The Guardian

Caicedo’s long shot helps clinch European football for Chelsea

- Jacob Steinberg Stamford Bridge

When Mauricio Pochettino sits down with Chelsea’s board for the review that will determine whether he continues as head coach, perhaps he can point to the fact that he has imbued his collection of young talents with so much confidence that European football was secured in part thanks to Moisés Caicedo scoring from halfway.

It turns out that this is what £115m buys these days: crunching tackles, perceptive passing and a goal of the season contender.

Yet before merely looking at the extravagan­ce of the spending, it is worth rememberin­g that it has taken Pochettino’s coaching to knit everything together.

Pochettino refused to say whether he received assurances on his future from Todd Boehly after going out for “a very nice dinner” with Chelsea’s co-owner last Friday.

“All I can tell you is on Friday night, Todd invited me for a dinner and it was a very nice dinner together,” he said. “But I don’t know about the rumours about the review. My staff tomorrow are flying for their holidays. I am going to stay in London

nd for a few more days. I am always open. My phone is going to be on.”

This entertaini­ng 2-1 win against Bournemout­h was further proof that Chelsea, who will play in the Europa League rather than the Europa Conference League if Manchester City beat Manchester United in the FA Cup final, do not need more upheaval.

There are hints of unity at Stamford Bridge. Nobody was booing Raheem Sterling when he scored the goal that secured sixth place for Chelsea, while Caicedo’s improvemen­t since his move from Brighton last summer is evidence of the plan coming together. The midfielder started the campaign slowly and ended it by embarrassi­ng Bournemout­h’s goalkeeper, Neto, with his astonishin­g goal.

Chelsea being Chelsea, though, there would still be flashes of defensive frailty for Pochettino’s bosses to consider. Bournemout­h, who finished 12th in an impressive debut season for Andoni Iraola, halved the deficit through Benoît Badiashile’s own goal and should have completed the fightback in added time. Dominic Solanke could not believe that he fired over an open goal after Djordje Petrovic saved from Dango Outtara. Behdad Eghbali, José E Feliciano and Todd Boehly, Chelsea’s co-controllin­g owners, may have wondered why Bournemout­h were given so much space to counteratt­ack in the 94th minute.

Even so, Pochettino can point to finishing above Newcastle and United after five consecutiv­e wins. Hitherto disgruntle­d fans are seeing pulsating football and watching a defensive midfielder whose skillset is not confined to his ball-winning ability.

Chelsea were dominant before Caicedo’s opener. Bournemout­h were pushed back, Nicolas Jackson and Cole Palmer spurning early opportunit­ies, and the breakthrou­gh was not simply down to individual brilliance. As inspired as Caicedo’s moment was, the move had started with Jackson sending Sterling through on goal.

Neto flew out of his area, produced a fine tackle and prepared to clear, only to scuff the ball to halfway.

Caicedo was waiting. Urged to shoot by the crowd, he crept into Bournemout­h’s half and channelled his inner David Beckham. Neto was stranded as the ball sailed over him.

Perhaps liberated by such a school’s out goal – Caicedo’s first for the club – an air of silliness gripped both teams. Chelsea became slapdash. Marc Cucurella and Antoine Semenyo were booked after a clash. Milos Kerkez was punished for diving. Bournemout­h threatened through Marcus Tavernier and Ryan Christie.

Chelsea needed to wake up, particular­ly when Enes Unal missed another chance at the start of the second half. They responded when Palmer combined with Sterling, who drove into the area and scored with a shot that went in off Neto. It should have been game over. Bournemout­h, who started Solanke on the bench due to a hip issue, decided otherwise when Cucurella allowed Kerkez’s cross to reach Unal in the 49th minute. The striker’s weak shot struck Badiashile and looped over Petrovic.

There would be no clean sheet for Silva before he joins Fluminense. It became nervy, Solanke shooting wide after coming on and Petrovic denying Christie before the late drama.

Chelsea survived. The question is what comes next. There was no sign of Pochettino engaging with the crowd after full time. He stayed to watch the emotional farewell to Silva, but headed down the tunnel before the players went on a lap of appreciati­on.

 ?? BRADLEY COLLYER/PA WIRE ?? Moisés channels his inner Beckham
Moisés Caicedo embarrasse­s the Cherries keeper Neto with an audacious shot from the halfway line
BRADLEY COLLYER/PA WIRE Moisés channels his inner Beckham Moisés Caicedo embarrasse­s the Cherries keeper Neto with an audacious shot from the halfway line

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