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Reports From Saturday Newspapers (May 13, 2017)
Guardian:
Chelsea win Premier League title again as Michy Batshuayi sinks West Brom
West Brom 0 - 1 Chelsea
Daniel Taylor at The Hawthorns
When the decisive moment arrived there were a few seconds when Antonio Conte
gave the impression he might actually run all the away from the touchline to
join in the victory scrum. Chelsea’s manager made it half a dozen yards on
to the pitch before checking back but he did not have to wait too long
before he could be with his players and his first season in the Premier
League was assured of a happy ending.
For Chelsea, it was the moment that confirmed their fifth title in the last
12 years and the only downside of a glorious night for the new champions was
the fighting that broke out in the home stands after the substitute Michy
Batshuayi had delivered the telling blow. Chelsea have played a lot better
at times this season but there can be no doubt they have been the best team
in the country.
It has never been a bad trait for a team at the top of the league to win
without being at their best and Tottenham Hotspur know now that their last
game at White Hart Lane – at least as we know it – when Manchester United
head south on Sunday will be for nostalgia rather than trying to keep up the
chase. Football is a cruel game sometimes. “Tottenham Hotspur, we’re
laughing at you,” was the new addition to the Chelsea songbook.
It finished with Conte getting the bumps in front of the Chelsea fans who
had packed into the Smethwick End hoping The Hawthorns might finally bring
them some joy. Two of Chelsea’s recent managers, André Villas-Boas and
Roberto Di Matteo, lost their jobs after jarring defeats at this ground.
That, however, felt like a long time ago as the away end went through their
victory songs, David Luiz showed off his samba and the triumphant players
decided it was time to start throwing John Terry in the air. Even Frank
Lampard joined in the celebrations at one stage, leaving the touchline and
his television role to embrace some of his old team-mates.
Ultimately, it will not matter that Chelsea put in a stodgy performance or
that Pedro and Eden Hazard faded so badly they were substituted. Those were
just minor details after that moment, 82 minutes in, when Chelsea pressed
forward for the goal that would mean so much. César Azpilicueta provided the
pass. Batshuayi prodded his shot past Ben Foster and those were the moments
when all that pent-up emotion could be released. Leicester City’s time is
over but the ribbons on the championship trophy will still be blue and
Chelsea will look forward to being reunited with it when they play
Sunderland at Stamford Bridge next weekend.
It took a while to conjure up the decisive goal but every team that finish
in Chelsea’s position need a resilient streak. Chelsea came up against
obdurate opponents and it was difficult to remember at times that West Brom
have been in the worst form of any Premier League side since the beginning
of April, taking only two points from seven games and having previously set
an unwanted club record of failing to score five times in a row.
The oddity of Tony Pulis’s managerial career is that he is known for his
motivational powers yet West Brom, like Stoke before them, have a habit of
tailing off once they know they are safe. In total, Pulis has won only six
out of 45 games after reaching 40 points. This was West Brom’s fourth 1-0
defeat in five games, although in fairness nobody could accuse them of
playing without desire. Pulis’s team caused grievous damage to Tottenham’s
title hopes with a draw at White Hart Lane last season and they looked
determined to show they could influence this title race, too.
There were also times when Chelsea, perhaps in their desperation to make the
breakthrough, looked unusually ragged at the back. Salomón Rondón and the
substitute Nacer Chadli had chances to punish them in the second half and in
those moments it was unusual to see Conte’s team so vulnerable to the
counterattack.
For most of the night, however, Chelsea were on top without being able to
find a way through a team that spent parts of the game with a defensive line
of six players. Conte’s men began like a team in a hurry. Cesc Fàbregas
showed again he is an elegant replacement for N’Golo Kanté. Hazard and Pedro
flitted around dangerously while Victor Moses and Marcos Alonso demonstrated
why they have become such important players.
At various times this season Chelsea have been depicted as a
counterattacking team – defence-orientated, if you listen to José Mourinho –
but they can actually adapt their game in many ways and this was one of the
occasions when they tried to overwhelm their opponents. Their problem was
finding the killer pass. Foster is a difficult goalkeeper to beat and,
though it was quickly forgotten by the end, the shot from Hazard that went
out for a throw-in midway through the second half might well have been his
least distinguished moment of the season.
Perhaps Chelsea had also allowed a bit of apprehension to creep in, too.
Passes were rushed, shots snatched. For all their possession, the goal was
really the only moment of the night when they created a clear opportunity
inside the penalty area. But then the ball was at Batshuayi’s feet, Conte’s
fists were raised and it was an explosion of joy behind the goal.
Telegraph:
West Brom 0 Chelsea 1: Michy Batshuayi gives Antonio Conte the title in
debut Premier League season
There are hundreds of small steps to become Premier League champions but it
can so often be the final one that is among the hardest to take, and so it
proved for Chelsea who found a hero at the last in their bit-part £33
million striker Michy Batshuayi, a match-winner and now a title-clincher.
This was a long way from the best Chelsea performance of the season but they
found a way and with a winner from Batshuayi, a substitute, nine minutes
from time after a long, hard battle they showed that they have the
capability to win on all occasions. They were made to fight every last step
of the way by West Bromwich Albion, as if to make the point to Antonio Conte
that he is right when he says that no game in England’s top-flight can be
taken for granted.
When the goal went in the Italian leapt into the arms of his staff, and his
transformation of Chelsea from the champions that melted under the pressure
last season to the champions again this time has been remarkable. That they
won against West Brom when it looked like the title race could stumble on to
the 37th game against Watford at Stamford Bridge on Monday, was testament to
the cussedness of Conte’s team.
Good footballers, and good managers, never tire of that winning feeling and
there was no restraint in the celebrations in front of their travelling fans
after the final whistle. The Chelsea players and staff threw Conte up into
the air, and then they did the same for John Terry and all this barely 18
months since Jose Mourinho had accused much of this squad of betraying their
then manager.
From tenth place they have risen again, with some useful additions but
essentially a successful reboot of Mourinho’s Chelsea of 2014-2015. They
have been finely machined into shape by their exacting Italian coach who can
now complete the league and FA Cup double in his first season, and has
carried his team along with that restlessness that never permitted his
players to slack.
Conte made another brave call with 15 minutes of the match remaining and
West Brom holding his team out – in this case, he substituted Eden Hazard.
Chelsea’s No 10 might be the most talented attacking talent in the Premier
League but he does have bad days too and this was one of them. Although
substituting him is not a decision any manager takes lightly.
The original plan would surely have been to take the lead and bring on
N’Gole Kante who was on the bench, still recovering from injury, and in the
end did not play a part in this last step to securing his second consecutive
league title with two different clubs. In those last 15 minutes, Conte
instead turned to Batshuayi who has not scored a league goal since his
solitary previous strike this season against Watford in August.
Since then he had managed just four, two apiece in the EFL Cup and FA Cup,
before this momentous night at the Hawthorns when he got the decisive touch
on a cross from Cesar Azpilicueta to put the ball past Ben Foster. If there
had been one criticism of Chelsea’s summer transfer dealing then it might
have been their over-valuation of Batshuayi but this was a moment when one
could even make a case for that £33 million fee.
With Chelsea fans all over the ground to watch their team clinch the sixth
league title in their history, a fight broke out in the Birmingham Road end
of the Hawthorns with a few minutes remaining and the game was held up as
what seemed like away fans came onto the pitch. Even then, Pulis’ team did
their very best to come back into a game in which they had yielded nothing
to the new champions.
The casual observer might have thought, by the way in which the home team
performed, that there was more at stake for Pulis’ team than just their
comfortable top ten finish. In fact West Brom have been in eighth place
since New Year’s Eve and although they are a long way from the most daunting
opponent they are among the most awkward.
By the end of the game, before Batshuayi scored, West Brom’s back line
numbered six players, and even so they had some chances of their own in the
second half as Chelsea became more desperate for the breakthrough. Salomon
Rondon did a fine job chasing whatever West Brom’s midfield could get
through to him although it was mostly a case of Chelsea trying to pick their
way through or around the ten men the home team had behind the ball
Although West Brom have long been safe, this was the kind of performance
that demonstrates their manager’s will better than any other. His management
style, and the sort of clubs he manages, means that he has to wage a
perpetual war on complacency and where better to show that spirit than in a
game that means little to West Brom, but everything to their opponents?
Chelsea seemed to come out to try to kill off their opposition at the start
of the second half, but this was one vampire that kept climbing back out the
coffin. With 20 minutes remaining and a considerable urgency gripping the
league leaders, Pulis had reverted to that back six.
Hazard was having one of those games where nothing quite went right and the
defenders anticipate every one of his twists and turns and bursts of speed.
One of his shots from the left side was so badly miscued that it went out
for a throw-in rather than a goal-kick and he was called to the bench with
15 minutes of the game left.
There was pressure on Michael Oliver, the referee, from a home crowd who
seemed to disagree with just about every foul given against their team. Over
and again West Brom dug in and every minute that ticked by they warmed a
little more to the task, in fact they even created some chances of their
own.
Rondon showed quite a turn of pace and nimbleness of foot to get away from
David Luiz and run on goal, even if he was caught eventually by Gary Cahill.
Pulis had brought on Claudio Yacob, an experienced old midfield bruiser in
place of young Sam Field, to stiffen an already fairly rigid midfield. There
was another chance for West Brom on 72 minutes when another substitute,
Nacer Chadli, got onto Rondon’s ball and struck his shot wide.
Then came the goal from the most unlikely of sources, and all the doubt that
this would be Chelsea’s night lifted from the team. They saw out the game
with the usual hard-headedness that we have come to expect of this side and
they have more than two weeks now to prepare for that FA Cup final on May 27
while Arsenal must fight for fourth place. It seems like everything has
fallen their way this season, but it has taken some character to grasp the
opportunity when it has come.
Independent:
Chelsea beat West Brom to win the Premier League title in Antonio Conte's
debut season at the club
West Brom 0 Chelsea 1: Michy Batshuayi scored the goal that won Chelsea the
title
Miguel Delaney
After a season that has so often seen Antonio Conte turn negatives into
positives, and been a victory for pure coaching, the title itself was so
fittingly won by one more moment of inspiration; one more brave decision.
Michu Batshuayi has barely got a look-in for Chelsea this season, and the
manager has often expressed frustration in his development, but it was
Conte’s faith in the 23-year-old that ended his side’s frustration at the
Hawthorns and ensured the Belgian will be front of centre of every image of
celebration.
The Italian took a gamble by bringing on Batshuayi in the 76th minute of
what had been an immensely trying 0-0 draw with West Brom, and the striker
then took the gamble of a run to score. His effort won the game, and won the
title.
It is the sixth of Chelsea’s history, the fourth of Conte’s career, and his
first in England in what was his debut season.
The wonder was whether West Brom were going to be mere witnesses to a
procession, or proper participants in a battle that was going to make
Chelsea have to do that bit more to earn this title.
That was because, since claiming 40 points on 25 February, their record from
the next nine games read: five points, six defeats, seven games where they
failed to score… but with four of those points and three of those goals
coming in two games against Arsenal and Manchester United.
The big sides still get a big response out of Tony Pulis sides, regardless
of what stage of the season it is.
That was signalled as early as the opening minute of the game, when Salomon
Rondon finished off a sweeping attack with thrusting header. There was
similar aggression and energy to every West Brom challenge, leaving many
Chelsea players - and especially Eden Hazard - on their back on the
rain-sodden pitch. Sam Field was soon booked for one scything tackle from
behind on Pedro, that left the winger in a heap, and the young West Brom lad
somewhat brazenly protesting his innocence.
Chelsea were indeed being made to work, and fight, and really eke out their
chances.
The West Brom supporters did ironically celebrate when a decision went their
way on 40 minutes, but they might well have been fortunate that referee
Michael Oliver didn’t point to the spot when the ball appeared to strike
Chris Brunt’s arm earlier in the game.
They weren’t fortunate to be level, though, given they had so limited to
Chelsea to scrapping for chances and long shots.
The spectacularly-on-form Cesc Fabregas was naturally finding space where
others couldn’t, and flashed one 33rd-minute effort wide. It was the closest
they’d come in the first half.
Victor Moses went even closer at the start of the second half, bringing a
fine low save from Ben Foster as he tried another shot from distance. It did
look like it was going to take something inspired, or bit different, to
break West Brom down - put David Luiz’s attempted bicycle kick from the
resulting corner was probably a bit too different.
It looked like Eden Hazard had finally got behind the defence on 52 minutes,
but he delayed his shot when forced wide, and West Brom just about managed
to scramble the ball away.
That chance inevitably came from an inspired Fabregas floated ball, and he
was the Chelsea player most probing, most likely to produce something that
opened West Brom.
It said a lot for how much West Brom were frustrating Conte’s side that when
Diego Costa got the ball in the box on the hour, and looked set to turn, he
rather easily went down. That was how difficult Pulis’s well-drilled defence
were making it.
They were not going to willingly be anyone’s patsy.
Conte realised something big needed to change, so made a big decision: he
took off Chelsea’s most vibrant attacking player this season, removing
Hazard for Willian, and introduced Batshuayi for Pedro.
It had a big effect, an inspired effect.
On 84 minutes, just when West Brom seemed to be getting comfortable in their
ability to keep Chelsea out, Batshuayi finally stood out.
Cesar Azpilicueta got behind the backline to square, and the young Belgian
got the goal that he and his club had been waiting for.
Mail:
West Brom 0-1 Chelsea: Michy Batshuayi comes off the bench to sneak home
late winner and ensure the Blues are Premier League champions
By Martin Samuel for the Daily Mail
Michy Batshuayi has not scored many goals in the league this season, but 50
per cent of the ones he has scored have won Chelsea the title.
If you’re going to go, go big — and Batshuayi went big in the 82nd minute
here. Just at the point when it looked as if we would all have to reconvene
at Stamford Bridge on Monday, he arrived in West Brom’s six-yard box to
ensure the title race is concluded with more than a week to spare.
That is no small achievement in the season that brought Pep Guardiola to the
Premier League, Jose Mourinho to Manchester United, and saw Tottenham older,
more experienced and ready to improve on last season’s attempt to chase down
Leicester.
That Mauricio Pochettino’s team came up short again is due, in no little
part, to the traits we saw in Chelsea on Friday night. Resilience,
determination, organisation and some of the finest passing and most
fleet-footed forward play in the league.
Chelsea are worthy champions, Antonio Conte a worthy winner of the Premier
League in his first season as coach. Impressively, he has solved Chelsea’s
perennial problems: how to move on from John Terry and Branislav Ivanovic;
how to rebuild team spirit after a calamitous campaign a year ago.
He has made a solid citizen of David Luiz, dealt skilfully with
high-maintenance stars such as Diego Costa and Eden Hazard, turned Victor
Moses into a right wing back and unleashed Cesc Fabregas just at the right
time, his radar helping close out the season.
Indeed, right until the last, Conte got it right. At £33million from
Marseille, Batshuayi has been one of the transfer flops of the season. Yet,
with nothing working, and West Brom growing stronger — Nacer Chadli almost
gave them the lead late in the game — Conte was not scared to introduce him
as a late substitute, or withdraw Hazard, who had run himself into the
ground, even in defensive service.
And the title was his reward. If you’re going to score your first in the
league since August 20 against Watford, it might as well win the league.
With the game heading for a draw, Hazard off and West Brom at last exerting
pressure, there was a degree of tension as we entered the final straight.
Well, as much tension as there can be when a team needs one win and still
has Watford and Sunderland to play at home.
Enter Batshuayi. He took advantage of the defensive reorganisation caused by
the withdrawal of Gareth McAuley, after West Brom had failed to deal with a
sliced shot that went into no-man’s land. Chelsea recycled it, Cesar
Azpilicueta crossed and Batshuayi slid in to poke the ball past Ben Foster.
Cue lunatic celebrations. Cue much sliding in all corners of the pitch.
Batshuayi went first, again, down by the corner flag. So did Luiz into the
arms of Azpilicueta. On the bench Conte leapt on to his staff with such
abandon he may have suffered a cut lip.
This was Chelsea, showing the drive that has got them where they are this
season. This was Conte, passion overflowing, showing how a first season in
English football can be done. Batshuayi’s signing may have been a rare
error, but who will remember that now?
When the final whistle blew, Conte went round his team, jumping at them in
the style of one of those impassioned meetings on railway platforms. Arms
and legs wrapped around, catch me. The players responded by giving him the
bumps. Then John Terry.
Yet, digressing slightly, now the dust has settled, do you know for whom
this game looked very bad news? Pep Guardiola. West Brom must visit
Manchester City on Tuesday with Guardiola still not certain of a place in
the Champions League next season, and as Tony Pulis’s players demonstrated,
they take pride in their end of season cussedness.
It would have been easy for them to coast here, easy to let Chelsea take the
expected three points and the title with scant resistance.
Albion have little to play for, after all. They are a very credible eighth
but, in reality, top of the bottom. They defended as if their existence
depen-ded on it, almost scored after 23 seconds through Salomon Rondon and
looked just the sort of team that would delight in frustrating Manchester
City.
The reason Chelsea have won a fifth Premier League title, was on show even
in moments of greatest frustration. It was all there. The exquisite passing
and vision of Fabregas; the delightful touch and poise of Hazard; fine saves
when needed by Thibaut Courtois, including one in a part of the game when
many contemporaries may have been taken by surprise; a great saving tackle
by Luiz; the width; the counter-attacking; the speed of recovery.
All that was missing was player of the season, N’Golo Kante, still
recovering from injury and on the bench, and striker Diego Costa, who was
present in name only for much of the game. He was the one disappointment.
Yet he has been magnificent on other occasions, and any player can have an
off night. His team-mates made up for it. Intense, eager, willing to get the
job done at the first opportunity.
Chelsea’s biggest problem was accuracy. They had plenty of shots, but few
that challenged Ben Foster. Most of the chances were crafted by the boot of
Fabregas. Had the forwards found their range it could have been done much
earlier but West Brom, whose draw at Tottenham proved so decisive last
season, are nothing if not awkward.
Physical, too. James McClean was lucky his night did not end prematurely
having received a yellow card for taking out Moses after 20 minutes. He did
it again soon after and was fortunate Michael Oliver decided to be lenient.
The home fans moaned anyway, but they didn’t have a case. The best team won,
the match and — more importantly — the league.
WEST BROM (4-1-4-1): Foster 6; Dawson 6.5, McAuley 7 (Wilson 64, 6), Evans
6.5, Nyom 6, Fletcher 6.5, Brunt 7, Livermore 6, Field 6 (Yacob 51, 6),
McClean 6 (Chadli 59, 5), Rondon 6.5
Subs not used: Robson-Kanu, Morrison, Wilson, Myhill, Leko
Booked: McClean, Wilson, Field
Manager: Tony Pulis 6
CHELSEA (3-4-2-1): Courtois 6.5; Azpilicueta 6.5, David Luiz 7, Cahill 6.5,
Moses 6 (Zouma 86, 5), Fabregas 6.5, Matic 6.5, Alonso 6, Pedro 5
(Batshuayi, 76, 7.5), Hazard 5.5 (Willian 75, 5) Diego Costa 5
Subs not used: Begovic, Ake, Kante, Terry
Goal: Batshuayi 81
Manager: Antonio Conte 7.5
Referee: Michael Oliver
Attendance: 25,367
Player ratings by Matt Barlow