
Chelsea's
3-0 win over Leicester suggests the team is on the right track under Antonio
Conte. The introduction of wing-backs puts huge onus on Marcos Alonso and
Victor Moses but these two unheralded Chelsea players have responded, writes
Adam Bate…
Antonio Conte had laughed off suggestions that his job at Chelsea was under
threat on Friday, but the response delivered by his players the following
day was even more emphatic. After a mixed start to life at Stamford Bridge,
this well-deserved 3-0 win over Premier League champions Leicester had
Conte's fingerprints all over it.
Despite cutting a hyperactive figure on the touchline, the Italian has been
patient in his approach to the Chelsea job. He's watched and he's waited,
taking the time to assess the squad. After initially sticking with a 4-2-3-1
formation, familiar problems soon emerged in high-profile defeats to
Liverpool and Arsenal.
Conte has been careful to subtly point out that these issues predate his
arrival. As a result, while the switch to a back-three against Hull came at
a low point for the team, it was made from a position of strength by the
manager. Time to do things his way. Back-to-back victories have justified
the decision to change.
What's interesting is that the new 3-4-3 formation was not necessarily an
obvious fix given the personnel. Gary Cahill has played on the right of a
two-man centre-back partnership for much of his career, but now finds
himself on the left of a three. Cesar Azpilicueta turned himself into an
effective left-back but is now on the right of that three.
Most notably, it was Cesc Fabregas who had to make way for Victor Moses in
order to facilitate the formation change. Reputations were secondary. A
solution had to be found. Conte described it as a "big change in the
tactical aspect" and spoke of how his team "must find the right way to be
compact" by defending with a "very high" line.
He warmed to this theme after seeing off Leicester. "In the week we tried a
lot to find a solution that gave us more compactness," said Conte
afterwards. "For this team and squad this system is the right fit. The coach
must understand and find the right suit. We are like a tailor." Finally, the
suit fits.
Speaking on Sky Sports, former Chelsea boss Gianluca Vialli, an old
team-mate of Conte's at Juventus, said: "I loved the attitude from the start
and I think tactically the change in system could be the answer. They were
very, very effective. They are still a work in progress, you can see they
are not perfect, but I think that is the way to go."
Playing a high line is something Chelsea are not particularly accustomed to.
That they made it work against the pace of Jamie Vardy and Ahmed Musa is a
testament to that work on the training ground, and a clue that while some
players are being challenges by the changes, others have been freed.
David Luiz is enjoying the chance to express himself in possession with
cover either side of him at the back, while N'Golo Kante's energy is being
better harnessed too. Eden Hazard, meanwhile, is feeling the benefit of a
system that allows him to roam inside and reduces his responsibility to
track back with the opposition full-back.
But for all this to work it requires wing-backs. It seems that Chelsea have
found two of them in Moses and Marcos Alonso. Both were impressive against
Leicester. Moses even got his goal, capping off the win by latching onto
Nathaniel Chalobah's back-heel to late on. But it's Alonso who is really
providing Chelsea with the balance they need.
Chelsea running stats v Leicester
Player
Distance Player Sprints
Marcos Alonso 12.08 km
Marcos Alonso 74
N'Golo Kante 11.94 km
Diego Costa 59
Nemanja Matic 11.90 km
Eden Hazard 56
A natural left-footer, the Spaniard is ideally suited to taking advantage of
the space opened up ahead of him by Hazard's tendency to drift around. He
used it well. Against Leicester, he was the only player on the pitch to
cover 12 kilometres. Moreover, his total of 74 high-intensity runs was more
than anyone else too.
Alonso, Moses, Chalobah. There are unlikely saviours. But with Ola Aina and
Ruben Loftus-Cheek also getting onto the Stamford Bridge pitch on Saturday,
it underlines the fact that Chelsea are changing. Conte's future might have
been questioned but there are encouraging signs that he's the right man to
manage Chelsea through this transition.