The Mail on Sunday

Attack! Attack! Attack!

Forget Conte’s meek surrender, Chelsea are sold on Sarri-ball

- By Adam Crafton and Kieran Gill

THE hangover from the last time Chelsea faced Manchester City not only left supporters with splitting headaches but the players too — Eden Hazard in particular.

Used up front on his own and shorn of support, Hazard was a passenger as the then reigning Premier League champions surrendere­d, securing zero shots on target.

The Belgian later said: ‘I would not have got a touch even if we’d played for three hours.’

It was supposed to be a coming together of two heavyweigh­ts — the champions-elect against t he champions of Engl a n d . Instead, i t was Champs versus Chumps.

Eventually, the only remedy was to get rid of the root of the problem — Antonio Conte. That defensive 1-0 defeat was the beginning of the end for the Italian.

Now under the tutelage of Maurizio Sarri, there will be none of that from Chelsea today. No shutting up shop for 90 minutes, no hiding, no thinking you’re second best.

Such thoughts are not tolerated under this superstiti­ous chain-smoking former banker who, as if an antidote to Conte, insists there will be no compromisi­ng of attacking tactics.

He may have a depleted squad following the World Cup but Sarri is desperate to prove a point against Pep Guardiola’s City in the Community Shield.

Sarri, a friend of Guardiola who accompanie­d the Catalan on a visit to see the great Italian tactician Arrigo Sacchi on the Italian coast earlier this summer, had his own experience of facing City when his Napoli t e a m were drawn against the English team in last season’s Champions League.

Napoli lost 2-1 away and 4-2 at home, yet Guardiola described Sarri’s outfit as ‘probably the best’ team he had faced in his career. However, in the match at the Etihad, Napoli’s bold approach saw them 2-0 down within 13 minutes, although they did halve the deficit as the game wore on.

Sarri recalled: ‘It’s difficult for everybody to play against City. I played t hem in November, in the best moment of City’s season. And it was very hard, very difficult. The first 20 minutes was a nightmare, it was horrible.’

Yet Sarri insists Chelsea will be bold and go toeto-toe with City rather than focus on restrictin­g their opponents. At l ast, perhaps, Roman Abramovich may have hi s l ongdesired freewheeli­ng football

with S arr i’ s approach.

‘I’d like for my players to have personalit­y, to think in their mind that we are at the same level,’ said the Italian. ‘Maybe at the moment it’s not true, but they have to start to think that they can play against everybody in every stadium. I’d like to defend if it’s possible in the other team’s half. Sometimes it’s not possible.’

Sarri, 59, is certainly his own man. His history tells us that, and so has Chelsea’s preseason. He wears track

suits on the touchline

and prefers his players to wear plain black boots, detesting signs of ostentatio­usness. He forces his squad to repeat drills to the extent they risk suffering recurring dreams of the manoeuvres he teaches them. With 30-plus set-piece routines, you can see why.

While on the Aviva Stadium touchline in Dublin during Chelsea’s midweek friendly against Arsenal, Sarri appeared to pull an e-cigarette out of his pocket for an occasional puff. Such behaviour is banned in England, of course, though

Sarri is not one to shy away from cont r oversy, ei t her. He once flipped a middle finger towards Juventus fans while at Napoli. He has also been accused of sexism and homophobia, though he insisted at his internal interviews with director Marina Granovskai­a and then subsequent Chelsea unveiling that is not the case.

While away on tour, Sarri continued to learn English on a daily basis. To his credit, not once in Australia, France or Dublin did he answer a question in his native Italian.

On the pitch, there are sure signs that his ‘Sarri-ball’ style of play has been taken on board. The focus on passing, possession and a high press has been easy on the eye, part i c u l a r l y wi t h £ 5 7 mil l i o n Jorginho spreading play like he has been wearing royal blue for months. Today, Guardiola’s City will get their first taste.

‘We need Jorginho more than City,’ Sarri joked, ‘so it’s right that Jorginho is here. Pep already has great central midfielder­s. Fernandinh­o is a wonderful player. Jorginho is one of the steps to try to reduce the gap. He’s only the first. But the rest is to work hard and not look too much at the market.

‘ The last Premier League table told me City 100, Chelsea 70 points. We have to try to reduce 30 points and I know only one way: to work. My job is this, to improve my players. I don’t think every problem can be resolved by the market.’

 ??  ?? ISOLATED: Eden Hazard cut a lonely figure when Chelsea last played City
ISOLATED: Eden Hazard cut a lonely figure when Chelsea last played City
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