Irish Independent

Chelsea on back foot at Barca, it could all come down to Conte’s front man– whoever he is

- MIGUEL DELANEY

OVER the last few days, Antonio Conte has been putting on practice matches in Chelsea training that have involved a few different formations, and certainly no fixed XI.

The Italian had still not made a fixed decision yesterday over the one factor that remains unknown about the Champions League second leg with Barcelona, and that his club hope can yet add some uncertaint­y to this tie. That is whether to play the muchdebate­d false-nine.

It could yet be the decision that this tie revolves around, precisely because the Chelsea attack will revolve around it.

It is all the more important because so much else in this game feels set.

We pretty much know what Ernesto Valverde’s starting

XI will be, and how Barcelona will approach the game. They will play that more contained possession game that makes Leo Messi more central than ever before, something probably more suited to a game where they have the away-goal advantage and thereby no need to give up space in behind.

We know that Conte will start with a counter-attacking plan because of the threat of that possession and that Barcelona legend … but also that Chelsea absolutely need to score.

Finally, we also know that the success of the false-nine system has been mixed, both in terms of results and reception among players as well as supporters.

The discussion around it has been largely negative in the last few days, because of how utterly ineffectiv­e the tactic was against Manchester City.

That 1-0 defeat was considered something of a trial run for this second leg at Camp Nou, but then it shouldn’t be forgotten that the false nine worked very well in an actual match against Barcelona in the first leg.

Eden Hazard’s movement in the role drew Barca players out of their positions in this more constraine­d system, and created the gaps for an on-form Willian to run into. That is why Conte (right) is completely justified in considerin­g it again, at least for this match.

It may well remain the perfect approach for this game.

It underlines something often overlooked with such tactical changes. The success of any system isn’t always universal, but dependent on applicatio­n in individual games, and whether individual pieces fit against specific opponents.

Hazard himself is said to like it against weaker sides, because of the fact that Chelsea naturally have more of the ball further forward so he will naturally see so much more of it. Of course, one of the reasons that the false-nine has been so maligned is because it feels such a waste of the best abilities of Chelsea’s best player. Hazard is someone so dangerous when on the ball that he should be on it as much as possible, rather than forced to the fringes, where only really his running is utilised and that mostly for decoys. It’s also difficult not to think that the only reason Conte uses him there at all is because he doesn’t currently have a striker that fully plays to the

manager’s prefered system.

The Chelsea boss never used it when he had Diego Costa, except for the line-in-the-sand moment in January last year. That was when the first flashpoint between striker and manager occurred, and Costa was left out of the 3-0 win away to Leicester City.

Chelsea proved they could temporaril­y persevere without the Spanish internatio­nal in that title season, but neither of his replacemen­ts have yet proved they can do the same job to the same level.

That has arguably been the crux issue of the champions’ entire season, and will likely end up being seen as the turning point of Conte’s anticipate­d twoyear reign. They just haven’t been the same without Costa. It has removed some of Chelsea’s thrust, and thereby also caused issues further back.

This is also the issue with his initial main replacemen­t. Alvaro Morata generally has all of the abilities to perform the role that Conte would like but he ultimately lacks that rage; that battle-readiness.

It’s almost become a cliche, but because it’s true. Morata just lacks that assertiven­ess.

When he came on against Crystal Palace at the weekend, he didn’t look ready to take the chances against beaten relegation-threatened opponents in the manner he should have done. He instead still looked conscious of how many chances he has failed to take, with that firing a rattiness that could well have got him sent off.

Olivier Giroud meanwhile has that assertiven­ess, the required mentality, but doesn’t have the range of other abilities.

The French striker (left, below) still does look like he has started to more deeply understand Conte’s requiremen­ts, and it will be tempting for the manager to use his aerial ability – especially away from home.

There’s also the fact that, if there is ever going to be a perfect situation for Conte to use his famed motivation­al skills on Morata, this is it: a Madrid man taking on Barcelona, after a difficult spell, but with the ultimate stage to prove a huge point. Conte just needs to spin Morata’s recent issues into an advantage, just as he needs to spin around Barca.

For a team that will spend most of the game on the back foot, so much will come down to the front man – whoever it is. (© Independen­t News Service)

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