
Antonio
Conte is the odds-on favourite to become the next Chelsea manager - but what
style of play would he bring to Stamford Bridge? We got the view from Italy
to find out...
Sky Sports News HQ understands Chelsea technical director Michael
Emenalo travelled to Italy to watch Juventus' Champions League tie with
Bayern Munich - a fixture Conte was also due to attend.
With British newspaper reports suggesting the Juventus legend is due to take
over at Stamford Bridge after leading his nation at Euro 2016, we've spoken
to Sky in Italy reporter Augusto de Bartolo for an expert opinion on the
46-year-old.
De Bartolo agrees with Sky Sports pundit Tony Cascarino that Conte is
similar to former Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho, but also explains how the
former Juventus boss may re-shape the current Blues squad…
I
s Conte a popular manager with his players?
De Bartolo: "There is a connection between Antonio Conte and Jose Mourinho:
they both find enemies to fight against to help themselves - and their teams
- express themselves as best they can.
"Just like Mourinho, Conte is a coach who uses outside challenges to
motivate his players to the maximum level - and demands unconditional
loyalty to his project from them.
"According to this, Conte is very popular with his players. The concrete
example of this is when he was at Juventus and the relations he established
with Carlos Tevez.
"The former Manchester City striker was a rebel but under Conte's guidance
he probably played the best football of his career in Turin. Unlike his time
at City, Tevez showed his leadership not only on the pitch but always as a
symbol of the team.
"Conte is a coach who has a great and positive influence on his team."
What's the style best associated with his team?
De Bartolo: "It's not easy to tag with one word the style of football that
Conte prefers.
"However, in general, I can say that Conte's strategy is based on a solid
defensive pack, with a backline of three, which he used at Juventus because
of the players he had, or four, which he is using with Italy.
"His style is not based on possession like a Pep Guardiola team - it is
based on direct football, to the wings or to the strikers."
And how do his teams play when they don't have the ball?
De Bartolo: "In the non-possession phase, his team pressures opponents high
up the pitch - even when defenders are trying to play out from the back.
"Conte uses an aggressive approach, trying to win the ball back as soon as
the team can, making the space near the ball short and busy."
Do the players in Chelsea's current squad suit his style?
De Bartolo: "To play the high-pressing game Conte likes out of possession,
he needs some fast, aggressive, tactically intelligent players. I think
Chelsea already have players with these skills: Diego Costa, John Obi Mikel,
Nemanja Matic and Cesc Fabregas, for instance.
"If we look at the actual roster at Chelsea, according to the features of
the players, we must consider that Conte will have the opportunity to choose
between one of his preferred systems - the 4-3-3 or 3-5-2 he used at
Juventus.
"I think his choice will depend on the importance, for instance, he will
give to Oscar. If Conte bets on the Brazilian, he will need a midfield line
that will be able to protect Oscar's tactical anarchy.
"At Juventus, to protect Paul Pogba he had Andrea Pirlo, Claudio Marchisio
or Arturo Vidal. For this reason, I think Conte will try to buy a player
that will be useful for that. It could be Radja Nainggolan, from AS Roma,
who Conte admires."
What other transfer business would you expect Conte to do, should he
join Chelsea?
De Bartolo: "I think that the attention of Conte in the transfer market will
be focused on the defence. As I said, the defensive solidity is for him the
most relevant question to solve and Chelsea are having a lot of problems in
that sense.
"I'm sure he will look at young players like Kurt Zouma or Baba Rahman and
give them the opportunity to grow but he will also try to buy experienced
players considering John Terry's contract is running out and Gary Cahill is
the only established centre-back.
"Defence apart, Conte won't change a lot in the team, just three or four
players useful for the strategy - the plan he has.
"But one thing is sure: he will push out from his players all their value."