
Alvaro
Morata says he was "destined" to work with Antonio Conte at Chelsea and
believes the club can beat his former employers Real Madrid.
Chelsea's confirmed new No 9, Morata, is planning to make his bow in
Tuesday's friendly against Bayern Munich, after signing for the London club
on a five year-deal for a fee which could eventually cost the Blues £70m.
Morata had looked close to a move to Manchester United earlier this summer
before Jose Mourinho's side brought in Romelu Lukaku, but the Spain
international insists uniting with Conte was fate after the pair missed out
on a partnership at Juventus.
"I know Antonio wanted me in the past and I really want to work with
Antonio, and finally destiny put us together," Morata told Chelsea's
official website.
"I can't wait to play for him and for Chelsea and to win together.
"It was disappointing in 2014 when he went to Italy, but I played well and
had a good year at Juventus, but I really want to work with this coach and
finally I can.
"I know his work, the staff. I know it is a lot of tactics and I really like
this game and I know how to play with this system."
Morata returned to Real Madrid in 2016 after an impressive spell at
Juventus, but the forward failed to earn a regular first-team spot under
Zinedine Zidane - despite having a goals-to-minutes ratio (one every 89
minutes) only bettered by Lionel Messi in La Liga.
The 24-year-old striker has held a long-term ambition to play in the English
top flight, and after finally achieving his wish he has backed his new side
to beat Europe's biggest teams.
"It is the perfect situation," he said. "I decided to play in the Premier
League and I want to play in Antonio's team. Now I need to work hard, score
goals and to play well for the team. There are very good players here and I
think we can do something amazing this year.
"It is hard to leave Madrid but it is not so hard when you come to a club
like Chelsea, with these players and with this coach, and I think we can
play against Real Madrid and Barcelona and win."
Morata will link up with several of his Spain national team-mates at
Chelsea, having already admitted Cesar Azpilicueta helped convince him of
the move to Stamford Bridge, but the forward intends to put himself outside
his comfort zone.
He added: "For me it is very good I have many Spanish players here but I
think I need to speak a lot with the other team-mates to learn good
English!"