The Herald (Zimbabwe)

EPL will miss Diego Costa

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LONDON. — It seemed like a strange substituti­on at the time. Now it looks to have acquired more significan­ce. There were two minutes left in the FA Cup final. Chelsea needed a goal to force extra time. They removed their scorer. Exit Diego Costa from the Wembley pitch — and now, seemingly, from Stamford Bridge. Two months after that anticlimac­tic ending, Arsenal and Chelsea reconvene for a rematch of sorts in Beijing on Saturday, minus the same.

LONDON. — It seemed like a strange substituti­on at the time. Now it looks to have acquired more significan­ce.

There were two minutes left in the FA Cup final. Chelsea needed a goal to force extra time. They removed their scorer. Exit Diego Costa from the Wembley pitch — and now, seemingly, from Stamford Bridge. Two months after that anticlimac­tic ending, Arsenal and Chelsea reconvene for a rematch of sorts in Beijing on Saturday, minus the same meaning and without Costa, the source of many a disagreeme­nt between the London rivals over the past three years.

Spared the start of pre-season training to negotiate a return to Atletico Madrid, he seemed guilty of premature celebratio­n when he was pictured partying in his native Brazil and his former club’s shirt at the weekend.

Costa has endured a swift, ignominiou­s descent from crucial to cast-off. Costa was dumped by text message, a potentiall­y costly error if it weakens Chelsea’s negotiatin­g position with Atletico — not to mention the clubs who know their needs to sign a striker have been exacerbate­d — and also an indication that Antonio Conte was no longer willing to let the forward dictate the terms.

But assuming this is it and that there is no improbable comeback, Costa leaves a strange, conflictin­g legacy, perhaps reflecting the divisive figure who appeared equally capable of proving destructiv­e and self-destructiv­e.

That part might be unfair: his 120 Chelsea games produced 59 goals and a solitary red card, even if it is a mystery that he was not expelled more often. An ongoing and unresolved debate is how much control the “wind-up merchant” retained on those occasions when Costa seemed more concerned with getting opponents sent off than scoring.

Costa’s volatility reflected Chelsea’s own in a period when they finished first, 10th and first again. In those trophy-winning campaigns, he was rather more potent before February.

In the brief slump of what was then the worst title defence in Premier League history, he was better from Boxing Day onward, but such form was never sustained for a whole season, let alone three.

He was one of Jose Mourinho’s best signings and one of those most culpable for getting the Portuguese the sack, the sort of player that opponents love to hate briefly attracted the ire of his own. Costa was even branded as one of the “three rats” responsibl­e for Mourinho’s departure on a banner.

He helped Chelsea win the Premier League twice, a feat beyond many with more consistent records. But he also was a reason why Chelsea did not win the league on two other occasions, even if he was blameless for the first: Mourinho opted not to sign a striker in January 2014, as he waited for Costa to become available in the summer.

It was a sign of his primacy in the Portuguese’s plans, and through that, Costa can be seen as the personific­ation of Chelsea’s short-term thinking — an on-field Mourinho. The manager has famously never lasted four years anywhere but tends to guarantee a title, if not more. Even Costa’s arrival was a reflection of how the immediate is prioritise­d at Stamford Bridge: Rewind to 2014 and Romelu Lukaku was excelling on loan at Everton. There were reasons to believe the fast-improving Belgian represente­d the better long-term bet.

Chelsea might yet rue not installing Lukaku as their starting striker, but Costa delivered straight away. He suited the ethos of a club with little patience. The cost of overlookin­g the future would have been measurable had Lukaku rejoined Chelsea this summer, instead of signing for Manchester United: A man sold for £28 million would have been priced at £75m, a £47m loss. Instead, another putative successor — whether Alvaro Morata, Andrea Belotti, Sergio Aguero or Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang — threatens to be similarly expensive.

Chelsea’s short-term gamble on Costa arguably paid off on the field. It would have also done so on the balance sheet had his mooted £76m move to Tianjin Quanjian materialis­ed; instead, the prospect of a vast profit has disappeare­d. — ESPN

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