?As Ayoze Perez tapped home Newcastle United’s third, rubber stamping Chelsea’s miserable day, the camera panned across to a man in a glossy tracksuit. His arms folded, looking like a depressed worker at the end of a long week waiting for his train home.
This same man, 366 days previous had been seen diving head first into a pile of bodies. Smile plastered across his face. Grabbing, pulling and pushing anything that would move. This was moments after he’d seen Michy Batshauyi net the goal that would give his side the Premier League crown in his maiden season in English football.
A year later, Antonio Conte might as well be a different man. The same determined Italian who stormed England’s top division now looks dishevelled, worn down and non plussed at anything that takes place in front of him.
Its been a pretty miserable season at Stamford Bridge. The final day sealed Chelsea to a fifth placed finish, 23 points off their total the previous season. The dethroned Champions left without Champions League football, without mounting a defence of any kind and a squad lacking any belief or dynamism needed for a club of Chelsea’s size and stature.
Chelsea finished 2017 with a 5-0 thrashing of a depleted Stoke City side. Nothing too impressive considering the Potters fate come May. The win left the West London club second, in front of Manchester United and 8 clear of fifth placed Tottenham Hotspur. Despite being miles off a rampant Manchester City side, in hindsight now, I’m sure Chelsea fans would wish for a time machine to take them back to what was then, the best it would get for their league campaign.
Since January, Chelsea have only picked up 8 wins from 17 games. Losing 6 and drawing the other 3. The side’s run of four wins against Southampton, Burnley, Swansea and Liverpool helped make the stats look a little more respectable but still look bleak when compared to the 14 wins the side picked up in the first half of the campaign.
His supposed replacement, Tiémoué Bakayoko’s struggles have brought further questions to the decision making of the club’s hierarchy. Conte, not long after the sale, insinuated that it was out of his hands and one he had to “accept”. Conte’s frustration at Chelsea’s structure is a battle he would always lose.
The most impressive aspect of Conte’s title win was the ability to transform a broken squad who finished 10th and take them to 1st. Getting the best out of the signings of Marcus Alonso and David Luiz and taking a stowaway in Victor Moses and making him a first team regular were things that heightened his achievement and showcased his tactical nouse.
Over the season, Conte has looked like a man waiting to be sacked. One of the main responsibilities of a manager is to motivate their players. If the man leading you doesn’t look interested, how is that supposed to reflect positively on the pitch. I accept professional players still have their pride to play for but it all has lead to a toxic environment.
The saying that a team will often reflect a manager couldn’t be more true for Chelsea. Last season, Chelsea played with intensity, determination and passion. This campaign, they looked disinterested, lacklustre and despondent, like their manager.
Chelsea are a few days from an FA Cup final against Manchester United which is the last chance for Antonio Conte and his players to save face. However, after yesterday’s result, its hard to see anything other than a United victory.
Regardless of the result on Saturday, Antonio Conte will leave Stamford Bridge a shadow of the man who electrified the league, who simply watched on as his empire crumbled in front of his eyes.
Let’