
Jose
Mourinho described Nemanja Matic as Chelsea's midfield "monster" on their
way to the Premier League title last season, but his remarkable fall from
grace has continued under Guus Hiddink, writes Nick Wright…
Statistics don't always tell the full story but the numbers behind Nemanja
Matic's performance against Everton were certainly revealing. In the 55
minutes before he was mercifully substituted by Guus Hiddink, the midfielder
lost all eight of the duels and tackles in which he was involved.
It was a negligible contribution for a player whose chief responsibilities
are winning possession and shielding the back four, and, by contrast, his
central midfield partner John Obi Mikel won nine duels and completed five
successful tackles at Stamford Bridge.
It's little wonder Mikel is now ahead of Matic in Hiddink's pecking order,
and there were several moments on Saturday which underlined the Serb's
struggles. His weak challenge on Romelu Lukaku allowed the Belgian to set up
Everton's opening goal, and he was fortunate that Ross Barkley only struck
the post after he lazily misplaced a pass in his own half a few minutes
later.
Hiddink had seen enough. Matic was making his first start in four games
against Everton, but he may find himself back among the substitutes against
Arsenal on Super Sunday. Indeed, Chelsea's new manager has made no secret of
his preference for Mikel. "He's the ideal player to bring balance to the
team," he said of the Nigerian earlier this month. "John Obi can be one of
the key figures in getting the balance back."
Those comments were a slap in the face to Matic, who also suffered the
ignominy of being withdrawn by Mourinho just 18 minutes after coming off the
bench in their 3-1 defeat to Southampton in October, and Saturday was the
fourth time in 21 appearances that he has been substituted this season -
something that only happened once in the whole of the last campaign.
Matic looks a shadow of the player Mourinho once described as his midfield
"monster". Last season, the towering 27-year-old's midfield dominance
provided the foundation for Chelsea's success, with his solidity and
industry giving Cesc Fabregas and Eden Hazard licence to attack to
devastating effect.
But since lifting the Premier League trophy in May, Matic has arguably been
their worst performer. Mourinho bemoaned the 27-year-old's lack of
confidence back in October, and little has changed since then. Complacency
seems to have become a permanent fixture in his performances, and only
Everton's Gareth Barry and West Brom's Craig Dawson have made more
individual errors leading to opposition shots (four).
Errors leading to shots - Premier League 2015/16
Player
Team
Errors leading to shots
Gareth Barry
Everton
6
Craig Dawson West Brom
5
Nemanja Matic Chelsea
4
Seamus Coleman Everton
4
Matic's inability to perform at the same level as last season has been one
of the major factors behind Chelsea's slump. Without a reliable shield in
front of the defence, they have gone from allowing 3.24 shots on target per
game in 2014/15 to 4.64 per game this season. "If the team is not willing to
defend well, or hasn't got the right balance, then you'll concede a lot of
goals," noted Hiddink earlier this month.
The Blues have consequently shipped 34 of them in 22 games. It exceeds their
total for the whole of last season, and the only sides to have conceded more
are Bournemouth, Aston Villa, Norwich, Newcastle and Sunderland. Without the
safety net previously provided by Matic, Chelsea's attack has also been
compromised.
But while Fabregas and Diego Costa have shown signs of getting back to their
best with goals and assists since Hiddink's appointment, the change in
manager appears to have had little effect on Matic. So what now for the
midfielder?
Saturday's dismal outing suggests his partnership with Mikel does not have
much of a future, and Hiddink has made it clear he would rather use the
Nigerian when Fabregas moves back into a deeper role.
It seemed inconceivable that Matic's status as a key player could come under
threat last season, but the signs suggest he might have to get used to a
more peripheral role. From monster to misfit, Matic has his work cut out to
win back his place.