvaro Morata easily beat Stoke's attempt at an offside trap and bore down on goal from the right. He hit his shot with power but Butland spread himself well and made an excellent block to keep the Spain striker out.
It was only a brief reprieve. Chelsea did not let up and midway through the half, Willian probed the Stoke defence again on the edge of the box. He played a short square pass to Pedro, who bought himself a few feet of space by letting the ball run and tricking Josh Tymon.
Pedro took one touch and then angled his shot past Butland into the corner of the net.
Something approaching boredom began to set in for Chelsea after that and after the interval Stoke nearly pulled a goal back. Charlie Adam played a sublime pass beyond Gary Cahill for Saido Berahino to run on to but when Berahino tried to curl his shot round Thibaut Courtois, the Chelsea keeper dived to his left to push it away.
Chelsea did not allow many incursions like that and Morata missed another golden chance after an hour. Put clean through for the third time of the afternoon, he hit his shot too close to Butland again and allowed him to block the shot. In a game where easy goals were there for the taking, Morata looked a long way from his best.
It was nothing more than an inconvenience for Chelsea, though. Twenty minutes from the end, they got the fourth goal that was the very least their utter dominance deserved when Willian was brought down in the box by a clumsy challenge from Geoff Cameron.
Willian picked himself up and drove his penalty down the middle to beat Butland. Second-half substitute Davide Zappacosta stroked home the fifth in the dying minutes before the Premier League's two nations took their leave of each other.
Chelsea (3-4-3): Courtois 7; Azpilicueta 6, Cahill 6, Rudiger 7; Moses 7 (Zappacosta 57mins, 7), Kante 6 (Bakayoko 65, 5), Drinkwater 7, Alonso 6; Willian 8, Morata 5 (Batshuayi 72, 5), Pedro 8.
Subs not used: Caballero, Fabregas, Hazard, Christensen.
Goalscorers: Rudiger 3, Drinkwater 9, Pedro 23, Willian 73pen, Zappacosta 88.
Booked: Pedro.
Stoke City (4-4-2): Butland 6; Edwards 5, Cameron 5, Wimmer 5, Tymon 5; Diouf 5, Fletcher 5, Adam 6 (Choupo-Moting 80, 5), Afellay 5 (Ngoy 72, 5), Ramadan 6; Berahino 4.
Subs not used: Allen, Shaqiri, Crouch, Grant, Soutar.
Booked: Diouf.
Referee: Kevin Friend 7.
Man of the Match: Pedro Rodriguez.
Attendance: 41,433.
Brighton 2-0
Mail:
Chelsea 2-0 Brighton: Alvaro Morata and Marcos Alonso net second-half headers as Antonio Conte's men close gap on second-placed Manchester United
By Sami Mokbel for the Daily Mail
The intrigue was compelling. Not Chelsea's Boxing Day dismantling of Brighton; that was wholly routine. But it was Antonio Conte's post-match comments about Arturo Vidal that had the air of curiosity about them.
Spaniards Alvaro Morata and Marcos Alonso secured Chelsea's win over a well-organised Brighton, but all the commotion after the game was about a Chilean.
When questioned about reports of his interest in Bayern Munich midfielder Vidal, the Chelsea manager played the 'I don't speak about players from other teams' card. But then came the twist; Conte simply couldn't help himself.
'I must be honest, it's not right to talk about a player of another team,' said the Italian.
'Especially if you try to link this player with us. But Arturo is a fantastic player, I have a great respect for Arturo, and we spent many years in Juventus together.
'If we go to war, I'd always want him with me.' Out of nowhere, a curveball. Conte could easily have stopped at 'it's not right to talk about a player of another team'.
But he didn't. Why? Given Vidal is 30, there will certainly be opposition towards any swoop for the South American from within the Blues hierarchy. Chelsea's transfer policy is to target younger players approaching their peak.
Given the chance, though, the indications are that Conte would jump at the chance to have Vidal on board.
Not that he needed him on Boxing Day. After 45 minutes of monotony, Chelsea emerged victorious by keeping their heads. Quite literally.
What a bore this was until Morata planted his header past Mat Ryan to settle the anxiety that was manifesting at Stamford Bridge.
Alonso then notched with his own header to ensure Chelsea could breeze towards the final whistle.
In the end this was convincing from the champions. But barring the most spectacular of capitulations from Manchester City, this win will prove inconsequential in the title race.
But credit to Chelsea, they aren't gift-wrapping their trophy to City.
Conte said: 'I think in this league there is a great motivation for all. To try, I repeat, to stay there and to fight until the end, I don't know if it will win the title.
'It depends upon Manchester City. They are doing something extraordinary to win every game and draw only once up to now. But we want to work and improve.'
Despite the loss, Brighton left Stamford Bridge with their heads high; frustrating the champions for long periods.
But Chris Hughton's side could certainly do with some inspiration in attack. Celtic's prolific striker Moussa Dembele would certainly fit the bill.
But in response to suggestions Brighton have agreed an £18million deal with the Scottish giants, Hughton said: 'As manager of this football club, I'm quite sure I'd know. There's been no contact between the two clubs. That's speculation.'
The first half was low key, despite Cesc Fabregas' best efforts to shake Chelsea out of their snoozy start.
The Spaniard was at the heart of Chelsea's best moments during the opening 45 minutes. Not that it was much to write home about.
Tiemoue Bakayoko stabbed an instinctive shot from four yards wide after Antonio Rudiger headed Fabregas' deep cross back across the face of goal.
Ryan then denied Victor Moses' angled volley after Fabregas' chipped pass before the Spain international saw his own effort from the edge of the box held by the Brighton keeper five minutes before the break.
For Chelsea, it was all very uninspiring. Even Conte wasn't his super-charged self in the technical area. The only half-time consolation for the Italian was that his side's performance, certainly from an attacking perspective, couldn't get much worse.
And so it proved. It took Chelsea 45 seconds to take the lead after the restart. It was simple when it arrived: Cesar Azpilicueta's cross headed expertly home by Morata.
The tension eased. So did Conte's frustrations as Chelsea quickly shifted into overdrive. Eden Hazard rifled wide from 20 yards before Ryan produced a brilliant stop to deny Alonso's 30-yard free-kick.
The Brighton keeper was forced into another stop from the resultant corner, again denying Alonso this time from a bullet header.
But for Alonso, it was a case of third time lucky as he finally got on the scoresheet on the hour, glancing a header from Fabregas' corner past Ryan to ensure Chelsea cantered to their fourth win in five games.
Chelsea (3-5-2): Courtois 6; Azpilicueta 7.5, Cahill 6.5, Rudiger 7; Moses 7.5, Fabregas 8, Kante 7.5 (Drinkwater 85mins), Bakayoko 7, Alonso 7.5; Hazard 7.5 (Willian 73, 6.5), Morata 7.5 (Batshuayi 82).
Subs not used: Caballero, Pedro, Zappacosta, Ampadu.
Goals: Morata 46, Alonso 60.
Manager: Antonio Conte 7.
Brighton (4-2-3-1): Ryan 6.5; Schelotto 6, Duffy 6.5, Dunk 7, Suttner 6; Stephens 6, Propper 6; March 6 (Knockaert 82), Kayal 5 (Gross 73), Izquieredo 6; Hemed 5.5. (Murray 80).
Subs not used: Krul, Bruno, Baldock, Goldson.
Booked: Stephens.
Manager: Chris Hughton 6.
Referee: Mike Dean 6.5.
Man of the match: Cesc Fabregas.
Attendance: 41,568.
Everton 0-0
Mail:
Everton 0-0 Chelsea: Dogged defending from Sam Allardyce's side frustrates the champions and earns the Toffees a share of the spoils at Goodison
By Joe Bernstein for The Mail on Sunday
Jordan Pickford won’t have done his World Cup prospects any harm by excelling in front of England manager Gareth Southgate as Everton’s revival continued under Sam Allardyce.
Everton didn’t muster a single shot on target at Goodison but they didn’t have to in order to extend their unbeaten run to seven matches.
Pickford, clad in bright orange, threw out a strong hand to tip over a sizzling strike from Pedro and then got down low to deny the Spaniard again early in the second half. For an encore, he then beat away a shot from inside the box from danger-man Eden Hazard.
When he was beaten, 35-year-old skipper Phil Jagielka cleared off the line twice in the same move as Antonio Conte’s men tried in vain to better close the gap on the top two Manchester clubs. They were also left cursing their luck when Ashley Williams inadvertently met a Victor Moses cross and headed against his own post.
‘This type of game, you deserve to win,’ grimaced Conte afterwards. Allardyce didn’t directly argue. ‘We scrapped it out. No doubt about that,’ he said.
At 23, Pickford is still young for a goalkeeper at the top level but with Joe Hart out of West Ham’s team and Stoke struggling this season with Jack Butland between the sticks, he could still be England’s No1 in Russia.
‘It might be a bit early but it’s not beyond what he can deal with,’ said Allardyce, who also worked with him at Sunderland. ‘He is 23 going on 30, very mature for his age.
‘He sometimes looks at me to say: “Why are you saying that – I’m a top-class goalkeeper. I quite like that. Self-assurance.
‘His starting position seems to be exceptionally good. He is able to get the right spot. But if he thinks he has made it and doesn’t do all that practise, he won’t achieve what he can.’
There were significant misses on both team-sheets. Wayne Rooney was absent through illness in the Everton line-up while Chelsea’s top scorer Alvaro Moratta was banned after over-celebrating his Carabao Cup winner against Bournemouth in midweek.
In the circumstances, and given Chelsea’s domination, it was perhaps surprising that Conte only threw on his fox-in-the-box Michy Batshuayi for the final 20 minutes, Hazard working as a false No 9 beforehand.
Allardyce likes to test himself tactically against the best European coaches and had a gameplan, pushing Idrissa Gueye onto Chelsea’s holding midfield players and allowing Victor Moses plenty of space on Chelsea’s right flank while trying to crowd Marcos Alonso on the other side.
It wasn’t pretty but Allardyce will point to the final score – and Everton’s record of five clean sheets in their unbeaten run – and the fans agree. The roar that greeted the final whistle couldn’t have been louder if Everton had managed a famous win.
They were put under pressure from the 10th minute when Hazard whipped in a cross and Jagielka was on the line to block Tiemoue Bakayoko’s shot after it had beaten goalkeeper Jordan Pickford. Willian followed up the rebound, the same player was there to clear again and receive a congratulatory handshake from Tom Davies.
Pickford kept Everton level with a brilliant stop as Pedro’s shot was bound for the top corner. Allardyce changed to three-at-the-back at half-time sacrificing Aaron Lennon and Davies but the gamble backfired six minutes into the second period when he was forced to make his final change with Idrissa Gueye hurting a hamstring.
Everton had to really dig in. Michael Keane took one for the team by being booked for a late foul on Hazard to thwart a Chelsea breakaway. Pickford twice got down low to keep his team in it and there was a collective sigh of relief when the ball fizzed off Williams and onto the woodwork.
Everton’s best chance of a goal came in injury-time when an unmarked Michael Keane headed a Gylfi Sigurdsson corner over, though that would have been daylight robbery.
‘Defensively, I can’t knock the team whatsoever,’ said Allardyce. ‘Phil Jagielka decided he wasn’t going to let Chelsea score today. Those goal-line clearances aren’t luck. That is reading the situation.’
It was Jagielka’s first start under Allardyce and justified the manager’s decision to change both centre-halves, with Williams and Mason Holgate on the bench.
The one downside is Gueye will miss Everton’s Boxing Day trip to West Brom.
Chelsea will play worse than that on many occasions and win. Conte cut a frustrated figure at the end.
‘When you play this kind of game, with possession and 26 shots, for sure you must be disappointed. You have to take three points,’ he said.
‘I consider Everton the best team outside the top six teams and I thought we played a really good game, a good performance. We had to be more clinical. It’s a pity.’
Everton (4-4-1-1):
Pickford 7.5; Kenny 6, Jagielka 8, Keane 6.5, Martina 6; Schneiderlin 6; Lennon 6 (Sandro 45 6), Gueye 7.5 (Baningime 51 6), Davies 6.5 (Williams 45 7), Sigurdsson 6; Calvert-Lewin 6
Subs not used: Robles, Niasse, Holgate, Bolasie, Niasse
Booked: Calvert-Lewin 10, Martina 21, Keane 57
Chelsea (3-4-3):
Courtois 6; Azpilicueta 6.5, Christiansen 6, Rudiger 6.5; Moses 6.5 (Zappacosta 81 6), Kante 7, Bakayoko 6.5, Alonso 7; Pedro 6.5 (Fabregas 63 6), Hazard 6.5, Willian 6.5 (Batshuayi 70 6.5)
Subs not used: Caballero, Drinkwater, Cahill, Hudson-Odoi
Ref: Bobby Madley 6.5
==============================
Friday, December 22, 2017
Bournemouth 2-1
Telegraph:
Chelsea 2 Bournemouth 1: Late Alvaro Morata strike earns semi-final spot - but it was a 17 year-old who stole the show
Matt Law
Chelsea’s record signing Alvaro Morata stepped off the substitutes’ bench to clinch a Carabao Cup semi-final tie against Arsenal, but it was a 17-year-old they have not even paid for who stole the show.
While Chelsea’s reserves largely disappointed, with Michy Batshuayi again failing to grasp his chance and Willian frustrating despite scoring the opening goal, Ethan Ampadu shone against Bournemouth.
Making only his second senior start for Chelsea and his first in the centre of defence, Ampadu put in an assured performance that defied his inexperience. It looked worrying for Ampadu, when he was booked inside 90 seconds for a late challenge on Jermain Defoe that eventually forced the striker off with suspected ankle ligament damage.
But he quickly regained his composure and did not put a foot wrong again, which will have no doubt been noted by old club Exeter City.
Chelsea have not been able to settle on a compensation fee with Exeter for Ampadu, who turned down a contract with the Grecians to sign for the Premier League champions in the summer. The stand-off is expected to be settled by a tribunal and, on this evidence, Exeter’s valuation of the youngster will have shot up even further.
“After one minute and 20 seconds, you decide to book a player who is 17-years-old – I think he played the whole game with this problem and it’s not simple for a defender to play after a yellow card in the second minute,” said Antonio Conte, the Chelsea head coach. “You have to play 93 minutes with this danger. But he showed great maturity and personality.
“I said in the past that this player, despite his young age, has shown great maturity. I don’t like to make gifts for someone. If they deserve it, I’m ready to play with very young players. Why not?
“Ampadu deserved to play this game and against Everton and against Huddersfield [as a substitute] in the league. Now he has to stay calm. Maybe next game, he’ll go to play for the youth league. I don’t know. But this player is very humble. He could have a great future, but he has to continue in this way, to improve and to work.”
Morata’s winning goal, which came less than a minute after Dan Gosling had appeared to send the tie into extra-time with a 90th-minute equaliser, came at a price.
The Spaniard’s celebrations earned him a yellow card and he will now serve a one-match suspension and miss Saturday’s Premier League trip to Everton. “I must be honest, I didn’t see this yellow card,” said Conte. “He’s a big loss for us, especially because we have to play a tough game against Everton. It’s a pity. But we have to accept it. Many players were booked.”
Other than Morata, Eden Hazard and Tiemoue Bakayoko were called on from the bench, as Conte was annoyed with the way Chelsea started the second period having taken a 13th-minute lead.
Batshuayi passed to Kenedy, who back-heeled the ball into the path of Cesc Fabregas. The midfielder drove into the penalty area before finding Willian, who easily beat goalkeeper Artur Boruc.
Willian almost went from hero to villain, as he inexplicably let in substitute Jordan Ibe, who should have at least tested Chelsea’s reserve keeper Willy Caballero.
Having thought he had been fouled, Willian stopped playing to appeal for a free-kick. Referee Lee Mason ignored the Brazilian and Ibe raced into the area, but fired the ball into the side-netting.
Bournemouth came out from the break reinvigorated and Ampadu had to be alert to divert a shot from Lys Mousset over the bar. Conte was concerned enough that he felt the need to call for Hazard and Bakayoko, who took over from Willian and Pedro.
The changes did not knock Bournemouth out of their stride, however, and Gosling was the next visiting player to worry the Chelsea defence, but his shot was too high.
It was evident that Conte did not want extra time, as he sent on the last of his big guns – Morata – with 17 minutes remaining. But there were more warnings for the hosts, as Ibe flashed a low shot just wide and Caballero got down well to stop substitute Callum Wilson’s cross reaching Gosling.
Gosling finally got the better of Caballero with a curling shot in the 90th-minute, only to see Chelsea race straight up the other end and win the tie through Morata.
“It feels heartbreaking, to be honest,” said Eddie Howe, the Bournemouth manager. “The players gave everything to get back into that game. I was hoping it would go into extra-time and we’d have a go at winning it. It was bitterly disappointing what happened in those last few moments.
“It’s too painful to watch the goal again.”
==================
Mail:
Chelsea 2-1 Bournemouth: Alvaro Morata scores last-ditch winner moments after Dan Gosling equaliser to send Antonio Conte's side into Carabao Cup semi-finals to face London rivals Arsenal
By Adam Crafton for the Daily Mail
As Alvaro Morata's finish trickled into the Bournemouth goal, Antonio Conte let out one of those visceral outpourings of energy.
A minute before, the picture could hardly have been more different.
Leading through an early Willian goal, Chelsea simply switched off after the restart. Chelsea were rattled and Bournemouth's Dan Gosling eventually scored a deserved equaliser just as the game edged into injury time.
Conte had seen it coming. Heaven knows he had tried everything from the Chelsea technical area. He tried cajoling his players. Then he introduced his big-hitters. Yet the more frantic Conte became, the more his side retreated into their shell.
Bournemouth played with greater urgency, forcing a succession of corners. Only the most tenacious of blocks from the outstanding 17-year-old Ethan Ampadu denied Guy Mousset an equaliser.
The prospect of extra-time began to haunt Conte's mind. So out came three of Conte's aces in Tiemoue Bakayoko, Eden Hazard and Morata. Yet Chelsea continued to stumble around. Gary Cahill did so quite literally, falling flat on his face to concede a corner.
But the visitors just kept coming. Gosling fired over. Substitute Jordan Ibe flashed a low shot inches wide of Chelsea's goal.
When Gosling's sweet curling strike nestled into the goal shortly before the fourth official raised his board for injury-time, it was the least Eddie Howe's side merited.
Yet in Hazard and Morata, Conte possesses two of the Premier League's most gifted footballers and straight from the kick-off, the pair took matters into their own hands.
The duo dovetailed beautifully, as Hazard's back-flick freed the Spaniard to seal a dramatic late victory. Morata was booked for his enthusiastic celebrations, ruling him out the weekend visit to Everton.
'It was heart-breaking,' Howe said. Yet for Conte, victory was significant. Certainly, his side's progress in this competition means more than he might have envisaged early in the season.
Conte might have regarded the Carabao Cup as a token reward but amid the broader outlook of Manchester City's excellence and a Champions League duel against Barcelona, a semi-final draw against Arsenal now takes on renewed significance.
Conte's sense of purpose was clear from the team-sheet. The Italian may have made eight changes from the weekend victory over Southampton but his starting XI still came in at a combined value of £218.7m, including the talents of Cesc Fabregas, Willian and Pedro. Hazard and Morata waited on the bench.
So this was not a scratch Chelsea side. There were places on the bench for two English World Cup winners, in the Under 20 winner Jake Clarke-Salter and Under 17 Callum Hudson-Odoi but neither entered the fray.
Conte was true to his pre-match word, offering another high-level starting opportunity to young Ampadu. He started the previous round against Everton in central midfield and here the Welsh international played at the heart of the Chelsea defence. Sporting his frizzy dreadlocks and lean build, he is a David Luiz doppelganger.
Ampadu's former Exeter manager Paul Tisdale said that he plays with the brain of a 35-year-old yet just like Luiz, there are signs of over-exuberance. The ferocity of Ampadu's slash at Jermain Defoe's ankles inside the opening 80 seconds spoke volumes for a young talent's anxiety to impress.
Referee Lee Mason took his name yet Ampadu responded so positively to his early set-back, carrying the ball with confidence and defending with urgency and composure.
'It is not simple to play 90 minutes with a yellow card,' Conte said. 'Ampadu showed great maturity and personality. He is very humble and he could have a great future.'
Defoe was forced off by the lunge with suspected ankle ligament damage and that loss represented the latest blow for Howe in a season that simply refuses to take off.
After suffering two defeats by Manchester United and Liverpool in the past eight days and with the trauma of a visit to Manchester City to endure this weekend, the injury to Defoe, in addition to Harry Artur, who exited with a calf injury, provide further headaches.
Bournemouth are seven matches without a victory and a pivotal run of fixtures after Christmas will determine whether a drama becomes a crisis for Howe.
Still, Bournemouth made the more vibrant start to the game and Gosling might have been more composed when a shooting opportunity presented itself early on. Chelsea's attacking qualities soon surfaced.
It was a quite magnificent opening goal. An impudent back-heel from the Brazilian Kenedy released Cesc Fabregas breaking from midfield and as the crowd rose up, Fabregas was the coolest man in the stadium, glancing up and teeing up Willian to score.
For a fleeting while, we wondered whether Chelsea may inflict serious damage to Bournemouth's fragile confidence, as Michy Batshuayi spurned one good chance and Davide Zappacosta fired across goal. Yet the second-half was a different story and ultimately, Chelsea were grateful to come away with any win at all.
Chelsea: Caballero 6; Rudiger 6, Ampadu 7, Cahill 6.5; Zappacosta 6, Drinkwater 6, Fabregas 7, Kenedy 7; Pedro 6 (Bakayoko 61, 6), Willian 7 (Hazard 61, 6.5); Batshuayi 5 (Morata 73, 7)
Subs not used: Clarke-Salter, Eduardo, Sterling, Hudson-Odoi
Goalscorers: Willian 13, Morata 90+1
Booked: Ampadu, Fabregas, Zappacosta, Morata
Manager: Antonio Conte 6.5
Bournemouth: Boruc 6; A. Smith 6, S Cook 6, Francis 6, Simpson 6.5, Fraser 6.5; Gosling 6, Artur 6.5 (L Cook 73, 6), Surman 6; Mousset 5.5 (Wilson 71, 6), Defoe 5.5 (Ibe 17, 6)
Subs not used: Ake, Pugh, Ramsdale, Hyndman
Goalscorers: Gosling 90
Booked: Simpson, A Smith, Francis, Gosling
Manager: Eddie Howe 6
Referee: Lee Mason 6.5
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