The Herald (South Africa)

CHELSEA CAN WRAP UP TITLE TONIGHT

Blues can wrap up Premier League title against West Brom tonight

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HOW quickly affections can switch in soccer. Where once they would serenade coach Jose Mourinho at Stamford Bridge with an operatic flourish, now Chelsea fans have fallen headlong for another man driving them inexorably to the English Premier League title.

To the Bridge faithful, Mourinho is not special any more now he has pitched up at Manchester United, but their embrace for coach Antonio Conte will be suffocatin­g if he guides the Blues to a title-clinching victory at West Bromwich Albion tonight.

As the arty canvas held by his daughter at Monday’s home victory over Middlesbro­ugh put it, the Italian is now already enshrined as “The Confather” to a happy family of ruthless operators in blue.

No wonder. Albeit a quietly charming, thoughtful figure away from the pitch, on the touchline Conte comes across as a manic, hyperactiv­e figure making demands of his players that they dare not refuse.

Win this game or else, his eyes scream.

So do not expect him to stop now. Conte has spent his time since the 3-0 drubbing of Middlesbro­ugh trotting out his familiarly cautious mantra about hard work, fight and commitment still being needed to finish their efficient job.

Just a little step, he warned softly, but one that won’t be easy.

He hailed West Brom as a really good, physical team but, of late, the truth is that Tony Pulis’s eighth-placed side have looked anything but, having lost four of their last five games.

If Chelsea win, they will have an unassailab­le 10-point lead over Tottenham Hotspur and will become champions for a sixth time.

A defeat or draw, though, would still leave Spurs the flimsiest of lifelines as they prepare for an emotional afternoon at White Hart Lane on Sunday against Manchester United, fittingly illustriou­s visitors for the last match to be played at the Lilywhites’ 118year-old stadium.

United may prove suitably distracted, too, with Mourinho having written off their chances of a top-four finish while fluttering eyes only at the Europa League.

So, with United out of the equation, the fight for the third and fourth places to guarantee Champions League football next term reaches a critical point.

Manchester City will be in the driving seat if they beat Leicester City at the Etihad tomorrow, but it looks no easy task with last year’s champions belatedly reprising some of their 2015-16 heroics.

Victory would give Pep Guardiola’s side a two-point lead over Liverpool with Jurgen Klopp’s men then having to negotiate a tricky visit to West Ham United on Sunday in their penultimat­e match.

Arsenal, who beat Southampto­n 2-0 on Wednesday to move three points behind Manchester City in fifth, remain long shots in the top-four race as they face Stoke City tomorrow.

At the other end of the table, Sunderland may still be licking their wounds after already being relegated, but they could have a huge say in who joins them and Middlesbro­ugh in the second-tier Championsh­ip.

With two games each left, it has come down to a three-way battle between Hull City (34 points), Swansea (35) and Crystal Palace (38) to avoid the one remaining relegation spot.

Sunderland host Swansea tomorrow and if the visitors prevail, it will only make it an even more nerve-shredding Sunday at Selhurst Park where the clash between Sam Allardyce’s Palace and Marco Silva’s Hull has been touted as the most expensive relegation tussle of all. – Reuters

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Picture: GALLO IMAGES VOICE OF ENCOURAGEM­ENT: Thamsanqa Gwabeni, of Platinum Stars, has some advice for KeYona participan­ts
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ANTONIO CONTE

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