The Warm-Up: Alvaro Morata shows post-Costa Chelsea the way forward, Pavel Nedved is back! Adam Hurrey



Adam Hurrey witnessed some title-race authority from the Premier League contenders this weekend...


MONDAY’S BIG STORIES
Morata chooses his moment with perfect timing

If ever there was a moment to move into a new gear and bag your first Premier League hat-trick, this was it. Alvaro Morata has been greeted with a precise balance of admiration and scepticism since his arrival at Chelsea, as the apparent Plan B after Romelu Lukaku opted for Old Trafford and Diego Costa dug his heels in. The Spaniard had made a tidy start to Premier League life, but was still waiting for a dominant performance to confirm that he was a credible line-leader.

This past week added a layer of pressure. The return of Costa to Atletico Madrid was finally formalised, which – in tandem with Chelsea’s bluntness in the Stamford Bridge stalemate with Arsenal – highlighted the net result of their striking exchange: namely, an aggressive, decisive presence up front.

Away to Stoke, Morata flourished. Within 90 seconds, he raced beyond the hosts’ patched-up defence to finish with what the industry terms as “aplomb”. His second was another hugely encouraging showcase of poise, pace and polish, as he strode towards goal and sidefooted beyond Jack Butland. The match ball was secured with a simple finish – thanks to his serial assister Cesar Azpilicueta – but, most importantly, demonstrated a repertoire beyond stealthy penalty-area headers.
Alvaro Morata of Chelsea celebrates scoring a goal during the Premier League match against Stoke City

Alvaro Morata of Chelsea celebrates scoring a goal during the Premier League match against Stoke CityGetty Images

For all their Abramovich-era glories, Chelsea have not been noted for their subtleties up front. The dynamic Didier Drogba and Diego Costa grabbed the attention, but there was a sense of all-or-nothing about them. Morata might just deliver the unfussy consistency they have always quietly craved.
Manchester clubs continue to provide fascinating contrast

After half a dozen rounds of the Premier League season, a semblance of a title-race dynamic has been formed. But, for all Jose Mourinho’s control-freakery and Pep Guardiola’s supposedly top-heavy tactics, one number stands out: Manchester United and Manchester City have conceded just two goals each so far.

The means by which they continued their rock-solid starts could not have been more different this weekend, however. United ground out their 1-0 victory at Southampton with what one national newspaper described as “callous efficiency and a charming stubbornness”, with Mourinho applauding his team’s necessary dirty work with such determination that he strayed out of his technical area one too many times and was sent to the stands in injury time. Goalscorer Romelu Lukaku celebrated at the final whistle as if he knew that these were three points that could make all the difference come May.
Manchester United's Romelu Lukaku scored the winner at Southampton

Manchester United's Romelu Lukaku scored the winner at SouthamptonPA Sport

As for City, their hot collective knife needed no encouragement to slice through the butter of Roy Hodgson’s utterly impotent Crystal Palace.

“We have less points than last season,” Guardiola noted after the 5-0 glorified training session, “but I think we have more goals, conceded less and the feeling is a little bit better. But it’s just September.”

Guardiola’s textbook playing-downage might be wise at this early stage, but no Premier League side can match City’s sheer breadth of attacking options. Sergio Aguero was packed in ice at the hour mark, and Fabian Delph stepped out of the shadows to get in on the goalscoring act for the crowning goal, the only of the five that didn’t feel like a routine training-ground tap-in.

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