
Chelsea's
new signing Kai Havertz says the Premier League has no bad players and that
the games are "exhausting".
Havertz signed for Chelsea from Bayer Leverkusen last month, and has made
five appearances and scored three goals for Frank Lampard's side so far.
The 21-year old scored a hat-trick as Chelsea romped to a 6-0 victory
against Barnsley in the third round of the Carabao Cup, but is yet to score
in his four Premier League appearances. The German international says the
league is "more intense" than what he experienced in the Bundesliga due to
the fact that "everybody is at a very high level".
"It was difficult for me, especially because the Premier League is a
completely different league," Havertz told Chelsea's official website. "It's
more intense and I noticed that in the first few games.
"The intensity in the duels and the runs is much higher. It's a completely
different league and the games are very exhausting.
"The Bundesliga isn't worse but I noticed differences. It seems to me like
there aren't any average or bad players here - everybody is at a very high
level."
Havertz was satisfied with his performance against Barnsley, but says he is
aware it will take him time to adjust to his new environment and build
relationships with team-mates.
"The hat-trick was good for me," he said. "The start was a little difficult
because I only trained with the team for five or six days, then played the
first game right away. It was also a very big step for me to leave my family
and familiar surroundings. Of course, it takes time to get it right."
Havertz is currently with the German national team ahead of Nations League
fixtures against Ukraine and Switzerland, both live on Sky Sports.
The midfielder made his international debut in September 2018, and says he
is remains patient in his quest to add to his eight appearances so far under
Joachim Löw.
"In my two years with the national team, I haven't played too many games but
I'm still relatively young," he said.
"I have a lot of games ahead of me which is why so far I've always remained
calm. I have enough self-confidence to attack the national team."
Ukraine vs Germany - Can Werner rediscover
his form?
There are seven Nations League games taking place on Saturday with all
fixtures, including Ukraine vs Germany, live on Sky Sports.
Team news: Germany will welcome back Joshua Kimmich, Manuel Neuer, Leon
Goretzka and Serge Gnabry after the Bayern Munich quartet were exempt from
playing in the friendly against Turkey. Real Madrid's Toni Kroos and
Chelsea's Timo Werner have also bolstered the squad having sat out the
midweek 3-3 draw.
Marcel Halstenberg and Lukas Klostermann complete the new faces in the
German ranks with Joachim Low releasing Mahmoud Dahoud, Nico Schulz,
Benjamin Henrichs, Niklas Stark and Nadiem Amiri following their
participation against Turkey.
Ukraine face a selection crisis after a number of their players were
declared unavailable for selection due to injuries and positive coronavirus
test results.
Head coach Andriy Shevchenko named 45-year-old assistant coach Oleksandr
Shovkovskiy on the bench against France but goalkeeper Mykita Shevchenko has
been called up to join the squad.
Mykola Matvienko and Junior Moraes have withdrawn from the squad after their
tests came out positive but Viktor Kovalenko, Romero Marlos and Valery
Bondar have been called up. Heorhiy Bushchan conceded seven on debut against
France but is expected to stay in goal.
Player watch: Ruslan Malinovskyi will shoulder Ukraine's creative onus in
the No 10 role but there are other dangerous members of Shevchenko's team.
West Ham's mercurial talent Andriy Yarmolenko will provide a threat cutting
in from the right while Spain will also have to be mindful of Viktor
Tshyankov, who has three goals for Dinamo Kyiv this season. Roman Yaremchuk
will likely lead the line for Ukraine.
Chelsea outcast Antonio Rudiger was substituted after an hour against Turkey
but could be in line for another start as part of a three-man defence
alongside Emre Can and Niklas Sule.
Havertz is starting to find his feet at Chelsea, and Low could operate him
in the No 10 role behind Timo Werner and Gnabry.