
Chelsea
bounced back to their best with a 4-0 win over Brighton in the early
kick-off on Saturday. Midfielder Tiemoue Bakayoko has struggled but on this
showing he deserves time to show his true value, writes Adam Bate.
Tiemoue Bakayoko's relationship with former coach Leonardo Jardim was
strained from the start. After going a goal down at home to Lorient, Jardim
substituted the youngster just 32 minutes into his Monaco debut. The player
himself has since admitted to his anger. "From then on, something was a
little broken between him and me," Bakayoko told L'Equipe.
There have been times during Bakayoko's debut season at Chelsea when plenty
of Chelsea supporters would have forgiven manager Antonio Conte for taking a
similar approach to handling the club's near £40m summer signing. It has
been a difficult start for the Frenchman and the criticism has been so
fierce that some seem to be losing faith already.
The nadir was perhaps the draw with Liverpool when Chelsea legend Frank
Lampard urged Bakayoko to raise his game after watching him fail to track
Mohamed Salah for the opener at Anfield. But he has been a disappointment
going forward too - most notably failing to take advantage of the space
afforded to him in the game against Manchester United.
"I think he needs for sure to improve in the tactical aspect with us and to
go into our idea of football," said Conte, and there were some signs of that
during Saturday's 4-0 win over Brighton. Bakayoko was far from his team's
standout performer in Chelsea's first victory of 2018 - that man was Eden
Hazard - but this was more like it from the midfielder.
The lumbering style remains and is unlikely to endear him to supporters, but
the statistics suggest this can be misleading. For example, while appearing
cumbersome in comparison to his more overtly industrious midfield partner
N'Golo Kante, Bakayoko actually covered more ground - 11.15 kilometres -
than any other Chelsea player at the Amex Stadium.
He also made more high-intensity sprints than Kante and, while his
compatriot did win the ball back once more than him, it was Bakayoko who
gave it away less than anyone on the pitch who played the full 90 minutes.
He found a team-mate with 96.4 per cent of his passes and this was not
because Bakayoko was taking the easiest option every time either.
His use of the ball was hardly spectacular but there were hints of what
Conte wanted when opting to replace Nemanja Matic in the summer. Bakayoko
found some forward passes into Hazard's feet - feeding Chelsea's star man 10
times during the game - and showed signs that he can be a player capable of
progressing the ball up the pitch for his side.
Former Chelsea midfielder Claude Makelele was Bakayoko's mentor at Monaco
and remains insistent that this is someone who can do it all - a dribbler
and a passer as well as a tackler. But Makelele's experience of working with
Bakayoko also suggests that he is someone who needs lots of support if he is
to fulfil his potential.
There have been setbacks on and off the pitch. The failure to earn a place
at the famed French football academy Clairefontaine and a broken leg before
the decision to refocus during his third season at Monaco, selling his pink
Porsche and working with Makelele to get back on track. The two spoke every
day for a month to help him turn things around.
"Claude sought me out immediately and told me that he believed in me,
counted on me, and [telling me] what I had to work on so I could offer more
on the pitch," said Bakayoko himself in a recent interview with The
Guardian. "So to have the chance to follow in his footsteps here at Chelsea
is a real motivation."
It has not started well and Bakayoko is now 23. He is at an age where he
needs to take more responsibility and embrace the challenge ahead of him. He
has acknowledged that Conte is asking more of him than he has been used to.
There is more running required, more work to do without the ball and more
tactical work in training.
"If I follow his orders, my game will rise to a new level and I can fulfil
the potential he sees," added Bakayoko. His encouraging efforts against
Brighton were a start. But Conte and Chelsea's supporters will want to see a
lot more of that before they are convinced that he can begin to justify his
fee and be a real factor in taking the club forward.