The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Mount delivers again for Lampard as Chelsea ekes out big win

- By Steve Douglas

Four months into the season and Chelsea manager Frank Lampard appears no closer to knowing his best lineup following a $300 million offseason spending spree that delivered him a squad bursting with quality.

One player he knows he cannot do without is Mason Mount.

The England internatio­nal looked to be the man with the most to lose coming out of a summer when Kai Havertz, Hakim Ziyech and Timo Werner arrived at Stamford Bridge at great expense to add competitio­n to the attacking midfield and forward spots.

But there was Mount on Saturday, starting for Chelsea for the 12th straight English Premier League game — he has played 90 minutes in all of them — and grabbing a badly needed winner for Lampard against Fulham at Craven Cottage.

Mount’s 78th-minute goal in a 1-0 victory capped a man-of-thematch performanc­e where Chelsea’s more high-profile players again came up short against a team which played the entire second half with 10 men, following the 44th-minute sending-off of U.S. internatio­nal Antonee Robinson.

Werner came off the bench in the 75th and squandered a glorious, one-on-one chance in stoppage time, summing up a striker short of confidence after one goal in two months for club and country.

Havertz, signed for $92 million and supposedly a direct threat to Mount, never got onto the field in a sign that he is still not fully trusted by Lampard.

Ziyech was substitute­d after 75 minutes, having offered little.

Mount was there, of course, until the end. He is a trusted lieutenant of Lampard, who had the young, hard-working Englishman with him when manager of Derby County in the second-tier Championsh­ip in the 2018-19 season.

“His quality and attitude is brilliant,” Lampard said of Mount, who has started 16 of Chelsea’s 18 games — second only to N’Golo Kante.

Mount’s goal came when he drilled home a loose ball from a central position inside the area after Fulham goalkeeper Alphonse Areola scooped away a cross, and it brought Chelsea only its second win in its last seven league matches.

That poor recent run plunged Chelsea to ninth place and prompted scrutiny on Lampard, the club great who is in just his third year in senior soccer management and facing huge expectatio­ns this season.

“I won’t say I was blown away with the performanc­e,” he said.

CELEBRATIN­G ALONE

Also under scrutiny this weekend are goal-scoring players, with the British government having told teams to avoid close contact such as hugging and kissing during celebratio­ns as the country battles the coronaviru­s pandemic and remains in lockdown.

One player who stuck to the protocols was James Maddison, who scored Leicester’s first goal in its 2-0 win over Southampto­n and responded by waving away his approachin­g teammates and applauding himself repeatedly.

Harvey Barnes netted the second goal in second-half stoppage time at King Power Stadium.

Leicester jumped into second place with a joint-best 11th victory of the campaign, splitting leader Manchester United and champion Liverpool ahead of their much-anticipate­d match at Anfield on Sunday.

FIRST WIN

Sam Allardyce is known for his acts of escapology as a soccer manager, and it might be his greatest feat yet if he is able to keep West Bromwich Albion in the Premier League.

A month after taking charge of the relegation-threatened team, “Big Sam” — as he is widely known — got his first win at Wolverhamp­ton 3-2 in a Midlands derby. Matheus Pereira scored the winner with his second penalty of the game.

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