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Saturday, May 13, 2017

How the title was won


How the title was won



‘We know this year won’t be easy for us. If we think about the 10th position, it was a bad season for us. We all know that, but we must think about the present and work hard every day, week and month to achieve something important for us, the club and the fans. The supporters need to find a team who are ready to fight until the end to compete with others.



'I hope we can surprise people, that there is a small flame flickering that can grow into a blazing inferno.’

When Antonio Conte arrived at Stamford Bridge last July, on the back of a good European Championships in charge of his native Italy, he inherited a squad full of ability but low on confidence.

Most had experienced the ups and downs of the two previous years: the fantastic title and League Cup-winning 2014/15 campaign, and then the disappointment that followed as we recorded our lowest points tally for a couple of decades.

The big question, then, was how they would respond to their new boss’s methods. This was a man who had galvanised Juventus – the club he represented for the majority of his impressive playing career – by winning three Serie A titles in a row and even going a whole campaign undefeated. They had finished seventh the season before Conte took over, and now, on the back of the foundations he laid, they will soon be competing in their second European Cup final in three years.

At Euro 2016, his Italy side reached the quarter-finals, only defeated on penalties by Germany. Conte’s tactical acumen and passion stood out in France, and the feeling was those qualities would stand him in good stead for a Premier League campaign that looked set to be the most competitive ever.

There were six realistic title contenders, plus reigning champions Leicester City and others who perhaps harboured hopes of repeating the Foxes’ astonishing triumph.

The bookmakers installed Conte’s Chelsea as fourth favourites before a ball was kicked. Not many in the media felt we could do it: the BBC, for example, asked 33 of their pundits and commentators to predict the top four. Most thought Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City or Jose Mourinho’s Manchester United would emerge on top. Three went for Chelsea (a tip of the hat, then, to Trevor Sinclair and Match of the Day commentators John Motson and Steve Wilson!).
‘We are pleased to have N’Golo with us. I think he is a player that doesn’t speak a lot but he does fight and it’s very important, a good guy, humble and with a great will to work.’

Pat Nevin, of this parish, explained in the same prediction page he didn’t think Chelsea would finish in a Champions League position unless a centre-back and left-back were acquired before the transfer window closed.

He got his wish. Marcos Alonso, a Spaniard with Premier League experience at Bolton and Sunderland, joined from Fiorentina, and then, thrillingly, cult hero David Luiz returned to west London after two years in Paris. Nevin had long been a huge fan of his.


Their arrivals followed on from a trio of acquisitions earlier in the summer: back-up keeper Eduardo, young Belgian striker Michy Batshuayi and, most crucially of all, N’Golo Kante from Leicester. The dynamic midfielder had been a revelation in his first year in England, the heartbeat of the team that so unexpectedly won the league. It was quite a coup.

‘When I was in Italy I liked to say the manager is like a tailor. You must build the best dress for the team. You have to respect the characteristics of the players and the talents of the players and then you decide.’


The next question was how Conte would set his team up. Three at the back had been his preference at Juve and then with the national team, but there was no sign of such a formation during pre-season when 4-2-3-1, 4-2-4 and 4-1-4-1 shapes were all sampled. It was with the last of those that the Blues lined up for the first game of the season, a Monday night home fixture with West Ham.

It materialised into as hard-fought a London derby as you might expect, settled very late on by a low Diego Costa drive that sparked delirious scenes on and off the pitch. Nobody at the Bridge celebrated as joyously as Conte. It was one of many signs of things to come.

Another was an excellent performance from Eden Hazard who opened the scoring. And though the Hammers levelled and it looked for a while like we would begin the season with the kind of frustrating home draw that hampered 2015/16, Diego Costa came up trumps.

Five days later he repeated the trick at Watford after Batshuayi had opened his Chelsea account. A steely determination and some clinical finishing meant it was six points and not two from the opening fortnight.


Burnley were soundly beaten to cap a perfect August, before points were dropped for the first time at Swansea at the start of September’s action. It would prove the season’s defining month.

A Friday night loss at home to Liverpool followed and then came a first-half capitulation at Arsenal the following week. That result, and in particular his team’s performance, left Conte angry.


‘We must work a lot to improve and change the situation because now we are only a great team on paper, not on the pitch,’ he said afterwards at the Emirates.


Nine goals conceded in four games was perhaps his principle concern, and 10 minutes into the second half in north London he introduced Alonso and switched to a 3-4-3 formation with the Spaniard deployed as a left wing-back.

The Blues never looked back.

‘In the past I started my season with other teams with one idea of football, and then I changed it because I saw the system for these players wasn’t good.’


Chelsea kicked off at Hull on the first day of October in eighth place, and the same number of points adrift of leaders Man City.

Three at the back was chosen from the start with David Luiz in the middle, Gary Cahill to his left and Cesar Azpilicueta to his right. Victor Moses had been a part of Conte’s plans from the start and having already made some positive contributions off the bench, the Nigerian was selected at right wing-back, with Alonso on the opposite flank.

That quintet would start the next 21 league games together over a six-month period, forming the backbone of a team that would, before long, be sitting pretty at the top of the table.

On Humberside a clean sheet was kept, and at the other end, Willian and Diego Costa struck delicious second-half netbusters. The goals kept on coming: three in the next game against Leicester, four against Man United, two at Southampton and then, most spectacularly, five against Everton on Bonfire Night. It was as sizzling a Chelsea display as any in recent years.


Perhaps most satisfyingly for Conte, we didn’t concede in those games, either. In fact, we allowed just six shots on our goal in as many hours of football. The new-look back three was well and truly working, and not only to the benefit of our defending.

Hazard looked comfortable cutting in and occasionally playing more centrally, with Pedro bringing a goal threat to the attack on the other side. The increasingly influential Kante scored a memorable solo goal against Man U and Moses and Alonso also chipped in, against Leicester and Everton respectively.

Following the November international break, we ground out a hard-fought victory at Middlesbrough. For the first time, a round of Premier League fixtures finished with Chelsea at the summit. Only eight weeks had passed since the Arsenal humbling.

‘In this period to talk about the title is not right. We have to improve a lot; we have a long way in front of us. It’s important to stay humble and continue to work, and trust in our work.’


Big tests awaited. Tottenham came to the Bridge unbeaten and subsequently opened the scoring, Thibaut Courtois beaten for the first time in 10 hours. But the Blues roared back with character, quality and goals either side of the break from Pedro and Moses. The unbeaten home record against Tottenham extended into its 28th year; the winning league sequence now stood at seven games.

An eighth looked in doubt when Man City took the lead a week later, but at this point it seemed nothing would throw Conte’s men off course. Diego Costa, Willian and Hazard delivered devastating counter-attacking goals and the Blues left the North-West four points clear of Guardiola and co.


A trio of awkward-looking fixtures preceded Christmas but we showed we had substance as well as style, edging West Brom, Sunderland and Crystal Palace out by a goal to nil. Diego Costa at his very best had supplied the knockout blows in the two lunchtime weekend kick-offs, and the long midweek trip to the Stadium of Light between them was settled by a fine Cesc Fabregas strike and an even better last-second save from Courtois. It was the stuff of champions.

The year finished with entertaining home wins over Bournemouth (3-0) and Stoke (4-2). We had now equalled Arsenal’s record for consecutive Premier League victories in a single season, 13, having not dropped a point in October, November or December.

‘During my experience as a footballer I won a title with eight points more, and another time I lost in the same way.
‘For this reason, I think I have a bit of experience to manage this situation and try to keep our antennas very high.’


Tottenham put a halt to that club-record run but we bounced back with comfortable victories over Leicester and Hull, and at the start of our FA Cup campaign, too.

Four points from Liverpool away and Arsenal at home was a good return, those big games lit up by spectacular goals from David Luiz, his first since returning, and Hazard.

The league action then somewhat dried up with only four fixtures to contest in the seven weeks following the derby win over the Gunners. An extremely tough game at Burnley finished all-square but again the response was good as we recorded three straight wins, against Swansea, West Ham and Stoke. The latter in particular was special for Cahill’s late winner. The England defender had been captain in John Terry’s absence and spent much of the campaign popping up with crucial goals, none more important than his thumped finish in the Potteries with time running out. It meant we headed into the March international break 10 points clear, with 10 games to play.

‘You win and you lose as a team. We are a team in every situation. Chelsea was an underdog at the start of the season, but now we stay at the top and we want to keep this position.’


Considering we had only lost to Liverpool, Arsenal and Tottenham, the defeat at home to Palace once the action resumed came as quite as shock, but it was no April fool. For once our shooting boots had deserted us, but four days later Hazard provided the magic touches as we battled our way to victory over Man City at the Bridge. A serious obstacle had been hurdled.

By now, it was apparent our great rivals Tottenham would be providing the sternest test to our title credentials. Arsenal were long out of the running, Liverpool and City too inconsistent and Man U beset by home draws.

So Spurs’ late comeback at Swansea on the night we beat City kept the pressure on, and they followed that up with a demolition of Watford before we faced Bournemouth. The gap was only temporarily cut to four points that weekend as we picked the Cherries off on the South Coast.

We had no such luck at Old Trafford on Easter Sunday. Injury and illness affected the team selection and those who did play were off colour. Conte later admitted this was the lowest point in the title race. The gap was now four points.

‘We are doing a great job, a miracle if you consider last season and the problems we had. For this reason, we must have great enthusiasm to play these last six games, with passion and a will to fight and win. If we are able to win we must be proud. Otherwise we must clap another team.’


In the first of our remaining six games we swatted Southampton aside. Tottenham then just about beat Palace the following night. We made light work of Everton at Goodison Park on the Sunday, set on our way by a cracking Pedro strike. Spurs responded hours later by beating Arsenal. Our lead stayed at four points, but now there were just four games to go.

The ball was in Tottenham’s court as they headed a few miles south-east to play West Ham. Win there and only a solitary point would separate the top two ahead of our home fixture with Middlesbrough on the Monday.

The Hammers had other ideas, however, dishing out a derby defeat that seriously damaged the title hopes of Mauricio Pochettino and his players. We looked like a team who knew they were close to something very special when Boro turned up at the Bridge, dominating and dismantling them with a display of quick, incisive football. It was the kind of performance that had lit up so much of our season.

The target was down to three points. A win at West Brom would do it. Enter substitute Michy Batshuayi to pierce the Albion Wall, as he had done in the first away game at Watford. Our defence held firm. You wait three months for this London team's clean sheet and then three come along together. As it was two years earlier, a 1-0 win was sufficient to claim no.1 spot.


It has been a mighty collective effort, inspired by the brilliant management of Conte. So good were performances across the team it is hard to single out one individual above others, but Kante winning the PFA Player of the Year and FWA Footballer of the Year awards pointed to the stunning impact he has made.

Diego Costa with 20 league goals to date and Thibaut Courtois 16 clean sheets contributed match-winning moments at either end of the pitch. The three central defenders in front of the Belgian keeper have been sturdy and consistent, none more so than Cesar Azpilicueta who is yet to miss a minute of league action this term.

The rise to prominence of Moses and Alonso has been an unexpected delight, and whether it was Matic or Fabregas lining up alongside Kante, the middle of the park has created and destroyed in equal measure. Hazard, back to his mercurial best, was only beaten to the individual awards by Kante. On the other side Pedro and Willian’s speed, skill and eye for goal have often proved the difference in tight games.

There have been important minutes for youngsters such as Nathaniel Chalobah and Ruben Loftus-Cheek as well as the wise old head Terry, in his last season at the club. Branislav Ivanovic and Oscar, two players we bid a January farewell to, also played their part in the first half of the season.

So, Chelsea are the champions again. Conte’s wish for us to surprise people came true. The flickering flame he inherited grew into the blazing inferno he dreamed of, as he watched his Blues engulf all before them.

More Information : Chelseafc.com

David Luiz: Dream come true

David Luiz: Dream come true


David Luiz is delighted his decision to come back to Stamford Bridge has been vindicated by winning his first Premier League title.


The Brazilian has now contributed to three consecutive national championships between his time with Paris Saint-Germain and second spell at Chelsea, having returning to Stamford Bridge last summer following two years in France. He could not be more pleased after securing his latest honour at The Hawthorns on Friday night.

'I'm happy, very happy,' he said. 'It's my first Premier League title. When I decided to come back here it was because of this. I was dreaming of one day winning the Premier League, so I'm very happy because my dream has come true.

'To win a title in any country you need to be better than the others. There are 20 teams and they all want to win, so it's never easy. I'm so happy to win this Premier League title, my first one, so it's time to celebrate.'

For David Luiz, these times of joy and celebration also bring home how fortunate he is to spend his life doing what he loves.

'We work hard every day to have this kind of moment. I think my life is great. God is great, he gives me health, he changed my family's life and I try to enjoy every day, because every day is a gift for us. But of course in my professional life, when you have this kind of opportunity to celebrate a big title, it is amazing.

'We have a fantastic job. We are lucky, blessed with a gift to wake up every day to have this kind of opportunity. It's a gift to play football. These are the great feelings I had when we scored the winning goal – the passion and the love for football, for my life.'


The feeling of being champions is made even sweeter for the defender by knowing how hard he and the team have had to work to achieve that success, both against determined and stubborn opponents in West Bromwich Albion in the game that sealed the title, and throughout a fiercely competitive Premier League campaign.

'They made us work all season, not just on Friday night,' he admitted with a characteristic grin. 'To win a single match here in the Premier League is always difficult and Friday was a great game. West Brom have a great team. Also at Stamford Bridge it was so difficult to win against them, but we did this with great patience.

'We were positive in the game. We knew it would be a game like this. Their plan is always so difficult to play against, they defend very, very well, they have physical players, but we were passionate, we were intelligent and we scored in the right moment. We played a great game.'

David Luiz also had words for the mastermind of our 2016/17 title triumph, Antonio Conte, praising the effect the Italian manager and his methods have had on the squad in his first year in English football.


'He likes to work, that is his secret. He loves to work, he works with passion every day. I'm so happy for him because it's never easy to come here in your first season and grab the title, but he deserves it,' said our No.30, who also feels it was important to celebrate with the supporters at The Hawthorns.

'We work for them. They are behind us every day, every single match, at Stamford Bridge, away from Stamford Bridge, outside London, so of course it is a pleasure to be with them, to say thank you to them.'

Of course, the Blues' season is far from over despite having already landed the Premier League title, with our final league fixtures against Watford and Sunderland, both at Stamford Bridge in the coming week, before we attempt to get our hands on another trophy in the FA Cup final against Arsenal at Wembley on 27 May.

'There's still some work to do, not just in the final, there are still two league games to go, so let's rest a bit and prepare ourselves.

'If I say I'm not thinking about winning the Double, I am a liar! Of course we think about this, but we need to think day by day, rest well, keep ourselves very good in these next two games to have a top performance against Arsenal. It will be a difficult game against a fantastic team, so we need to be at a high level.'

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More Information :Chelseafc.com

Friday, April 22, 2016

Champions League and Europa League qualification for Premier League teams explained

Champions League and Europa League qualification for Premier League teams explained



Who will go into the Champions League and Europa League group stages? Who faces qualifying for those competitions? And how could Chelsea salvage a European spot?


With the season reaching its climax, a complicated pattern of potential outcomes means domestic and European results will have a major effect on a number of Premier League clubs and their fixture list in 2016/17.

Here, we explain the permutations…

Methods of qualifying for the Champions League and Europa League


There are several ways Premier League teams can qualify for the Champions League and Europa League.


League position 

Winners will be seeded in the Champions League group stage. Second and third also make the group stages. Fourth would qualify for Champions League play-off round - although this is not currently assured. There are a further three positions for Europa League qualification which will be split between cup winners and league positions.

- Champions League win 

 Guarantees a place in the group stage of the Champions League for the following season.

- Europa League win - 

Guarantees a place in the Champions League play-off round for the following season but could also secure a group stage spot.

- FA Cup win - 

Guarantees a Europa League group stage spot.

- League Cup win - 

Guarantees a Europa League third-qualifying round spot.

European limits


No more than five clubs can enter the Champions League and no more than three can enter the Europa League from one national association.

Sky Sports

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Tottenham must hold on to stars to continue Pochettino progression

Tottenham must hold on to stars to continue Pochettino progression

Harry Kane's prematch posting of a pack of hungry lions on social media ended up being the perfect prediction of Tottenham Hotspur's 4-0 ravaging of Stoke City on Monday night. Premier League leaders Leicester City, currently fretting about how long Jamie Vardy might be banned for, may be five points clear at the top but are now looking warily over their shoulders.

Even if Mauricio Pochettino's team fall short of winning the title, the 2015-16 season will still have been Spurs' finest of the Premier League era. The club has not finished second since 1962-63, the era of legends like Jimmy Greaves, Dave Mackay and John White. Even in the glory days when Glenn Hoddle and company were winning consecutive FA Cups in 1981-82 and the UEFA Cup in 1984, the club never came so close to being the best team in English football.

This year's "St Totteringham's Day," when Arsenal's superiority over their North London rivals in the league table is celebrated, looks unlikely to happen. For the first time since 1995, Spurs can prove they are the better team.

At 22, Kane has become the most complete forward in the Premier League; the 20-year-old Dele Alli, who joined Kane in scoring twice at Stoke, is the breakout star of the season. The pair are young guns of the type that rivals will jealously covet, and in days gone by would have fancied their chances of signing. Indeed, amid the many mixed messages surrounding Jose Mourinho's candidacy to succeed Louis van Gaal at Manchester United, it has been strongly suggested that Kane is much admired by Mourinho.

Yet if Tottenham wish to make this season anything other than an anomaly, a sliver of success achieved while usual suspects like Chelsea and Manchester City have slumped, then the loss of Kane, or any other of Pochettino's stars, should not be allowed to happen. However, previous history and the club's current predicament suggests it can't be ruled out.

Gareth Bale, sold to Real Madrid for €100 million in 2013; Dimitar Berbatov, sold to Man United for £30.75m in 2008; Michael Carrick, sold to United for £18m in 2006 -- all stars who have followed the historic pattern of Paul Gascoigne's 1991 sale to Lazio for £5.5m and Chris Waddle's to Marseille for £4.5m in 1989. Each deal came about because of a transfer fee too great to resist.

Might things be different now? Through gaps in the high wooden boards that surround the construction site currently bordering the club's White Hart Lane home can be viewed a good reason why Tottenham may not be able to turn down good money. The Northumberland Project, or "New White Hart Lane," estimated to be complete at the start of the 2018-19 season, will become a 61,000-capacity stadium, a new home for the club, and for NFL games, too. It will cost an estimated £400m, the type of sum that even billionaire financier owner Joe Lewis cannot easily lay his hands on.

An unavoidable cost of that project is likely to be the regression of the team. Tottenham need only look towards Arsenal to see how a stadium project can affect performance on the pitch. Arsene Wenger, when asked last week about the deal that will see West Ham United pay just £2.5m annual rent from next season for the Olympic Stadium, did not shirk the opportunity to remind of the constraints that building the Emirates placed on him.

"I say to West Ham: 'Well done. You have won in the lottery and you do not need to sweat like I did for long years, and fight for every pound'," Wenger said, recalling a time when stars had to be cashed in when clubs of greater cash-flow came calling. While rivals in England and Europe spent freely, Wenger was forced to retrench, as his unearthing of talent served others. Ashley Cole joined Chelsea (£5m-plus William Gallas); Thierry Henry (£16m) and Cesc Fabregas (around £35m) joined Barcelona; Samir Nasri (£24m) and Emmanuel Adebayor (£25m) joined Manchester City and Robin van Persie joined Manchester United for £24m.
Construction of the £390m Emirates stadium at Ashburton Grove -- "Cash-Burning Grove" as some named it -- began in January 2004, midway through Arsenal's unbeaten Premier League season (their last title) and Wenger has frequently intimated that he was handcuffed in his prime, just when he could have dominated English and European football. Tottenham, a club further behind in its development than Arsenal were back then, are likely to be even more hampered.

How might Tottenham's manager react if the brakes are put on, and assets sold from under him? "I think you need to know, and the people need to know, that this is a very tough period for us," Pochettino said in February, after Spurs had failed to land transfer-window back-up for Kane, their sole senior centre-forward. "We need to be careful because we need to arrive at the new stadium in very good condition to try to fight for everything."

With clever signings like Alli (£5m from MK Dons) and Eric Dier (£4m from Sporting Lisbon), the Argentinian has overseen a transfer profit of £6.3m since his summer 2014 arrival, after chairman Daniel Levy stressed in September that "pragmatic player trading has been important in the way we have run the business of the club."

Such sterling work has won Tottenham's manager much admiration across football, with Sir Alex Ferguson said to support his candidacy if Ryan Giggs does not replace Van Gaal at United. After playing for and coaching Espanyol, Pochettino also retains a home in Barcelona, whose eponymous club may soon be looking for new management if Luis Enrique cannot arrest his team's current slide.

The concern for Tottenham is that, just as the club has finally made its way towards the top of the pile, the cost of progress and a new stadium will be the loss of the playing and coaching assets that have got them there.

John Brewin is a staff writer for ESPN FC. Follow him on Twitter @JohnBrewinESPN.
ESPNFC

Ross County FC's website accidentally deleted

Ross County FC's website accidentally deleted


The website of Scottish League Cup winners Ross County was accidentally deleted, causing problems with selling tickets.
The Dingwall-based Scottish Premiership outfit uses web hosting firm 123-reg.
The company, which hosts 1.7m sites in the UK, has said an error made during maintenance "effectively deleted" what was on some of its servers.
David O'Connor, of Ross County, said the issue came amid the club's build up to next Sunday's game against Celtic.
The Staggies' website went down on Saturday and was not restored until Tuesday afternoon.
Mr O'Connor said: "Online is a crucial part of our ticket sales, selling merchandise and the website is where fans go to to reserve seats on buses and find match information."
While the website was unavailable, supporters were asked to contact the club by phone, or visit the stadium to buy tickets.
But Mr O'Connor said: "Coming to the ground is not easy for the fan who works nine to five. Our fan base is always widely spread out across the Highlands and it means supporters having to travel quite a distance to get to Dingwall."
Earlier this week, 123-reg started a "recovery process" but advised customers with their own data backup to rebuild their own websites.

Monday, April 18, 2016

High-flying Leicester City are Premier League myth busters

High-flying Leicester City are Premier League myth busters



Leicester City are ripping up the rule book with their extraordinary Premier League title charge.

Claudio Ranieiri's side were rated as 5000-1 outsiders for the title after narrowly avoiding relegation at the end of last season, but they sit five points clear of second-placed Tottenham after snatching a 2-2 draw against West Ham on Sunday.

With just four games of the campaign remaining, Leicester are now within touching distance of the first top-flight title in their 132-history - an achievement that would rank as one of the greatest in the history of the game.

Here, we look at some of the myths Leicester have busted on their astonishing rise to the top of the Premier League table…

You have to spend big



History suggests you have to spend big to win big in the Premier League, but Leicester's expenditure on wages and transfers is a fraction of their more illustrious rivals'. PFA Player of the Year nominees Riyad Mahrez, Jamie Vardy and N'Golo Kante cost £350,000, £1m and £5.6m respectively, and the most expensive recruit in their squad is Shinji Okazaki at just £7m.
Their favoured starting XI of Kasper Schmeichel, Danny Simpson, Robert Huth, Wes Morgan, Christian Fuchs, Kante, Danny Drinkwater, Marc Albrighton, Okazaki, Mahrez and Vardy cost a meagre £20m to put together - an eighth of the overall total spent by Manchester City in the summer transfer window alone.

You need title-winning experience




Leicester's heroics also prove title-winning experience might not be all it's cracked up to be. While the likes of Morgan, Drinkwater and Vardy formed the spine of the Foxes team that won the Championship in 2014, former Chelsea defender Robert Huth is their only player to have lifted the Premier League trophy.
In fact, the only other Leicester squad members to have won top-flight titles are fringe players Gokhan Inler, who won two Swiss Super League titles with Zurich earlier in his career, and Marcin Wasilewski, who won three Belgian Jupiler League titles during his time at Anderlecht.

Rotation is key


Sir Alex Ferguson used to extol the virtues of squad rotation at Manchester United and Claudio 'Tinkerman' Ranieri was one of its biggest advocates during his time at Chelsea, but the Leicester manager has ditched his old habits and embraced continuity at the King Power Stadium.
Leicester's starting line-up picks itself, with Ranieri naming an unchanged team for the sixth consecutive Premier League game against West Ham. If it wasn't for Vardy's sending off on Sunday, you could bet that team would have stayed the same against Swansea this weekend.

The top four is impregnable


The top four has had a predictable feel to it in recent years, with Everton and Tottenham the only 'lesser' sides to join Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool in the Champions League places since the 2004/05 season.

Leicester, though, are turning the old order on its head and proving it's possible for anyone to gatecrash the elite. Last weekend's 2-0 win over Sunderland guaranteed a top-four finish for Ranieri's men - and now they're taking aim at the title.

Four-four-two is dead


Leicester have also shown the enduring effectiveness of a 4-4-2 formation. The Premier League's big guns have generally favoured 4-2-3-1 in recent years, with a lone frontman flanked by two advanced wide players, but the Foxes have adopted a more old school approach.
Ranieri uses two strikers together in front of a flat midfield four, with Vardy playing on the last man and looking to get in behind the opposition's defence while Okazaki drops deeper to help out defensively. It's simple but effective - and it may yet fire Leicester to the title.

Possession is key


Devotees of possession-based football have been left scratching their heads by Leicester's approach. The last three Premier League-winning sides have dominated the ball and averaged at least 55 per cent possession, but Leicester prefer to sit back, defend resolutely, and play on the counter-attack.
They rank 18th in the Premier League for possession and bottom for passing accuracy, and their direct style has flummoxed their rivals. "I love it," said Ranieri in September. "I would also like to keep possession of the ball but we don't have these characteristics in the team so I prefer to go straight away."

Passing accuracy rankings - Premier League 2015/16


Team Passing accuracy Rank
Arsenal         84.2%          1st
Man City         83.6%           2nd
Chelsea         82.4%         3rd
Man Utd       81.9%        4th
Leicester      70.1%               20th

Sunday, April 17, 2016

The Football Manager Team of the Season announced

The Football Manager Team of the Season announced


The Football Manager Team of the Season has been announced at The Football League Awards 2016.

For the first time, the award recognises 11 outstanding players and one manager that have excelled across the three divisions of the Sky Bet Football League this season.   
  
The all-star line-up was revealed at the gala ceremony at Manchester Central on Sunday evening in front of over 600 guests from clubs, sponsors and the football industry. 

The Football League Awards 2016 was being hosted in Manchester for the first time, the same city in which The Football League was officially formed 128 years ago to the day. In its 11th year, the awards ceremony celebrates on and off pitch excellence across The League’s 72 clubs. 

Based on a 4-3-3 formation, the team was selected after a local media representative - nominated by each club - selected their own team from the division their club played in. The selections were then put together to create a shortlist of players for each position, which a national judging panel then chose the final Football Manager Team of the Season with Opta’s player statistics assisting the selection process.   

The full Football Manager Team of the season is as follows: 

Goalkeeper: Adam Smith (Northampton Town) – A fans' favourite at Sixfields keeping 13 clean sheets and conceding just 39 goals in the club’s historic season. Smith’s impressive form has been key to Northampton being crowned champions of Sky Bet League 2. 

Defender: Bruno (Brighton & Hove Albion) – An ever-present in the Brighton team this season playing 3,344 minutes, the Spanish right-back has also added scoring to his game with his first goal of the season coming against Fulham on the 15th April. 

Defender: George Friend (Middlesbrough) – Friend enjoyed a memorable 2015 being named in the PFA Team of the Year and captaining Boro on his 150th appearance. The full-back has also been commended for his off pitch contributions in the local Teesside area, being named the PFA Player in the Community for 2016. 

Defender: Craig Morgan (Wigan Athletic) – The Latics’ club captain has been integral to their promotion push, helping to keep 15 clean sheets while contributing at the other end of the pitch with two goals this season. 

Defender: Daniel Ayala (Middlesbrough) - The Spaniard has starred as Boro have conceded just seven league goals at the Riverside in their race for automatic promotion, leaving them top of the Sky Bet Championship with just four games to play. 

Midfielder: Alan Judge (Brentford) – The energetic Republic of Ireland international has played over 3,100 minutes this season, scoring 14 goals and notching nine assists. The midfielder was shortlisted for the Sky Bet Championship Player of the Year. 

Midfielder: Bradley Dack (Gillingham) – A driving force behind Gillingham’s promotion push with 13 goals and nine assists, having played over 3000 minutes. 

Midfielder: Joey Barton (Burnley) – Barton’s experience and leadership has proved invaluable for Burnley this season as they look to achieve an immediate return to the Premier League. The midfielder has been ever-present, making 36 appearances in the Championship this season. 

Forward: Kemar Roofe (Oxford United) – The 23-year-old has enjoyed an outstanding season making 37 appearances and scoring 17 goals for the U’s, spearheading the clubs push for promotion as well as helping them to a Wembley appearance in the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy Final. 

Forward: Nicky Ajose (Swindon Town) – The top goal scorer in Sky Bet League 1 with 21 goals in 32 games, the young striker has been a shining light for Swindon Town in his first season at the Robins. 

Forward: Andre Gray (Burnley) – The front man has been central to the Clarets’ promotion push. In his first season at Turf Moor, Gray has scored 22 goals in 37 games for Burnley to add to the two goals he scored for Brentford in August to put him top of the Sky Bet Championship goalscorer chart. 

Manager: Chris Wilder (Northampton) – The mastermind behind Northampton’s historic campaign, as he has turned the club from relegation battles to champions of Sky Bet League 2. 

Many of the team were in attendance at the ceremony to acknowledge their inclusion in the special line-up. 

Shaun Harvey, Chief Executive of The Football League, said: "During another action-packed Football League season it is important to acknowledge outstanding performances, both on and off the pitch. 
  
“We’re delighted to recognise this special group of nominees who have shown exceptional levels of talent, dedication and achievement. Congratulations to everyone who was nominated and particularly our winners, all of whom are deserving of their accolade.” 

All the news, reaction and photos from the awards can be found via The Football League’s Twitter page, @football_league, while the awards ceremony was also broadcast live on The Football League’s YouTube channel. 

To find out more about The Football League Awards, and for a full list of award winners, visit www.FLAwards.com or search #FLAwards on Twitter. 

Read more at Football League