For the Chelsea supporters who arrived at a balmy Stamford Bridge for the opening salvo of the season against West Ham there was a weird sense of everything being kind of the same but different. The external decorations outside the ground still depicted giant posters of José Mourinho in his Chelsea blazer holding the Premier League trophy.
A boy began to chant for the man currently in charge of Manchester United and his father shushed him a little awkwardly. Inside, the team selection was close to identical to the XI their old leader chose to begin their title defence last August. There was just one change. N’Golo Kanté replaced Cesc Fàbregas but the rest of the starters chimed with familiarity.
Welcome to the new show in town? It felt as if a PA announcement would not have seemed massively out of place: “Today, ladies and gentlemen, the part of José Mourinho will be played by Antonio Conte.”
The whole event was intense and committed enough that by the end everyone felt tangled up in a familiar shade of blue.
Here was Chelsea with a success-driven manager backed up by a handsome CV patrolling his technical area with ferocious edge in his sharp suit. On the pitch was that old back four that trips off the tongue. Eden Hazard and Willian shimmered in flashes from wide positions. Diego Costa was booked early for dissent and fortunate not to pick up a red. This was a very subtle kind of revolution.
It might take a while for the Conte era to emerge fully from the Mou shadows. The former Juventus and Italy head honcho may share the hot competitive streak and desire for meticulously organised and tactically disciplined effort but he has more than enough qualities to form a side in his own image given time and a few more tools to his taste to work with.
A place back among the title contenders is in his remit. Nothing less will do for either his personal standards or his club’s. Three points is a welcome start.
Conte has understandable frustrations that he could not add more significantly to the squad he was handed over by the caretaker, Guus Hiddink, after Mourinho was ousted. He is not alone in that among Premier League managers. It meant that the most significant change of tone would be tactical rather than in terms of personnel.
Kanté, the newcomer, was positioned in front of the back four in a 4-1-4-1 formation, covering ground with expected intelligence. It was notable that positionally he stayed quite deep, carefully sitting and protecting with a little less freedom to roam than he had at the King Power Stadium. His secure presence allowed Conte to spread four across midfield ahead of him, which encouraged Hazard and Willian to operate from quite wide, with the licence to drive inside when opportunities presented themselves. Hazard’s appetite was refreshed and Willian’s matched the efforts which made him the club’s player of the year last season, which bodes well.
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