
With
Atletico Madrid in talks to sign Alvaro Morata, we look at where it has gone
wrong for the striker during his 18 months at Chelsea.
In July 2017, Chelsea completed a then club-record £70m signing for Morata,
who was brought in to replace the outgoing Diego Costa.
"I am looking to work hard, score as many goals as I can and to win as many
trophies as possible," Morata said after touching down in London.
"We believe he can make a great impact for Chelsea. Alvaro has proven class
at the highest level and his quality will be a huge asset to the squad,"
added Chelsea's now former technical director Michael Emenalo.
But some 18 months, 24 goals, and one FA Cup later, Morata is seemingly
heading for the exit door at Chelsea, and Sky Sports News understands he is
even willing to take a pay cut to leave, while the club are seeking a
permanent deal to offload the forward.
The 26-year-old has been linked with both Sevilla and Barcelona in recent
weeks, but Atletico - the club where he began his youth career - now look
like frontrunners for his signature.
With the views of Chelsea head coach Maurizio Sarri, assistant Gianfranco
Zola, and Morata himself, we analyse the forward's struggles at the club…
The sorry statistics
Morata opened the 2017-18 Premier League campaign with six goals in six
games, four of which were from Cesar Azpilicueta assists as the Spanish pair
appeared to be forming an almost telepathic connection.
However, Morata scored just four more goals by the end of 2017, and just
once in the New Year before the season came to a close with Chelsea
finishing fifth.
Morata's 2017-18 in the Premier League
Games Played |
31 |
Games Started |
24 |
Goals |
11 |
Minutes Per Goal |
187.9 |
Big Chance Conversion |
37.1% |
Shooting Accuracy |
54% |
Their campaign ended with FA Cup victory, and though Morata contributed
valuably with goals in the quarters and semi-finals, he played just one
minute of the final with Antonio Conte starting Eden Hazard and Olivier
Giroud up front.
The summer heralded a managerial change at Chelsea, with Conte making way
for Maurizio Sarri. The Italian initially persisted with Morata, but five
goals in 16 league appearances - a goal every 188 minutes - has seen Hazard
become the preferred attacking option.
Why he struggled
For Morata, it has been as much about the chances missed as the ones he has
taken. In 2017-18 he squandered 17 big chances, placing him fourth behind
Mohamed Salah (23), Christian Benteke (20) and Harry Kane (18).
This season, Morata is fifth in the standings having missed 10 big chances,
and this disparity between opportunities converted and wasted has been to
the player's detriment - particularly as the only player to miss more since
the beginning of 2017-18 - Salah (35) - has scored 46 times to make amends.
PL - Big chances missed v goals since 2017-18
Player (Team) |
Big Chances Missed |
Goals |
Salah (Liverpool) |
35 |
45 |
Moarta (Chelsea) |
27 |
16 |
Kane (Tottenham) |
26 |
44 |
Jesus (Man City) |
24 |
18 |
Wilson (Bournemouth) |
21 |
17 |
Aubameyang (Arsenal) |
21 |
24 |
Lacazette (Arsenal) |
21 |
21 |
Aguero (Man City) |
20 |
31 |
Earlier this month, Zola acknowledged Morata cannot rely on ability and must
improve tactically in order to succeed in the Premier League.
"Technically without doubt he is one of the best in this position," said
Zola. "I think he has to improve a little bit tactically because nowadays
with the type of football, football is so organised you need to get better
tactically, your ability is not enough.
"In my opinion he needs to improve on this. He's been working on that, he
has a good attitude. He feels that he doesn't score enough and he feels a
lot of responsibilities for that."
Morata then scored twice in Chelsea's next game - their 2-0 FA Cup win over
Nottingham Forest - and Marca noted the player's "joyless celebration" was
aimed at Zola.
The Spanish newspaper added: "Not feeling respected, Morata wanted to
respond with a gesture showing how he feels, particularly given his lack of
backing from the club."
Lacking confidence
Confidence, unsurprisingly, appears to be key for Morata, and this has
evidently fluctuated during the player's time at Chelsea.
Following Morata's two-goal contribution in November's win over Crystal
Palace, Sarri said: "He improves in confidence, in personality, in playing
with the team, so now I am very happy.
"He can improve more because the technical potential and physical potential
is great, now he has confidence he can improve more."
In Morata's own words: "Last year was very difficult for me for many things.
Now I am good and the team is good and it is time to enjoy this," he told
the club's website after the 3-1 win against Palace.
"We have a very good group and they help me to find the very best feeling on
the pitch and in training and I just want to say thanks to all my team-mates
and all the supporters."
But come December, Sarri compared Morata to a player he coached at Empoli,
Riccardo Saponara, whom he described as "one of the best players I have ever
seen, but a little bit mentally fragile".
Morata was subsequently left out of the squad for the defeat to Manchester
City. "A tactical decision, not the final option," said Sarri, after
implementing Hazard as a false-nine.
And as of January, Sarri has conceded Morata could leave the club: "If
Morata goes to another club we need a replacement. At the moment Morata is
here, so he has to think only about playing."
Nev and Carra's view…
At the start of the season, Sky Sports pundit Neville expressed his concern
over Morata's quality, stressing Chelsea required a player of Diego Costa's
calibre in order to compete for the Premier League.
Neville said: "To win the league they have to keep Eden Hazard and get a
centre-forward. Alvaro Morata is a good player but I think about the void
left by Diego Costa. If they are going to play a single striker, which they
historically have, then they need another one."
Carragher echoed these sentiments, noting how Morata looks "finished" after
falling short of Chelsea's requirements, with the team winning the league
twice with Costa spearheading the attack, and three times during Didier
Drogba's first spell at the club.
"I think Drogba changed the perceptions about what a striker could do and
the way in which a team could be shaped," Carragher said in his Telegraph
column.
"It begs the question as to what his latest successor Alvaro Morata will be
remembered for at the club and, as things stand, I find it hard to believe
he has a future there… The reality is I do not think that Morata will ever
click at Chelsea, and I am sure the club think that too.
"All Chelsea's title-winning sides have had great strikers - Drogba or Diego
Costa - and this team needs one desperately."
So what next?
Sky Sports News understands Chelsea are keen to recuperate as much of their
£70m investment back as possible, and prefer a permanent deal.
Morata was also pictured in Madrid on Monday ahead of a potential move to
Atletico, and is willing to take a pay cut to seal a move away from Stamford
Bridge.
Much like last January, where Chelsea would only allow Michy Batshuayi to
leave on loan if a replacement could be found - leading to a Deadline Day
move for Giroud as Batshuayi left for Borussia Dortmund - Morata will need
to be replaced.
Sarri wants to bring in Gonzalo Higuain, but according to Sky in Italy,
Chelsea's chief-executive Marina Granovskaia remains unconvinced that the
Argentine is the answer to their striker problems.
A £50m move for Bournemouth striker Callum Wilson could materialise if Sarri
is unable to bring Higuain to Chelsea, and the club now have just over a
fortnight to resolve this predicament before the window closes.