The Guardian (USA)

Mason Mount double and Arrizabala­ga heroics ensure Chelsea sink Aston Villa

- Nick Ames at Villa Park

The last thing Steven Gerrard needed was to encounter a goalkeeper who chose this occasion to produce the best performanc­e of his Premier League career. Kepa Arrizabala­ga has not had too many afternoons such as this over the past four years but he denied Aston Villa with an outstandin­g exhibition of his art.

Two first-half saves from Jacob Ramsey and Danny Ings took the breath away. Those were far from his only interventi­ons and they meant Graham Potter, whose side put in the worst performanc­e of his tenure to date, could hail a fifth successive win even if Chelsea hardly deserved it.

They prevailed because Villa, unable to apply the decisive touch at one end, self-destructed at the other. A glaring mistake from Tyrone Mings gave Mason Mount the opener on a plate; then Mings and Emiliano Martinez could both have done better around the second-half free-kick, albeit superbly executed, from which the same player killed proceeding­s off. Chelsea’s revival continues apace but the embattled Gerrard, who was jeered by a pocket of supporters as he walked down the tunnel after full-time, saw the prospect of a transforma­tive outcome slip away.

“I’m aware of it all but I have to accept it and do everything I can to try and change the way they feel at the moment,” Gerrard said of the disquiet among some fans whose patience is wearing perilously thin. They would have perked up considerab­ly had an enterprisi­ng Villa, much the better side until they went two behind, converted their superiorit­y into points.

Instead they face crucial games against Fulham and Brentford over the next week knowing there is little room for error; Gerrard surely needs a result against at least one of them if the unrest is not to reach a crescendo.

“I said to the players: ‘I know you’ll be frustrated and disappoint­ed but, if you can replicate that [performanc­e] at Fulham, I don’t think you’ll have any problems,’” he said.

Arrizabala­ga’s reflexes were a driving force behind those emotions. The best of his work came during a dizzying 20-minute spell midway through the opening period when Chelsea should have found their early lead overhauled.

His stop from Ramsey was extraordin­ary: he had just beaten away John McGinn’s drive and Ramsey, taking aim from the rebound, looked poised to crack it past him from 12 yards. Instead he plunged low to his right and somehow deflected the ball on to the post.

Just after the half-hour Leon Bailey checked back and crossed from the right for Ings, four yards out, to power a header that Arrizabala­ga tipped over despite minimal time to respond. It was an equally good save and there were others in that blizzard of pressure, McGinn and Ings seeing angled drives repelled. When Villa contrived an effort Arrizabala­ga could not reach, Bailey headed on to the top of the crossbar.

“Kepa has found a fantastic level today,” said Potter, who was careful to cushion his praise in a general appreciati­on of the camaraderi­e among Chelsea’s keepers. “He’s made brilliant saves that have kept us in the game and allowed us to win the points, so I’m really pleased for him.”

Chelsea scored with their first attack when Mings, misjudging the flight of the ball after Ramsey’s attempt to dispossess Ben Chilwell looped up into the air, horribly skewed a header straight into Mount’s path. The finish was confident but otherwise Chelsea looked lost.

Marc Cucurella had a horror show of a first half at left centre-back before being replaced, Potter deploying Kalidou Koulibaly and César Azpilicuet­a at the interval to shore things up. Raheem Sterling’s selection at right wing-back in Reece James’s absence was an experiment curtailed during Villa’s purple patch; he was belatedly moved forward and, from a rare attack, curled a shot on to the bar.

“Villa made us suffer,” Potter said. But a fourth consecutiv­e clean sheet was still the outcome and Mount’s set piece garnished it. Mings was again partly responsibl­e, with a clumsy foul on him 25 yards out. The free-kick was well struck but Martinez paid the price for making a sidestep to his right, the ball wobbling leftward and arcing under his bar. Villa had been punctured and the final quarter was a non-event.

“I’m still in a little bit of disbelief that we haven’t scored at least a couple of goals,” Gerrard said. That tends to be a common refrain when a team are struggling. Villa remain 16th even if Gerrard felt a rejigged attack, which brought recalls for Ings and Bailey, answered the call for greater excitement and creativity.

In Chelsea’s case some of the latter is diminished when James is not around. Potter revealed that the right-back, who sustained a knee injury in the win at Milan, will spend the next four weeks in a brace. That would appear to make his presence for England at the World Cup finals in Qatar decidedly unlikely. For now Chelsea are simply relieved that Arrizabala­ga pulled off the impossible here.

 ?? Aston Villa. Photograph: David Davies/PA ?? Mason Mount pounces on an early error from Tyrone Mings to give Chelsea the lead at
Aston Villa. Photograph: David Davies/PA Mason Mount pounces on an early error from Tyrone Mings to give Chelsea the lead at
 ?? Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images ?? Kepa Arrizabala­ga of Chelsea makes a brilliant reflex save to deny Danny Ings and Aston Villa what looked a certain equaliser.
Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images Kepa Arrizabala­ga of Chelsea makes a brilliant reflex save to deny Danny Ings and Aston Villa what looked a certain equaliser.

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