toptop
Eden
Hazard and Fernando Torres struck as Chelsea overcame Hull City 2-0 at the KC
Stadium to go top of the Premier League.
The Blues had an opportunity to climb to the summit with Arsenal and Manchester
City not in action on Saturday, and made the vital breakthrough on 56 minutes
when Hazard cut inside from the left and drilled a powerful finish into the
bottom corner.
Torres then put the result beyond any doubt with a classy late run and shot to
take Chelsea one point clear of the Gunners.
Hull had settled the quickest at the start, with Tom Huddlestone showing a
calmness on the ball that helped Hull settle quickest.
It was the hosts who had the first shot of the game in the seventh minute, but
Ahmed Elmohamady's effort was never likely to trouble Cech.
The Egyptian saw plenty of the early action, three times beating Ashley Cole for
pace without ever finding a cross to match.
Chelsea's first real chance saw Torres spring the offside trap but by the time
he had set himself to shoot Alex Bruce was back to make the block.
By and large, though, it was Hull doing the best work. Jake Livermore had one
decent effort from distance - denied by Cech after Yannick Sagbo had gamely held
the ball up in the corner under close attention from Gary Cahill.
But it was Sagbo himself who had the Tigers' best chance. John Terry was the
culprit, sending a reckless pass across his own area only for Livermore to
partially intercept and send the ball spinning towards Sagbo.
The Ivorian shot first time from 10 yards but missed the target and spared the
Chelsea captain's blushes.
The visitors were stronger after that and were only denied a goal of their own
by a remarkable Allan McGregor save.
Ramires' deft chip gave Hazard room to place his cross from the byline and when
it reached Oscar close to the penalty spot, the Brazilian seemed certain to
convert.
In truth he did little wrong, shooting powerfully towards the roof of the net,
but McGregor reacted superbly to divert the ball over the crossbar.
The Scotland keeper was required again just before the break when David Luiz's
swerving free-kick threatened to creep under the crossbar and the half-time
whistle came as a welcome break for the hosts.
Hazard emerged as the man most likely to get Chelsea on the scoresheet as the
second period began, beating two men on his way into the area and winning a
corner before helping earn a dangerous free-kick.
Luiz aimed for the near side of goal but again found McGregor alert to the
danger.
Hazard eventually took the responsibility himself. Luiz and Cole played him in
after a neat combination on the left and the Belgian produced what is fast
becoming his trademark finish.
He cut inside twice to create his preferred angle, wrongfooting the Hull defence
and leaving Bruce sprawling, before clinically finding the bottom corner.
The game was not without entertainment in the final half hour, but there was an
unavoidable sense that Hazard's effort had settled things.
A Huddlestone free-kick was Hull's likeliest chance but came to nothing, while
Chelsea had plenty of possession in the final third and should have made life
easier on themselves.
Willian, in particular, sparked into life and began picking holes in the Tigers
defence.
Oscar was denied a near-certain goal for the second time in the match when
Curtis Davies deflected his close-range effort over but Torres did make sure in
the 87th minute.
He had enough pace to jockey Bruce out of position as he bore down on goal and
finished crisply to secure the points.
Teams
Hull City McGregor, Chester (Fryatt 77), Bruce, Davies (c), Elmohamad,
Livermore, Huddlestone, Meyler (Koren 67), Figueroa, Boyd (Quinn 83), Sagbo
Subs Not Used Harper, Rosenior, Faye, Graham
Booked Livermore, Figueroa
Goals
Chelsea Cech, Azpilicueta, Cahill, Terry (c), Cole, Ramires (Essien
90), Luiz, Willian (Schurrle 88), Oscar (Mikel 79), Hazard, Torres
Subs Not Used Schwarzer, Bertrand, Mata, Eto’o
Booked Cahill
Goals Hazard 56. Torres 87
Attendance 24,924
Referee Mark Clattenburg