
Eden
Hazard's loss of form has been alarming and Real Madrid and Paris St Germain
are hovering, but can he get back on track under Guus Hiddink at Chelsea?
Eight months. 30 matches. 2289 minutes. There are many ways to measure Eden
Hazard's remarkable Chelsea goal drought, but none of them make the reality
any easier to stomach for last season's PFA Player of the Year.
Hazard has not scored since capping a brilliant individual campaign with the
goal that clinched Chelsea's Premier League title against Crystal Palace in
May. As recently as July, before the new season had unravelled so
spectacularly, Jose Mourinho said the Belgian's performances in 2014/15
ranked ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo's and second only to Lionel Messi's in
Europe.
It was high praise - but Mourinho had a strong case. Hazard had started
every one of Chelsea's Premier League fixtures on their way to the title,
scoring 14 goals, adding nine assists and dragging them over the finish line
almost single-handedly as team-mates faded all around him.
Hazard went into the summer as one of Messi's strongest rivals for the 2015
Ballon d'Or, but by the time the three-man shortlist was announced in
November, his challenge had faded completely. One statistic circulating on
social media summed it up: Barcelona's Neymar has won five trophies since
Hazard last scored a goal.
Hazard, of course, is not the only Chelsea player to have struggled this
season, but the heights he scaled in 2014/15 mean his decline has felt
particularly steep. And while Diego Costa and Cesc Fabregas have shown signs
of resurgence in recent weeks, the same cannot be said of their No 10, who
still looks a long way short of his best, with niggling injuries also
hampering his progress.
Hazard's Premier League dip
Season Dribbles per game
Chances created per game Shots per game
Passes per game
2014/15
4.8
2.6
2.1
58.4
2015/16
2.8
2.4
1.2
45.6
It's not just the goals that have dried up, either. Hazard is attempting
fewer dribbles, having fewer shots and creating fewer chances than last
season. And despite the fact that Chelsea have actually averaged
fractionally more possession than in 2014/15, his involvement has dropped
off dramatically, with his average number of passes per game falling from
58.4 to 45.6.
Those numbers left Mourinho scratching his head, and Guus Hiddink now finds
himself in a similar situation, albeit with the considerable advantage that
his relationship with Hazard is not strained beyond repair. The Dutchman has
been pressed on the 25-year-old repeatedly in recent press conferences, and
despite overtures from Real Madrid and Paris St Germain, he says he has been
struck by his hunger.
"As a coach I haven't experienced him in the past and now I have had him for
just a few days because he was injured," Hiddink said last week. "If a
player comes back from an injury then normally they like to take some time
to get in good physical and mental shape, but he was eager to play in the
Watford game already. When he was warming up, he said: 'Please, bring me on,
bring me on'."
Some of Chelsea's senior players were accused of downing tools in the final
weeks of Mourinho's tenure, but Premier League tracking data proves Hazard's
struggles have not been down to a lack of effort. Indeed, the Belgian is
covering more distance per 90 minutes than last season, and he is also
averaging more high-intensity sprints.
Hazard's running stats
Season Distance covered per 90 mins
Average sprints per 90 mins
2014/15
10.35km
56.37
2015/16
10.54km
59.98
It's a cause for optimism for Hiddink, and Ray Wilkins, the 69-year-old's
assistant during his first stint at Stamford Bridge, believes he is the
perfect man to bring Hazard back to his usual standards. "Guus is a
tremendous man motivator," Wilkins told Sky Sports. "These big players all
have the talent, but it's just getting the man management right and getting
these young men to run around for you. Guus will do that.
"Mourinho did a fantastic job, but I think a lot of the players were
struggling. Now a new manager comes in and they seem to pick their game up a
touch, so long may that continue. Guus will bring joy to training. He'll
bring a fun environment in which to work, and he'll be like a dad to them.
That's what he was like the last time he was there. They loved him."
Diego Costa's confrontation with Oscar on Thursday shows training will be as
competitive as ever, but the image of Hiddink with an arm around Hazard
contrasts sharply with that of the Belgian pushing Mourinho's hand away as
he came off the pitch against Porto last month, and he could be set for more
special attention from Didier Drogba, who is being linked with a return to
the club as a coach.
Hazard has looked up to Drogba throughout his career, and it was the Ivorian
who convinced him to join Chelsea back in 2012. "Back in the summer of 2012,
just as I was leaving Chelsea, I'd persuaded him to sign for the club,"
Drogba wrote in his recently-published autobiography, Commitment.
"After we won the Champions League, I got [his former Lille team-mate]
Gervinho to call Eden and I persuaded him that Chelsea would be the right
place for him. He told me afterwards that he was amazed I had made that call
and that it had been a big reason why he'd come to Chelsea."
Suddenly, Chelsea looks like the kind of environment in which Hazard could
thrive once again, but Wilkins insists it's up to him to raise his game too.
"You've also got to put [his dip in form] down to the defenders he's playing
against, because they're not going to allow him to do what he did last
year," he said.
"He just wrecked them last year, everybody. But now they're getting tighter,
they're bringing him down more, they're not allowing him to get on those
dribbles and they're doubling up on him."
Hazard's reduced numbers of dribbles and passes per game certainly tally
with Wilkins' assertion that he is receiving closer attention than ever from
defenders, and Hiddink eluded to it too in the wake of the goalless draw
against Manchester United after Christmas: "At Old Trafford they were
searching for him all over the pitch and he reacted very well - he has a
very strong character."
"They've made it tough for him," added Wilkins. "Now it's up to Hazard to
start thinking: 'I need to be doing something different to hurt these guys'.
Let's hope that evolves under Hiddink."
Chelsea might face a battle to keep hold of Hazard in the summer if they
miss out on Champions League qualification, but in the meantime, his and
Hiddink's task is to find a way to make it work in west London. After eight
arduous months, the Belgian's prospects are starting to look a little
brighter.