Morata ends drought
> ... but questions still remain about striker’s ability so be Chelsea’s top dog
CHELSEA’S SHOW OF STRENGTH
RARELY HAS an elite level footballer looked quite so despondent at hitting the back of the net – especially considering the quality of the finish.
Running onto a prod forward from Willian, Alvaro Morata (pix) strode into the penalty area, opened up his body and lifted the ball daintily over the advancing Kasper Schmeichel, handing Chelsea the lead over Leicester at the King Power stadium yesterday.
As Morata peeled away, his arms initially darted out to his sides, perhaps in excitement, perhaps just out of muscle memory. But then he seemed to remember.
And while his teammates rushed to congratulate him, he dropped to the turf on his knees, with the ashen-face of a man who had just been told some particularly bad news rather than one who had scored the opening goal in an FA Cup quarterfinal.
It was Morata’s first goal of 2018 and he didn’t mark it with a celebration, more a moment of earth-shattering realisation.
In a way, his reaction neatly surmised his difficult debut season in English football.
Nobody doubts that he is a fantastically talented player with the predatory instincts to succeed in Chelsea colours, but his concerning tendency to dwell on spurned opportunities with that thousand-yard stare of his has many questioning whether he will be handed the necessary time to succeed.
This has been yet another difficult week for Morata, left on the bench for Chelsea’s trip to the Nou Camp before Spain coach Julen Lopetegui surprisingly decided against handing him an international call-up.
And perhaps more concerning about that second snub was Antonio Conte’s decidedly ambivalent reaction to the news, when quizzed about it in his press conference on Friday.
“I think that this question is for the coach of the national team, not for me,” he parried.
“My only worry is to try to have the players in the best form for Chelsea. Then there is a national team coach to make the best decision for the country.”
If Morata had been hoping for a vote of confidence similar to the one recently handed to Marcus Rashford by Jose Mourinho, he would have been left sorely disappointed.
So his goal – which ends a dismal run of 13 games in all competitions without one – comes at a very good time.
What happens next largely depends on Morata himself. An experienced striker would concentrate on the one converted chance rather than the cluster of wasted ones and work hard to finish the season in the same promising way that he started it. But does Morata have the resilience?
Patience is in famously short supply at Stamford Bridge and it will surely grow harder for Conte – under significant pressure himself – to excuse too many more of these performances. – The Independent