
Eden
Hazard looks in brilliant form but Olivier Giroud's role in his team-mate's
success should not be underestimated. MNF Extra examines his influence on
the star man and why he could be a better option for Chelsea than his fellow
forward Alvaro Morata…
Olivier Giroud did not score a goal against Cardiff at the weekend. He did
not score a goal for France at the World Cup either. But just as his
performances in Russia helped his country to glory, Giroud's impact on Eden
Hazard could be the key to Chelsea's success this season.

He provided Hazard with two assists on Saturday. The first was a delightful
flick into his path. The second was arguably even more impressive with
Giroud holding off his marker and somehow diverting the ball to his
team-mate. Naturally, the little genius did the rest.
Hazard is in devastating form. His hat-trick against Cardiff means he has
scored five goals in three Premier League starts, a tally he did not reach
until December last season. Something has changed. "He is being used really
well by the manager," says Jamie Carragher.
There was the usual speculation about Hazard's future in the summer but
there was also much excitement about him working with Maurizio Sarri.
The Italian favours a more expansive game than his predecessors Jose
Mourinho and Antonio Conte. As a result, the hope was that Hazard would be
given more freedom - perhaps even emulating his compatriot Dries Mertens,
who was converted from talented winger to prolific goalscorer for Sarri's
Napoli at a relatively late stage in his career.
The early signs are even more promising than many could have hoped. While
the opposition has been modest so far, Hazard's numbers are up this season.
He is having more touches both inside and outside the box. He is having more
shots and scoring more goals too.
The player himself is relishing it. "We have great players and we want the
ball," he said recently. "I'm that kind of player who likes the ball at my
feet, so I can be happy."
Interestingly, Hazard's creativity has not increased so much. He now seems
as likely to get on the end of things himself as to be the one setting up
chances for others. It hints at a change of role. It is a change best
facilitated by the presence of Giroud, not Alvaro Morata.

Hazard said as much at the weekend. "He is a target man," he told Sky
Sports. "Maybe the best in the world? I think so. When he gets the ball, he
can hold the ball and we can go with him in deep. It is a pleasure to play
with him.
"Alvaro is a different type of player."
The statistics for this season highlight the contrast. Handily, Hazard has
spent almost the exact same amount of time on the pitch alongside each of
Chelsea's two strikers this season - 153 minutes with Giroud and 154 minutes
with Morata. That is where the similarity ends.
Morata has passed the ball to Hazard six times this season. Giroud found him
nine times against Cardiff alone. While the Frenchman helped to lay on two
assists for Hazard in that game, his Spanish counterpart has yet to even
create a chance for his team-mate.
So Hazard wants to play with Giroud? "I think he is saying that," says
Carragher. "You don't normally hear something like that. No disrespect to
Morata but I think he is saying to the manager that he wants to play with
this guy more often than not.
As for Giroud, Carragher adds: "I have always felt that he was one of the
most underrated players in the Premier League, even when he was at Arsenal.
He is not world class even though he has now won the World Cup, he is just
short of that. But whether it's as a second striker or as a first striker as
he may now be at Chelsea, he's a fantastic player and Hazard speaking like
that about him shows what he thinks too."


In one sense, the comparison is unfair on Morata because few forwards can
compete with Giroud when it comes to this aspect of the game. He has created
more chances per 90 minutes than any other genuine striker in the Premier
League over the past two seasons.
It is no coincidence that he also averages more touches in the box per 90
minutes than any other Premier League player in that time period. As Hazard
pointed out, when Giroud gets the ball, his team-mates "can go with him" in
the knowledge that he will hold it up.
The average position data for the game against Cardiff underlines this
point. It shows that Hazard's touches came in advance of Giroud. In
contrast, in Morata's most recent start at Newcastle, Hazard was much deeper
than the striker. It is a very different relationship.
The bald statistics show that five games into the Premier League season,
Morata has scored and Giroud has not. But it is not quite that simple.
Just ask Eden Hazard.