
Saturday
marks the anniversary of the day Jose Mourinho was sacked by then defending
champions Chelsea with the team in a mess and languishing in 16th. One year
on, the Blues are back on top under Antonio Conte. Adam Bate examines the
clean-up operation…
Jose Mourinho's final broadcast interview as Chelsea manager in the
immediate aftermath of the team's 2-1 defeat at Leicester was brief but
comprehensive. He touched on a myriad of issues crippling his side as well
as seeming to wonder whether this even was his side any more. "I feel like
my work was betrayed," he told Sky Sports.
As well as positing the theory that "I did phenomenal work and brought them
to a level that's not their level", there were reflections on once key
players.
"Clearly Diego is in trouble in the box," was his view on the star striker.
Eden Hazard's injury that saw him walk off the field "must be serious". He
was back within a fortnight. Mourinho was long gone.
Twelve months on from the day that Chelsea pulled the plug on a man who had
taken them to the Premier League title only seven months earlier, the
turnaround has been as dramatic as the decline.
Antonio Conte has renewed the players and restored Chelsea's position with
interest. Six points clear, they will be top at Christmas and are now odds
on to stay there.
Diego Costa has put his penalty-box problems behind him. He's the Premier
League top scorer having already matched last season's tally of 12. Hazard
has eight of his own, double his 2015/16 total.
Both men are back to their brilliant best. Maybe even better. But they
aren't the only ones. All over the pitch, Chelsea players have shown their
true level.
For Mourinho, that might sting. "I know one of my best qualities is to read
the game for my players," he said that afternoon at the King Power Stadium.
"It's to read the opponent and identify every detail about the opponent." So
when Cesar Azpilicueta allowed Riyad Mahrez onto his stronger foot for what
turned out to be the winner, his frustration was palpable.
Where were Hazard and Nemanja Matic on the cover? Was it that they could not
do what was required or that they would not do it? Either way, it reflected
badly on the players.
Once again Mourinho's third season at a club appeared to have left his squad
weighed down by his demands, resulting in the "palpable discord" to which
Michael Emenalo referred.
This was a group that apparently lacked mental toughness and the fact that
they clambered rather than stormed their way back into the top half under
Guus Hiddink was seen as revealing. They were shot. Even Conte downplayed
expectations in the early months. "The past is there, it's very clear," he
said as recently as October. "We haven't got a magic wand."
But he's cast his spell nevertheless. Chelsea are on a longer winning streak
than anything achieved in Mourinho's second spell. The players are ready to
take instructions and they are capable of playing a brand of football that
requires high concentration levels. It seems it was not the message that
these Chelsea players were struggling with but the messenger.
Speaking to both Thibaut Courtois and Willian at the club's Cobham training
ground recently, neither man appeared afraid of hard work.
"It's intense," said Willian with a smile, while Courtois explained the
team's tactical plans in enthusiastic detail.
Conte is every bit as demanding as the likes of Diego Simeone and Mourinho,
suggested the goalkeeper.
All of which points to a group of players who were dormant rather than
destroyed by the chastening experience of last season, one that perhaps
reached its nadir in the first home game following Mourinho's departure when
Costa and Cesc Fabregas were among those targeted by a disgruntled Stamford
Bridge crowd keen to pay homage to their fallen leader.
At Sunderland in midweek, Fabregas found himself back in the role of hero -
scoring the goal that extended Chelsea's winning run into double figures.
The turnaround is complete. The anger of Mourinho's exit that gave way to
unease has dissipated. The players are heroes once more. It was the old
manager's return that ended in "humiliation".
Conte has changed things just enough, coaxing the best from a group who had
lost their way. From civil war to six points clear, against Crystal Palace
on Saturday afternoon they will have the opportunity to extend that lead to
nine at the top of the Premier League table. From disarray to dominance,
it's been quite a year.