
An
under-strength Real Madrid side beat Chelsea 3-2 in the International
Champions Cup in Michigan on Saturday night.
The European champions led 3-0 at half-time thanks to a quick-fire Marcelo
brace - matching his entire goals tally from last season - followed by a
wonder strike from Mariano Diaz Mejia.
However, Antonio Conte's team dominated the second period and were rewarded
for their efforts when substitute Eden Hazard scored two late goals to set
up a tense finish at the Michigan Stadium.
As expected, Chelsea striker Diego Costa missed out with a back injury,
meaning Ruben Loftus-Cheek was asked to play as a lone frontman in his
place.
Real, meanwhile, were without their Big Three of Cristiano Ronaldo, Gareth
Bale and Karim Benzema in attack, and holding midfielder Toni Kroos was also
unavailable for a fixture that was in danger of being called off because of
torrential rain in the build-up to kick-off.
However, despite Chelsea being ahead of Madrid in their pre-season
preparations, it was the European champions who looked stronger and fitter
in the first half.
After Nemanja Matic had missed an early chance at the far post, Real took
control by scoring three times without reply before the break, and it could
have been more but for the brilliance of back-up Blues' goalkeeper Asmir
Begovic.
The increasingly busy Begovic was first called upon to prevent Matic from
scoring a spectacular own goal by clawing away the Serbia international's
back header, before Madrid broke the deadlock after 19 minutes.
Marcelo cut in from the left and after no Chelsea defenders went to close
the left back down, he tried his luck from the edge of the area with his
unfamiliar right foot, with his effort deflecting off Oscar on its way past
Begovic.
If that strike owed much to fortune, the Brazilian's second, only seven
minutes later, was all down to his own work.
Temitayo Olufisayo Olaoluwa Aina tried to dribble his way out of Chelsea's
half, only for Marcelo to dispossess him, and the full back then went on a
rampaging run past a posse of Chelsea players before beating Begovic to his
right with a low shot.
And the first-half scoring was then completed by the best goal of the game
as, after a lovely flowing move down the left wing, the ball was worked to
Mariano, who then beat Begovic with a brilliant effort from fully 35 yards
out.
Conte made four changes at the interval, introducing the likes of Michy
Batshuayi, Thibaut Courtois, Juan Cuadrado and Nathaniel Chalobah, with the
substitutes seemingly having the desired impact.
Chelsea dominated proceedings in the second period and it was a surprise
that it took them so long to get back into the contest, with Batshuayi and
Chalobah particularly impressive.
Chalobah could, and probably should, have pulled one goal back just before
the hour-mark after rounding Real goalkeeper Kiko Casilla, only for his
goalbound effort to be cleared.
It was Hazard's introduction with 10 minutes to go, though, that really
changed the game as the Belgian playmaker scored a late brace to put a more
accurate reflection on the scoreline, and both identical efforts.
On each occasion the diminutive playmaker was sent clean through on goal by
defence-splitting passes from Chalobah and Batshuayi respectively, with
Hazard rounding the onrushing Ruben Yanez - who had come on for Casilla -
before side-footing into an empty net.
However, with the second of those two strikes coming in stoppage time, there
was not enough time for Chelsea to complete what would have been a
remarkable comeback.