Enzo Maresca hails impact of Jadon Sancho after Chelsea’s win at Bournemouth

Jadon Sancho marked his first Premier League appearance in 12 months with an assist on his Chelsea debut.

George Sessions
Saturday 14 September 2024 22:23 EDT
Christopher Nkunku celebrates with Chelsea team-mate Jadon Sancho at Bournemouth (Alastair Grant/AP)
Christopher Nkunku celebrates with Chelsea team-mate Jadon Sancho at Bournemouth (Alastair Grant/AP) (AP)

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

Enzo Maresca hailed the impact of Chelsea attacker Jadon Sancho after he marked his debut with an assist for Christopher Nkunku’s winner at Bournemouth.

Sancho was introduced at half-time for his first Premier League appearance in 12 months after a spat with Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag last season.

While Sancho settled the rift with Ten Hag this summer, he joined the Blues on loan on transfer deadline day and set up the winner with a wonderful threaded pass into Nkunku, who turned inside the area and found the bottom corner in the 86th minute for the only goal on the south coast.

“Very happy, very happy for him. He was very good,” Maresca said of Sancho.

“I have a feeling that Jadon is a guy that needs love. This is what I thought when I spoke with him before he joined us.

“Also I know he has the desire to show the player he is, but for me, it is just to enjoy football. This is the reason why they play.

“Jadon helped us a lot but what he did tonight is exactly what we expected from him. As I said, I know Jadon very good because I watched him many, many times in the past and I know what he can give us.

“Then also Christopher was very good and not just because he scored but because he fought without the ball and Jadon was exactly the same.

“The performance second half changed completely but we need to learn these kind of things if we want to build something important and we want to win games, first of all we need the desire to win games, win duels and to fight together.”

Bournemouth enjoyed the better of the chances in the first half, with Marcus Tavernier firing an effort against the crossbar from 25 yards in the fourth minute before Evanilson set up Justin Kluivert, but Robert Sanchez produced a smart save.

Not long after Nicolas Jackson had been denied by Mark Travers, Bournemouth won a penalty when Evanilson raced on to Wesley Fofana’s poor back pass and was brought down by Sanchez.

However, the blushes of Fofana were spared when Evanilson saw his low shot pushed wide by Sanchez to continue his goal drought since a £40million move from Porto.

Maresca had seen enough and at half-time sent on Sancho, who immediately helped Marc Cucurella go close to teeing up Noni Madueke.

Sancho was in the thick of the action, setting up Jackson for another chance which the forward curled wide before he was booked for dissent, but his key moment arrived with four minutes left.

The Manchester United exile worked a yard of space on the left and passed into Nkunku, who got in between Marcos Senesi and Illia Zabarnyi too easily and slotted into the bottom corner to earn Maresca a narrow second Premier League win.

Andoni Iraola refused to criticise Evanilson for his penalty miss and was eager not to speak about referee Anthony Taylor after he handed out 14 yellow cards, which is a new Premier League record.

“Within 14, first yellows? Quite easy first yellows and then second yellows? Not easy but I will not focus on the referee. It hasn’t worked before so I will try not to focus on that,” Iraola insisted.

“I think we were the better team and deserve probably to win, but when you are against this kind of opposition and miss a penalty, hit the crossbar, hit the post, miss more chances, their keeper is good, you can think that at one moment in the game they will hurt us and it happened at the end.”

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in