Five things we learnt as Chelsea went 12 points clear after victory over Arsenal

Arsenal's title chances now appear over

Jack Pitt-Brooke
at Stamford Bridge
Saturday 04 February 2017 10:29 EST
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Chelsea are now 12 points clear at the top
Chelsea are now 12 points clear at the top (Getty)

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In late September, Arsenal battered Chelsea 3-0 and left the Blues out of the top four with no clear idea of where they were headed.

It is early February now and Chelsea avenged that defeat, winning 3-1 at Stamford Bridge to leave Arsenal firmly out of the title race and with everyone knowing what direction they are going in.

Antonio Conte's men went 12 points clear of the Gunners after Marcos Alonso, Eden Hazard and Cesc Fabregas gave them an unassailable lead.

Olivier Giroud's late consolation was as feeble as Arsenal's display on a day they will want to forget.

But what did we learn? Jack Pitt-Brooke was at Stamford Bridge....

1. Tactical changes did not pay off for Arsenal

For a manager not always known for his tactical ingenuity, Arsene Wenger did spring a surprise giving up his favoured 4-2-3-1 for a 4-3-3 in the first half. It was meant to provide more stability in the middle, with Alex Iwobi alongside Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, in front of Francis Coquelin.

It worked up to a point, with Arsenal stable in the game aside from the concession of the opening goal. But in the second half Wenger wanted to make Mesut Ozil more central, so he abandoned it to go back to 4-2-3-1, opening his team up and conceding the second goal.

2. Bellerin was not fit

(AFP/Getty Images)

Hector Bellerin was not fit enough to start against Watford on Tuesday night but Wenger decided to take a risk today and play the young right-back. But Bellerin, still struggling with an ankle injury, never looked fully ready for the match.

It should not have been too much of a surprise when he failed to jump high enough to the second ball after Petr Cech saved from Diego Costa’s header, beaten to it by Marcos Alonso, an incident in which Bellerin was injured and had to go off.

3. Ozil lacked interest and desire

On a day when Arsenal were steamrollered by Chelsea’s superior strength and desire, no-one encapsulated the difference between the two teams better than Mesut Ozil. A brilliant player on his day, he never got in the game, but did not always look as if he was trying to.

Ozil barely won a single 50-50, showing no real desire to win the ball or even to make things difficult for Chelsea. He ducked out of challenges, did not jump for headers and, when he found himself in wide areas, did not try to stop crosses. Defending is not his natural game but top players take responsibility and that is what Ozil has been failing to do for months.

4. The genius of Kante

What more can be said about N’Golo Kante? This was yet another masterclass of his brilliant skills, his power, his running, his football intelligence and his mastery of the whole midfield. He is going to drive his team to a second straight title and deservedly so.

Even when Arsenal switched to three in middle Kante and Nemanja Matic dominated the area. This was probably Matic’s best game this season, too, and he won every loose ball. For Chelsea to be stopped next season, opponents will have to wind a way to overpower or unpick that phenomenal pair. It will not be easy.

5.The title race is over

Today is only 4 February and yet there was a definite end of season feel about this tie. This was the end of Arsenal’s title race and it will take a desperately implausible Chelsea collapse for Manchester City or Tottenham to get near them.

The title race is over and we must now move onto other questions: who will go down? Will an English team win a European trophy? And can Chelsea win the double? It would be madness to bet against them.

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