toptop
Chelsea
took advantage of their rivals' slip-ups to move two points off the top of the
Premier League but made hard work of a narrow 2-1 win over Brentford.
The Blues did not make the same mistake as Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester
City who had all been held at home earlier in the weekend, but made hard work of
seeing off a Brentford side who had picked up only one away point all season.
They took a deserved lead into the break when Marc Cucurella nodded in his first
Premier League goal for the Blues minutes before the interval, having dominated
the opening half without creating much in the way of clear-cut chances.
Nicolas Jackson should have put the game to bed on the hour mark when he
ballooned the influential Jadon Sancho's cross over from six yards out, and
without that the Blues' narrow lead always remained precarious.
Brentford came so close to making them pay as momentum began to shift and
Christian Norgaard pulled a superb finger-tip stop out of Robert Sanchez, before
Fabio Carvalho's sliding effort bounced down off the bar, no more than a few
inches from crossing the line.
Enzo Maresca's celebrations which greeted Jackson's thunderous second after a
quick counter-attack summed up the relief around Stamford Bridge with 10 minutes
left as Chelsea finally gave themselves a cushion to defend.
But even then, a hospital pass of a throw from Cucurella to Moises Caicedo saw a
Brentford counter finished off stylishly by Bryan Mbeumo, leaving the Blues to
see out a nervy seven minutes of added time before they could finally celebrate
stealing a march on their title rivals with victory.
Cucurella's excellent evening ended on a sour note after the full-time whistle
when the goalscorer was shown a second yellow card for an altercation with Kevin
Schade.
Analysis: Chelsea move closer to top - but
title credentials look less convincing
Sky Sports' Ron Walker at Stamford Bridge:
"Chelsea succeeded where Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester City had failed by
winning at home, but had they been punished by Brentford, as they might have
been, it would have been just as self-inflicted.
"Robert Sanchez and Chelsea's centre-back options have been highlighted as their
Achilles heel, but it was their inability to finish Brentford off and the manner
of the goal they did eventually concede - from their own attacking throw - which
gives some credence to Enzo Maresca's insistence they are not ready to challenge
for the title.
"From the outside, this can look like a perfect example of a team winning
without playing well - the hallmark of any good side.
"But the way Chelsea let Brentford, a side who had lost six of seven on the
road, wrestle back control of the game out of nowhere and come inches away from
getting something is another sign that maturity is still developing.
"The Blues have still come an awful long way under Maresca. Whereas their title
rivals all have established, experienced names through the spine of the team,
Chelsea are still on the way up. They are getting there, but still have a way to
go."
Click Here for Official Teamsheet
Teams
Chelsea Sanchez; Gusto, Tosin, Colwill, Cucurella; Caicedo,
Fernandez (c); Madueke, Palmer, Sancho; Jackson (Nkunku 84)
Subs Not Used Jorgensen, Acheampong, Disasi, Veiga, Rak-Sakyi,
Dewsbury-Hall, George, Guiu
Booked Cucurella
Sent Off Curella 90+8
Goals Cucurella 43, Jackson80
Brentford Flekken; Pinnock, Collins, van den Berg, Lewis-Potter
(Meghoma 86), Damsgaard (Janelt 63), Norgaard (c), Yarmolyuk (Carvalho 76),
Roerslev (Ajer 76), Wissa (Schade 76), Mbeumo
Subs Not Used Valdimarsson, Mee, Trevitt, Konak
Booked Janelt, Schade
Goals Mbeumo 90
Attendance 39,571
Referee Peter Bankes
VAR Matt Donohue