
Olivier
Giroud fits Chelsea's players and style more than under-fire forward Alvaro
Morata, Tim Sherwood told The Debate.
The former Tottenham manager said new Chelsea boss Maurizio Sarri should
stick with the Spanish forward for now, having given him the nod in their
first game of the season at Huddersfield Town last weekend, but that he
could not afford to keep him in the side at the expense of losing points.
With that in mind, Sherwood told The Debate Morata's rival for the No 9 spot
at Stamford Bridge, Olivier Giroud, was more suited to Chelsea's style of
play - and had the benefit of being a proven goalscorer in the English
top-flight.
"You need to make [Morata] feel like the main man," he said. "How long do
you do it for? You can't relinquish points and Chelsea can't lose ground on
the leaders, and you've got someone who is a World Cup winner in Olivier
Giroud sat on the sidelines, who has been a proven goalscorer at Arsenal.
"He's a player who can come off the bench and score as well, he affects the
game. I think he's their main threat. If you asked the number 10s around
him, like Hazard and Willian, they probably play better with him than Morata
at the moment. But it's for Sarri to get the best out of him, and maybe
that'll be what he's good at.
"He won't give up on him, but it's how long he gives it and he's got someone
in there like Gianfranco Zola who can help with that transition as well.
They'll be in and around him. He's one of the best players we've ever seen
in the Premier League, and bringing him back was a masterstroke.
"Morata has a history of playing at the top level and scoring goals; he just
needs time to click in the Premier League. The manager will be telling him
things have changed now, we'll play to your strengths and we need you to
score. And if he does, he could go on to have a good season."
Fellow guest and ex-Arsenal striker Charlie Nicholas agreed Giroud had
proven a more useful foil for Chelsea's other attacking threats than Morata.
He put the Spaniard's drop in form down to a lack of faith from the Blues'
most recent manager, Antonio Conte, after his form dropped to such an extent
he scored only two Premier League goals after Boxing Day last season.
He said: "The first period of last season, I watched a lot of Chelsea, and
Morata would battle away. I wasn't convinced he had that quality but he did
show it, and he would be on the turn and sometimes Hazard and others had to
speed up the pitch to keep up because he was so positive, and gradually it
worked away from him.
"If you remember early in the season Conte was complimenting him all the
time, he's brilliant, he's a great lad, he's brilliant at this and that, but
then Morata ended up shaking his head every time he came off because it was
as if Conte was picking on him.
"And when you're a striker, and you lose confidence, the worst thing is when
you're getting picked on and your number's coming up after 60 minutes every
time. You know your manager has lost faith in you, and then you lose your
edge.
"Then Giroud came in, he didn't really want him there, but he works in the
right areas with Eden Hazard, Cesc Fabregas, Willian, and all the best
players at Chelsea I think are more suited to the way Giroud plays."