On a weekend when the rest of the Premier League elite looked lost, uncertain and confused, Chelsea opened up an eight-point lead at the top of the table with a sometimes-tricky 2-0 win over Hull.
Naturally, after a fortnight when either a back problem, interest from lands afar or a combination of both kept him out of the first team, Diego Costa seemed dead set on making an emphatic point, and he did so by scoring Chelsea’s opener and performing as you might expect an annoyed Costa to perform. This was an edgy, relentless Costa who seemed set on either scoring goals or starting arguments, the two elements that make him one of the best centre-forwards in the world. Aside from him, Chelsea were not at their best, and only felt secure when Gary Cahill bagged a second with around 10 minutes remaining.
Costa very nearly opened the scoring after just nine seconds, volleying just wide of the post, but the game was held up shortly afterward when Cahill and Ryan Mason violently clashed heads in the penalty area. The Hull players frantically hurried the medical staff onto the pitch, and while Cahill got up shortly afterward, Mason was on the floor for seven minutes as he was attended to. He was eventually delicately loaded onto a stretcher and taken off, receiving oxygen as the whole crowd applauded.
The remainder of the half had a slightly odd air, Chelsea broadly the better side and attacking with some intent, and Antonio Conte’s levels of exasperation ramped up as the minutes ticked by and his side didn’t manage to breach a stout Hull defence. Until the seventh minute of injury time that is, when Victor Moses dashed down the right, struck a low cross that somehow navigated its way through a thicket of defenders and found Costa, who struck low into the corner. On his 100th appearance for the club, that was his 52nd goal: on balance, you can just about see why Chelsea are keen to keep him.
Hull started the second half brightly, and undoubtedly should have been given a penalty in the early stages, when Marcos Alonso hacked at Abel Hernandez’s Achilles; everyone seemed to pause in anticipation of the spot kick being given, but the referee remained unmoved.
As the half progressed Conte danced further up and down the touchline, tearing his hair out at the scrappy play of his team, constantly bellowing instructions that were frequently not carried out. The problem for Hull was that for all their good play and even territorial dominance, their final ball was not good enough to breach a defence that has still only conceded 15 times this season.
And that failure cost them. With 10 minutes remaining Chelsea won a free kick on the left, substitute Cesc Fabregas curled it into the area where some wretched marking opened a broad gap into which Cahill ran and glanced home a header. Costa was substituted shortly afterwards, milking the applause from the crowd for all it was worth. He had earned it.
Even as Chelsea led in the second half, there was an air of frustration around Stamford Bridge, their fans rather more anxious than you might expect on a weekend that could hardly have gone better for them. Of the rest of the top six, only Arsenal won, and even then only just. This should have been a day when their supremacy was demonstrated without question.
This surprising dissatisfaction was largely because this was a disjointed performance from Chelsea, their attack nowhere near as potent as it had been in the past few months, Eden Hazard anonymous and only Costa showing much gumption and threat.
Compare this to the previous game between these two sides, the one in which Conte first switched to the 3-4-3 system that has defined this season and started their brilliant run. On that day they were ruthless, slicing through their beleaguered opponents like wire through warm brie. This time they were nothing of the sort, and while it would be a brave to call any Conte team passive, they were pretty close to that.
The rest of the title contenders could look at this two ways: either that, in the cliched manner, a win while playing badly can only be ominous for the rest, or alternatively that Chelsea are by no means unbeatable or uncatchable. Hull were game but the limitations of their squad were clear, and much like Swansea against Arsenal last weekend, a better side probably would have taken advantage of Chelsea’s off day.
At this stage it’s tough to see anyone but Chelsea winning the title, but oddly this performance might have given the chasing pack a little something to cling to.
Coming into this game just a point off the foot of the table, away to the side five clear at the top, you would forgive Marco Silva for not only parking the bus on the edge of their own area, but removing its wheels and disabling the steering.
There was an element of this. Hull’s starting formation roughly resembled a 5-4-1, and their collection of vast defenders did form a meaty wall aimed at letting nothing through. Hernandez toiled gamely up front, often with only hints of support from Sam Clucas and Evandro to his left and right.
And yet Silva spent much of the game insisting his players pushed up, trying to ensure they did not sit too deep and simply invite pressure onto them. He knew that unless they showed something approaching ambition, they would have little chance of defending for the entire game.
Many managers in this situation, for example, might have objected to Harry Maguire’s frequent jaunts up field, in which the substantial centre-half marauded up the right channel and actually provided many of Chelsea’s brighter attacking moments, in the first half at least. But Silva positively encouraged them, even though it could obviously leave a hole at the back to be exploited.
Equally, when Curtis Davies was forced off with injury, Silva replaced him with forward Oumar Niasse, moving to a two-man forward line and taking the opportunity to give his side some more attacking punch, rather than defending and hoping to nick a goal on the counter-attack.
Hull have a significant task on their hands to get out of trouble this season, but Silva’s proactive attitude could well be significant.
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