toptop
Chelsea
handed Jose Mourinho a victory in his 250th game in charge of the club, beating
Aston Villa 3-0 to cement their spot at the top of the Premier League.
Oscar (7) stroked in the opener, Diego Costa (59) – with his eighth goal in six
Premier League games since signing from Atletico Madrid for £32million – knocked
in a second and Willian brushed in a third (79) to maintain the Blues’ 100 per
cent home record.
The comprehensive win leaves Chelsea three points clear at the summit as they
chase a first Premier League title since 2010.
The Londoners defeated Manchester United 1-0 in Mourinho’s first league game at
the Chelsea helm in 2004 – and it took them little time at all to move into that
scoreline against a Villa side thumped 3-0 at home by Arsenal in their previous
match.
Oscar, who netted his first goal of the campaign in the Capital One Cup win over
Bolton in midweek, converted Willian’s pass to score from six yards
Willian had seen his initial attempt pawed away by Brad Guzan having been found
by Branislav Ivanovic down the right, but the Brazilian remained alert and
squared the rebound into his countryman’s path.
Cesc Fabregas was pulling the strings in the centre of the park - a delightful
slide-rule pass just evaded buccaneering right-back Ivanovic and nestled into
Guzan’s gloves – and the former Barcelona man skewed a strike wide soon after as
the hosts continued to control the contest.
Chelsea’s next two attempts were both headers – Costa flicking an enticing cross
from the ever-lively Willian into Guzan’s mitts and Ivanovic nodding a Fabregas
corner over the bar – before Costa and then Willian whipped in shots too high
and wide to test Villa’s American stopper.
The visitors were finding it tough to get a foothold and chances were at a
premium, too, with Chelsea skipper John Terry – who made his Blues debut against
Villa in a League Cup tie in 1998 – blocking crosses, and a Fabian Delph
snapshot, at will.
The Midlanders’ only moments of note came when left-back Aly Cissokho clipped
wide from a corner under pressure from Nemanja Matic, and frontman Andreas
Weimann was crowded out by the Blues' rearguard before he could get a strike
away.
And after Willian fired wide, official Phil Dowd – the referee when Villa were
thumped 8-0 at Stamford Bridge in December 2012 – brought an end to a first
period in which Gary Cahill was booked for a cynical swipe on Gabriel
Agbonlahor.
Villa had the first attempt of the second half - England new boy Delph rasping a
25-yard strike wide of Thibaut Courtois’ sticks – and were getting a modicum of
joy in Chelsea territory with the pace of Agbonlahor and the graft of Kieran
Richardson.
Baker headed Ashley Westwood’s free-kick onto the roof of the net but Chelsea
responded through Costa, who first nodded an Ivanovic centre into the grateful
arms of Guzan and then scored the hosts' second.
Terrific interplay from Eden Hazard and Willian down the left resulted in Cesar
Aspilicueta chipping into the penalty area and Costa – who amassed 27 goals in
all competitions for Atletico last term – heading his side further in front.
Mourinho’s men were turning the screw, with Oscar seeing his poke past Guzan
cleared off the line by Cissokho, Matic quelled by Philippe Senderos as he tried
to get his head to a Fabregas in-swinger, and Costa narrowly avoid making
contact with Hazard’s pearl of a ball into the box.
Hazard had danced past Alan Hutton to fashion Costa’s chance, but Villa’s
right-back – back in Paul Lambert’s good books and the recent recipient of a new
three-year contract – surged upfield shortly after and tested Courtois with a
low drive.
However, the Scot saw his side drop further behind on 79 minutes when Costa’s
effort was parried by Guzan, flicked off the unlucky Cissokho and livewire
Willian was presented with a simple tap-in to make it three.
BEST OF THE MATCH
Man of the match – Cesc Fabregas. The Spaniard was pushed hard by Willian but
the midfielder pulled the strings throughout as Chelsea kept possession
wonderfully well.
Moment of the match: Costa got a goal but it was his dummy in the build up to
Willian’s tap-in which was sublime as he seated three defenders.
Save of the match – Guzan was certainly the busier of the two goalkeepers and
made a great save to deny Willian only to see the rebound drop for the Brazilian
to feed Oscar for the opener.
Goal of the match - Terrific interplay from Eden Hazard and Willian down the
left resulted in Cesar Azpilicueta chipping into the penalty area for Costa to
head home
Winger Willian almost went from provider to scorer after 15 minutes, but, after
latching onto a beautiful back flick from Costa, saw his shot clip off Nathan
Baker and hit the side-netting.
Click Here For Official Team sheet
Teams
Chelsea Courtois, Ivanovic, Cahill Terry (c), Azpilicueta, Matic,
Fabregas, Willian, Oscar (Mikel 77), Hazard (Schurrle 68), Costa (Remy 81)
Subs Not Used Cech, Zouma, Luis, Drogba
Booked Cahill, Fabregas
Goals Oscar 7, Costa 59, Willian 79
Aston Villa Guzan, Hutton, Sanderos, Baker, Cissokho, Cleverley,
Westwood, Delph, Weimann (N’Zogbia 69), Agbonlahor (c), Richardson (Bent 69)
Subs Not Used Given, Bacuna, Clark, Sanchez, Grealish
Booked Senderos, Cleverley
Goals
Attendance 41,616
Referee Phil Dowd