The Independent on Saturday

CONTE SEES SOMETHING OF HIMSELF IN COMBATIVE KANTE

- MIGUEL DELANEY

IT’S got to the point with the irrepressi­ble N’Golo Kante that he is seen as a unique force in European football, but Antonio Conte doesn’t quite think he’s incomparab­le. The Chelsea manager can think of a similar player: himself. Conte used to love to run just as much as Kante.

Smiling as he said it, the Italian admitted Kante is “stronger” amid a few difference­s, and that he hasn’t yet had to treat the French midfielder the same way one of his old managers treated him. Conte tells the story of when he was at Juventus under the great Giovanni Trapattoni between 1991 and 1994.

“In my career, I remember Trapattoni trying to stop me [running] during training, telling me to go into the changing room because I had to run during the game.

“I wasn’t happy about it. I wanted to stay with my teammates. He’s a great player and he always puts 100% in the game, but also in training. “I don’t want to stop him.” Part of that is undoubtedl­y because Conte personally understand­s Kante’s willingnes­s, and because it is key to the manager’s game.

“I like a lot of these players. I was this type of player. And I always appreciate­d this type of player, their great generosity and ability to work for the team. I think it’s important to have this type of player if we want to win. Not only great talent, but players who run a lot during a game.

“He’s an example. N’Golo is a fantastic guy, fantastic player, great commitment, great behaviour. A great example.”

Asked whether that made him Conte mark two – sharing much more than just a similarity in their surname – the Chelsea manager wouldn’t quite go that far. A physical force who used to set the pace for his side’s running, the former Italian internatio­nal generally got further forward.

“He’s stronger than me,” Conte conceded. “I think I was stronger than him in scoring goals but, in the other respects, there is no contest. He is stronger than me.”

The signing of Kante has been seen as one of the key difference­s between the sensation of this season’s Chelsea title surge and the shambles of last season’s title defence, especially with the way champions Leicester City have gone in the opposite direction, but it would obviously be hugely unfair to Conte to portray it as the main difference.

A huge element in the Italian’s management has been looking to work with players on the training ground and improve their game, and he has done exactly the same with Kante. He hasn’t been someone who has just seen a force of nature and let it be. He has tried to hone it, add more to it, and specifical­ly look to enhance the 25-year-old’s passing.

“I think he has a lot of room to improve in the pass, and to look for the first pass forward,” Conte said. “He can improve these aspects.

“My own work is always to try to improve my players, and I want to improve my players through work. I work very hard to try to improve them. We are talking about great players. He played very well in the last season, with Leicester.

“He’s also playing very well this season with us. We are working on some things to try to improve, to make him a more complete player. But we are talking about a great player already.”

On Monday at Stamford Bridge in the FA Cup sixth-round tie against Manchester United, Kante’s goal was the difference between the two teams.

He also came out on top in his head-to-head with Paul Pogba, who was much more expensive than his French internatio­nal teammate, but has not yet had anything close to the same impact in the Premier League.

Conte oversaw some supreme Pogba performanc­es in Serie A, having been the manager who brought him to Juventus in 2012 and has no issue diplomatic­ally talking him up in similar terms.

“We are talking about a top player, a top player in all situations. Also, in his commitment in training, trying to improve him, good technique, physically strong, great stamina. We are talking about a top, top player.”

He is certainly Pogba’s opposite in terms of personalit­y. Whereas the younger United midfielder is so charismati­c with hair often as loud as his character, Kante is the quiet man of the Chelsea dressing room.

“Yeah, but he’s a really good guy,” Conte said. “He always has a smile on his face. He’s fantastic. You try to talk to him and he’s always smiling. During training sessions he works a lot, but always with a smile. To see this, it’s great for the other players, the staff, for me, the people who work at Chelsea.” A smiling assassin then? “No, no. It’s a good smile. Not an assassin’s smile. It’s the smile of a good guy, and he is a really good guy.”

As good as Conte as a player? The manager will willingly concede that, but wants to make him better. He certainly doesn’t want to suppress that energy. – The Independen­t

 ??  ?? REVELATION: Chelsea’s French internatio­nal midfielder, N’Golo Kante.
REVELATION: Chelsea’s French internatio­nal midfielder, N’Golo Kante.

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