
Mauricio
Pochettino offered profuse apologies for his furious reaction to the final
whistle in Chelsea's eight-goal draw with Manchester City. "I crossed the
limit," he said afterwards.
The Chelsea boss, incensed to see one final attack cut short, had to be
pulled away from referee Anthony Taylor having already berated the fourth
official. "It's not a good image for me and for football, this type of
behaviour," he added in his press conference.
No arguments there. Pochettino was booked and it could have been worse. For
those of a Chelsea persuasion, though, particularly those in attendance on
an exhilarating evening at Stamford Bridge, it only added to the sense of
something stirring under this manager.
Chelsea are five points worse off than at the same stage of last season but
a fanbase accustomed to the emotional intensity of Jose Mourinho, Antonio
Conte and Thomas Tuchel are taking to Pochettino in a way they never did the
anodyne Graham Potter.
Recent results help, of course. The draw with Manchester City came only six
days after the 4-1 win over Tottenham. But watching Pochettino from the
press box on Sunday, just behind the home dugout, underlined the power of
passion and personality too.
Long before his outburst at the final whistle, he could be seen screaming
with rage at the sight of Manuel Akanji scoring City's second from a free
header. Even after it, though, there were smiles and bear hugs for players,
starting with his former charge Kyle Walker.
Those scenes were a reminder of his ability to build connections and the
same quality was evident in Chelsea's performance. Beforehand, he had
insisted they were no underdogs, even against this City. "We need to go
there trying to be protagonists," he said.
The message clearly resonated in the dressing room. Chelsea tore into Pep
Guardiola's side from the first whistle until the last. At the end of it,
Pochettino used that same term - "protagonists" - as he talked up their
bravery and attacking intent.
They are still down in 10th place in the table. The 3-0 win over Luton in
August remains their only home victory in the competition since March and
Pochettino emphasised on Sunday they are a long way - "away in the distance"
- from where he wants them to be.
But the hope is that this performance ultimately gives them more than a
point. "I think it's a starting point to build our confidence and believe
more in the way we are working," said Pochettino.
And how could it not?
Chelsea are the first side in more than three years to score four or more
goals against Guardiola's City in a Premier League game. In fact, across 278
fixtures in total since his appointment, they are one of only of only four
teams to have done it all.
That it came so soon after a four-goal display against another strong
opponent adds to the feeling of positivity.
Having also drawn with Liverpool and Arsenal, Chelsea are unbeaten in four
games against the 'big six' this season. They have taken more points off
those sides than in the whole of the last campaign.
They are of course doing it following another round of extravagant spending
in the transfer market. Vast sums have been invested in this group of
players - albeit not all of it wisely.
But even the most lavishly assembled squads require the right guiding hand,
someone to manage the personalities as well as the performances, and recent
evidence shows Pochettino is providing it.
"What they have done in big games is a feather in the cap of the manager,"
said Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher on Sunday.
"The best thing about Chelsea right now is Pochettino. It is not the players
or the owners. It is the manager they have got."
He has certainly got them playing like a Pochettino team.
On Sunday, they pressed ferociously, their tenacity summed up by the
tireless Conor Gallagher, who ran further than 12km for the fourth game this
season. Indeed, the level of intensity was not unusual. Chelsea rank top
this term both for high turnovers and pressed sequences. Only Spurs have
made more sprints.
There have been frustrating afternoons in front of goal. Chelsea have
laboured against sides set up to sit back and frustrate. They have failed to
score in a third of their Premier League games this season.
But the goals are flowing now and the intent has been apparent all season.
Chelsea are creating more, shooting more, and forcing their opponents
deeper. They are, for the most part, entertaining to watch.
That in itself feels like a triumph after what went before.
Pochettino had a point when he said, after Sunday's game, that Chelsea
deserve to be far higher in the table than they are. Statistically, they
have created better scoring chances than their opponents in every Premier
League game bar one this season.
Those underlying numbers were written off as a quirk earlier in the
campaign, a consequence of a comparatively kind fixture list. But the games
have got tougher and the pattern has continued.
Now, only Liverpool have generated a higher total of expected goals this
season. Only four sides - Arsenal, Manchester City, Newcastle and Liverpool
- have allowed fewer expected goals against.
According to Opta's expected points model, Chelsea should be six places and
seven points better off than they are. It is not for nothing, then, when
Guardiola says, with "no doubts", that he sees them challenging for the
title again soon.
It all points to an upward trajectory and the same feeling of optimism could
be felt in the atmosphere that gripped Stamford Bridge on Sunday. The
emotions were fuelled partly by a sense of injustice over refereeing
decisions, but also by a manager ready and willing to fight Chelsea's
corner. Even if it means limits are crossed.