The Irish Mail on Sunday

HIG, HIG, HOORAY!

Higuain double puts a smile back on Sarri’s face...but the tough month ahead is real test

- By Rob Draper

JOSE MOURINHO once lost Gonzalo Higuain to injury at Real Madrid and surveyed the alternativ­es. It would be, he said, like ‘hunting without a dog’. Higuain had a ruthlessne­ss and aggression in attack that Mourinho knew they would miss with lesser players.

That was eight years ago when Higuain was in his prime. On a crisp winter’s afternoon at Stamford Bridge against limited opposition yesterday, the Argentinia­n opened his scoring account in English football.

At times in the match, the 31-yearold had looked a little laboured. His touch seemed rusty and his conditioni­ng is not perhaps what is required for a centre-forward in the ever-more energetic modern game. But though the dog may have lost a little zest, his hair thinned a little and be carrying a few war wounds, he has not lost his scent for wounded prey.

No one should doubt Higuain’s class. His consistent goal-scoring at the best clubs in the world – 122 in 264 games for Real Madrid – is evidence enough of his credential­s. The question is whether the man with one goal in 12 games at AC Milan this season is the right man to save Sarri-ball, Maurizio’s Sarri unique brand of football at Chelsea.

He did it for him at Napoli but not since 1996, when Roman Abramovich was just 30 and more worried about perestroik­a than Chelsea strikers, had the club suffered a defeat as bad as the one they did at Bournemout­h last week, where Higuain had played his first Premier League game.

The muscle memory of a worldclass striker does not fade quickly. That much was evident in the 16th minute when N’Golo Kante played a super slide pass into the box and into his path. A lesser player might have run offside. Higuain timed his run off Terence Kongolo perfectly and then, from a tight angle, finished clinically from close range at the near post.

By the time he struck his second, in the 69th minute, the contest was no more but, still, there was plenty to admire. Eden Hazard wriggled his way past players, touched the ball to Kante who, with the lightest touch, played it on to the Argentine. Twenty-five yards out from goal, there was no hesitation: Higuain sized up the chance, struck with power and lifted the ball over Jonas Lossl and under the crossbar.

‘When he arrived, he wasn’t at the top of his physical condition,’ said Sarri of his star signing. ‘Now he is improving. I’m really very happy because, apart from the goals, my feeling is he’s really suitable to play very close to Eden.’

Quite so. But then it was Sarri who was insistent that Hazard could thrive as a false nine when plenty have been adamant for some time that he might be better coming in from the left.

As much as you could draw conclusion­s, this game showed that Sarri’s team have not thrown in the towel just yet – but a domestic run of leagues and cup fixtures that sees them play Manchester City twice, Manchester United and Tottenham will tell us more.

At least Sarri felt that his team had implemente­d his philosophy for the first 25 minutes but insisted they needed to apply it for at least 75 minutes. ‘We need to improve the mentality, we have to arrive at every match with the same level of determinat­ion and motivation: we don’t need to lose a match to have the right motivation,’ he said.

It was not really the 16th-minute goal that killed Huddersfie­ld. It was the dubious 45th-minute penalty that finished them off.

They had started well, vibrant and energetic. Manager Jan Siewart does appear to have given them a fresh lease of life, albeit too little, too late.

They were extremely adept at playing the ball over the Chelsea back line, Aaron Mooy particular­ly, with Adama Diakhaby and, until he went off injured, Isaac Mbenza, showing real pace to trouble Chelsea’s full-backs.

Perhaps their best chance came after just six minutes when Mooy’s header was just over the bar from Chris Lowe’s cross. Still, they were in the game. Then, as half-time approached, Cesar Azpilicuet­a broke into the box. Elias Kachunga chased him down and, foolishly, stuck out a leg, over which Azpilicuet­a gratefully tumbled.

The foul was marginal but correctly given. However, the offence was initially committed outside the box and so should have been a free-kick. Hazard stepped up to convert, low and hard.

Thereafter, it seemed an impossible task for Huddersfie­ld. Ross Barkley threaded through a lovely ball for Hazard in the 66th minute and the Belgian turned in the third from close range. Then, after Higuain scored the fourth, David Luiz met Willian’s corner with a header and Kachunga deflected it past Lossl. The game had been lost well before. As it seems, has Huddersfie­ld’s season.

 ??  ?? GOLDEN OLDIE: Gonzalo Higuain, 31, fires in his first of two goals against Huddersfie­ld yesterday
GOLDEN OLDIE: Gonzalo Higuain, 31, fires in his first of two goals against Huddersfie­ld yesterday

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