
Jose
Mourinho went to extreme measures to nullify Eden Hazard in Manchester
United's 2-0 win over Chelsea at Old Trafford last season. Can he stop him
again in the same fixture on
Super Sunday?
The last time Manchester United faced Chelsea at Old Trafford, Jose Mourinho
knew it would take something special to stop Eden Hazard. It was April last
season and the Belgian had been one of the Premier League's outstanding
performers. Not only that, but in their most recent meetings he had shown
his determination to get one over on his old boss.
First, there was Mourinho's humiliating return to Stamford Bridge in
October, when Hazard ran riot, scoring Chelsea's third goal and inspiring
their thumping 4-0 victory. Then, in March, there was the FA Cup
quarter-final at the same venue, when Manchester United tried to unsettle
Hazard with a string of fouls. Unperturbed, he starred again as Chelsea won
1-0.
Hazard was desperate to prove a point to the man who questioned his heart
during their bitter fall-out in the previous season at Chelsea, and there
was no doubt he succeeded. But when he travelled to Old Trafford for the
third meeting between the two sides in the penultimate month of the
campaign, Mourinho finally enjoyed the upper hand.
In hindsight, there were clues about how he would do it in the FA Cup game a
month earlier, when Phil Jones was instructed to man-mark Hazard. Ander
Herrera's first-half sending off wrecked Mourinho's plans on that occasion,
but he had seen enough to adopt the same approach at Old Trafford. This
time, however, Herrera was the man tasked with carrying it out.
The Spaniard set up Marcus Rashford's opening goal and scored the second
himself that day at Old Trafford, but the defining aspect of his performance
was how effectively he shackled Chelsea's danger man. Herrera followed
Hazard everywhere, breathing down his neck and snapping at his heels
whenever the ball came near him.
Hazard was stumped. It was the first game all season in which he did not
touch the ball in the opposition box or attempt a single dribble. It was
only the third game of the campaign in which he completed the 90 minutes
without having a shot. With Hazard nullified, Chelsea did not muster a
single attempt on target for the first Premier League game in a decade.
Hazard's muted showing was a jarring contrast from his previous two
performances. The Belgian made six successful dribbles in the FA Cup game
and completed 71 of his 72 passes. Under the close attention of Herrera at
Old Trafford, however, he lost possession on 19 separate occasions.
The man-marking job was lauded as a Mourinho masterclass and 10 months on
the circumstances demand more tactical ingenuity. Chelsea are no longer
flying high in the Premier League and their results have dipped in the
second half of the campaign, but Hazard is proving as effective as ever. In
his last seven appearances, he has scored six goals and provided two assists
- including the pass for Willian's opener against Barcelona.
Mourinho is sure to consider adopting a similar approach this Sunday, but it
is less clear who exactly will occupy his midfield positions. Herrera joined
Marouane Fellaini in the treatment room on Wednesday evening against
Sevilla, and with uncertainty surrounding Paul Pogba, Nemanja Matic looks
like the only guaranteed starter.
It would have seemed ludicrous to question Pogba's place in the team earlier
this season, but Mourinho has made no secret of his dissatisfaction with the
Frenchman's recent performances. Pogba was dropped for the Premier League
meeting with Huddersfield, hooked against Tottenham and Newcastle, and left
on the bench again against Sevilla.
There were signs of greater defensive awareness following his first-half
introduction in Spain, but at the moment Pogba seems to have fallen behind
Scott McTominay in Mourinho's pecking order. And with Michael Carrick now 36
and Jones still doubtful with an injury, the academy graduate is the only
obvious candidate for a man-marking role on Sunday.
Mourinho was certainly happy with him at the Sanchez Pizjuan Stadium,
describing his performance as "fantastic" and "brilliant" as he helped
United keep a clean sheet. McTominay was impressively assured on only his
ninth start for the club, and by shadowing Ever Banega, he also had good
practice for what might be expected from him against Hazard.
But while he stuck to his task diligently, it would be wrong to suggest he
smothered Banega in the same way Herrera did Hazard. In fact, the Argentine
made nearly twice as many passes in the opposition half as any United
player. Over the course of the 90 minutes, he created 10 chances - the most
by any player in any Champions League game all season.
The stats give Mourinho plenty to ponder, and he will also be aware that the
Belgian is likely to be better prepared to cope with the tactic this time
around.
"Against Manchester United I thought he accepted things too easily, he made
it easy for Herrera far too often," said Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville back
in April. "Hazard fell short in his understanding of playing against the
man-marker. He needed to play high and wide or high and through the middle -
and next time he might."
That, coupled with the fact that Hazard is indeed playing further forwards
this season, complicates matters for Mourinho. The Manchester United manager
will be desperate to claim three points against his former club. But recent
history suggests how he copes with Hazard will be decisive in whether he
gets them.