Scottish Daily Mail

Conte aiming to boost his legacy with Barca scalp

- IAN LADYMAN

ANTONIO CONTE is a man fast running out of chances to deepen the footprint he looks destined to leave behind at Chelsea this summer.

He cannot defend his Premier League title — Manchester City’s win at Stoke City on Monday made that impossible — and he could be forgiven if the thought of winning the FA Cup does not quicken his pulse by comparison.

So tonight’s second leg at the Nou Camp presents the Chelsea manager with something of a defining moment in what we presume will be his second and final season at Stamford Bridge.

Lose tonight against Barcelona and we can bring the house lights up on Conte’s time at Chelsea. Nothing he could do thereafter would come anywhere near the trick he pulled off in winning the Premier League at the first time of asking last season.

Win, though, and the ride goes on. Win and the prospect of such a talented manager leaving Chelsea will look even more unfortunat­e and senseless than it does already. Win and Conte and his players would be in the last eight of a competitio­n shorn of candidates like Barcelona and PSG.

Wise, then, to treat with some scepticism Conte’s attempts to portray tonight’s meeting with Barca as just another game.

‘I hope in my career I consider an achievemen­t being when you actually win something,’ said Conte. ‘That is a big achievemen­t for a manager.

‘In this case, we are talking only about reaching the last 16. For sure, we have to make a great game to have a chance to go into the next round.

‘We are playing against Barcelona. I consider them one of the best teams in the world. They are top of La Liga. But, in football, you are never sure.’

Conte could be forgiven if he views the rest of this season as a personal audition. If he is to leave Chelsea so soon, the Italian — only 48 years old — will seek employment at another elite club. He may also wish to prove a point to Chelsea. Look at what you could have had.

After a 1-1 first leg in which his team hit the post twice, Conte has no reason to feel cowed.

Chelsea’s record against Barcelona is very good. They have not lost in eight games and drew memorably here in the second leg of the 2012 Champions League on their way to winning the competitio­n for the only time.

Lionel Messi cried in the dressing room that night, perhaps through shock as much as anything. Tonight, Chelsea will focus much of their attention on him again after he popped up to equalise in the first game last month.

Conte, meanwhile, is preparing his players for another night on what Sir Alex Ferguson used to call the Barcelona ‘carousel’.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the game plan will be similar to that which almost got Chelsea a win in the first leg: containmen­t followed by counter-attack. Conte said the prospect of trying to stop Messi, who is as creative as he has ever been, in the first game kept him awake at night. Tonight he may have to be slightly bolder.

‘There are moments where we will have to suffer,’ said Conte. ‘Every team who play Barcelona must be prepared to suffer, to be compact.

‘Then, when we have the ball, we must have the feeling in our heads to create a chance to score.’

Barcelona have not been beaten at home this season. In fact, they have only lost once anywhere since the Spanish league season began in August and scored eight times in three Champions League group games at the Nou Camp.

So for Chelsea to take anything from this game would be a pretty big deal indeed. Conte will need big performanc­es from big players and, whether he meant it or not, he inadverten­tly presented his own talisman Eden Hazard with a challenge of his own.

Asked to compare Hazard with Barcelona’s Andres Iniesta, Conte said: ‘We are talking about two different players with different careers. Iniesta won a lot in his career. Hazard has to start to win important trophies in his career.’

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