The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Baggies Bridge Blitz

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CHELSEA manager Thomas Tuchel suffered the first defeat of his reign as struggling West Bromwich Albion took advantage of Thiago Silva’s red card to earn a stunning 5-2 win.

Tuchel had overseen a 14-match unbeaten run in all competitio­ns since replacing the sacked Frank Lampard in January.

But that impressive start came to an embarrassi­ng end as West Brom ran riot at Stamford Bridge.

Christian Pulisic put Chelsea ahead early in the first-half, only for Brazil defender Thiago to get his marching orders moments later for a second booking.

That proved the turning point as Albion’s Matheus Pereira struck twice in first half stoppage-time.

Mbaye Diagne grabbed West Brom’s third goal and Callum Robinson netted twice to leave Tuchel shell-shocked.

Mason Mount’s reply was no consolatio­n as Chelsea’s bid to qualify for next season’s Champions League via a top four finish in the Premier League suffered a significan­t blow.

The Blues, beaten for the first time in 10 league games, remain fourth for now, but both West Ham and Tottenham would go above them if they win today and tomorrow respective­ly.

After conceding just two goals in Tuchel’s reign, with seven consecutiv­e clean-sheets since the defence was last breached at Southampto­n in February, this was a rude awakening for Chelsea.

For the first time since 2011 against Arsenal, Chelsea conceded five goals at home in the league. It was the worst possible preparatio­n for their Champions League quarter-final first leg against Porto on Wednesday.

West Brom remain second bottom but their first league win at Chelsea since 1978 gives them a glimmer of hope in the fight to avoid relegation.

Sam Allardyce’s team are seven points from safety with eight games left.

Thiago was making his first Chelsea start since February 4 after recovering from a thigh problem, but he was completely out of touch on his return.

The early signs were ominous when Jorginho’s wayward pass was intercepte­d by

Pereira on the edge of the Chelsea penalty area, forcing Thiago into a cynical foul that earned him a yellow card.

Despite their sloppy start, Tuchel’s men took the lead in the 27th minute.

Marcos Alonso’s 25-yard free-kick cannoned back off the post and Pulisic was first to react as he alertly steered his shot past Sam Johnstone from close-range.

But Thiago gifted Albion a lifeline two minutes later when he jumped into a rash two-footed foul on Okay Yokuslu.

The 36-year-old could have no complaints about his first dismissal since he saw red while playing for Paris Saint-Germain in 2013.

In keeping with their erratic display, Chelsea were punished for some dismal defending in first half stoppage-time.

A long punt forward by Johnstone should have been dealt with easily, but Kurt Zouma allowed Pereira to run behind him and guide a superb lob over the exposed Edouard

Mendy.

Suddenly incapable of getting out of their own half, Chelsea fell behind with virtually the last kick of the half.

James surrendere­d possession and Diagne found Pereira, who danced through the shambolic Chelsea defence before guiding cool low finish past Mendy from 10 yards.

Chelsea nearly drew level immediatel­y when Johnstone made a hash of James’cross, forcing Semi Ajayi to turn Alonso’s shot onto the post.

Mount, on as a half-time substitute, nearly caught out Johnstone with a clever free-kick, but Chelsea suffered a hammer blow in the 63rd minute.

A flowing move from the visitors ended with Robinson running onto Darnell Furlong’s cross to smash a superb volley past Mendy from 12 yards.

Chelsea were in tatters and West Brom compounded their misery with a superb 68th minute break that featured a flurry of deft passes before Diagne slotted home.

Mount reduced the deficit with a closerange finish from Timo Werner’s pass in the 71st minute.

But Tuchel’s misery was complete in stoppage-time when Robinson struck again with a dinked finish.

Meanwhile, Real Madrid came themselves in the hunt for the La Liga title, courtesy of a two-nil win over Eibar at the Santiago Bernabéu. Goals from Marcos Asensio and Karim Benzema either side of the half were that was needed to go within three points of log leaders and city rivals Atletico Madrid.

Atletico Madrid (66) are away to Sevilla this afternoon.

Elsewhere, Norwegian midfielder Jens Petter Hauge snatched a late equalizer to salvage a point for AC Milan whose poor home run continued with a 1-1 draw against 10-man Sampdoria.

Sampdoria had dominated the first half an hour with Milan staying in the game thanks to saves from goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma, who denied Manolo Gabbiadini early and a Morten Thorsby header.

And the hosts were on the back foot after a foolish Theo Hernandez pass across midfield after 57 minutes allowed veteran Fabio Quagliarel­la to pounce and lob from a distance over Donnarumma who was out of his goal.

It was the 38-year-old Quagliarel­la’s 10th goal this campaign, reaching double figures for the fifth consecutiv­e league season, with his 174 Serie A goals making him the top scorer active in the Italian top flight.

Claudio Ranieri’s side went a man down just after their goal with Adrien Silva sent off after picking up a second yellow card for a foul on Samu Castillejo.

Ante Rebic came off the bench for the hosts and threatened with Hakan Calhanoglu denied by Sampdoria goalkeeper Emil Audero before Hauge broke through beating the rival defence and curling the ball into the corner.

The hosts missed a chance for a late winner with Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c sending through for Franck Kessie who rattled the woodwork.

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