The sight of Mikel Obi strolling around
Chelsea’s midfield isn’t normally one to excite. But these aren’t normal
times for Chelsea and the team’s traveling support responded to the
midfielder’s performance in their 3-0 win at Crystal Palace on Sunday by
chanting his name throughout.
Guus Hiddink picked up the first win of his second spell in charge with a 3-0 win at Crystal Palace, Sky Sports reports.
The Nigerian has become accustomed to a
role on the fringes. A player synonymous with seeing out games, he didn’t start back-to-back Premier League matches at all during 2015. But
he’s begun 2016 with a second successive start and his presence could yet have a restorative quality for Chelsea.
Certainly, it seems likely that the
Chelsea supporters will be more comfortable focusing their praise on a
long-serving player not so associated with the recent problems under
Jose Mourinho. But Mikel appreciated it nevertheless. “It’s nice to see that,” he told Sky Sports afterward. “It was great.”
So was he. And yet, not too much has changed. Mikel is still strolling. Remarkably, he clocked a lower top
speed than any Palace player on the pitch, including Wayne Hennessey.
But time and again he got into the right positions to shut down the opposition and that’s part of what’s been lacking.
There were the tackles, interceptions,
clearances, blocks but even those details can be too showy for Mikel.
Instead, it’s the ball recoveries – the times he was in the right place
to pick up second balls and recycle possession – that really highlighted
his significance.
Mikel was the only player on either side
to gain possession of the ball as many times as they surrendered it on
Saturday – a statistic aided by his characteristically simple
distribution. The 28-year-old found a team-mate with 78 of his 82
passes.
Of course, this ball retention can often come with criticism. Paired with Nemanja Matic, as he was against
Manchester United at Old Trafford in midweek, it means Chelsea lose some
creativity in the middle of the pitch.
However, paired with Cesc Fabregas, as he was at Selhurst Park, the balance is better. Fabregas provided the through-ball for the game’s opening goal but Mikel did the rest,
covering for his midfield partner and giving Chelsea’s forward players the platform on which to play.
Both Crystal Palace manager Alan Pardew
and Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher said Fabregas “ran the show” but
Graeme Souness preferred to focus on Mikel’s contribution. “I don’t
think I’ve ever seen Mikel play so well,” said Souness. “He bossed that
area.”
It’s the job that Matic had done so well
in the past and failed so emphatically to do this season. Mourinho’s one-time “monster” and the man Fabregas enjoyed playing with because of
the “stability” he brings, has become unreliable.
The examples have already gone down in
the history of a calamitous season. There was a failure to close down
at Everton, being substituted on and off against Southampton sent off
at West Brom, with Mourinho’s reference to the confidence-sapping
misplaced pass against Aston Villa in between.
Mikel is less likely to be affected by
that – he rarely risks giving the ball away – and it’s telling that when
reintroducing Fabregas to the starting line-up, it was the Nigerian
rather than Matic whom caretaker boss Guus Hiddink entrusted with the
holding role. The manager is an admirer, as he stressed afterward.
“He played very well but also in the previous game,” said Hiddink. “He’s the ideal player in my option to bring balance to the team. If the team is not willing to defend well or hasn’t got the right balance, then you’ll concede a lot of goals. I
think John Obi can be one of the key figures in bringing back that
balance.
“On this podium very talented players
can explore their qualities. He reads the game very well, he knows where the strength of the opponent is and knows how to combat that. He has a very good sense, he doesn’t do it in a brutal way, he’s very elegant.
Someone who can defend so smoothly is very beautiful.”
Mikel is a veteran of Hiddink’s previous spell as manager in 2009. Indeed, he started 16 of the Dutchman’s 23
matches in charge last time around. Chelsea won 14 of them, including the FA Cup final, and drew the other two. As a result, Mikel remains unbeaten under Hiddink.
No wonder he is performing. Mikel feels
wanted again and duly delivered a display to match. “The atmosphere has
changed a bit and the players are more relaxed,” he explained in his post-match interview.
It’s understandable that Chelsea should play with a bit more freedom. After all, their Premier League season is
already all but over. But the sound of Mikel’s name reverberating around
Selhurst Park might just mark the start of the much-needed healing process at Stamford Bridge too.
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