Can anyone catch Chelsea? On paper the title race looks extremely tight but as Melanie Leupolz and Ji So-yun assumed an imperious hold on midfield at Kingsmeadow and the goals flowed it was hard to imagine anyone toppling Emma Hayes’s defending champions from their pedestal.
When the final whistle blew an ultimately irrepressible Chelsea had extended their unbeaten Women’s Super League record to 33 games, leaving Rehanne Skinner to reflect on a first defeat since her installation as Tottenham’s manager in November.
“I’m so blessed with so many good players, we’ve got so much quality,” said Hayes, who has not only recruited very well but succeeded in persuading her firmament of stars to buy into a ‘side before self’ mantra. “Confidence across the squad is high regardless of who plays. My challenge now is to maintain those standards.”
Here Chelsea started in deceptively sluggish mode - “we’re human and we’re not all always at our best,” said Hayes - but once their manager had tweaked the team’s shape to 3-4-3 in order to pile pressure on Tottenham down the flanks the landscape altered almost beyond recognition.
Skinner’s side had begun by pressing their hosts high and hard and, for 20 minutes, it was impossible to write off their chances of registering a fourth straight win. Only a fine finger-tip save on Ann-Katrin Berger’s part prevented Ria Percival from opening the scoring for the visitors but, shortly after Chelsea’s goalkeeper had performed wonders to push Perceival’s capricious left foot shot on to a post, Spurs’ collective concentration waned.
As Hayes’s side pressed those tactical buttons, some of the early intensity and discipline disappeared from their opponents’ pressing and Sam Kerr and company sensed increasing opportunity. When Leupolz – outstanding throughout – found herself in hitherto undreamt-of space, Chelsea’s summer signing from Bayern Munich made the most of it by unleashing a looping right-foot, 30-yard shot which caught the debut-making Aurora Mikalsen cold as it swerved away from the static Spurs goalkeeper en route to the top corner.
The Norwegian was swiftly involved in a second concession with fingers pointed at her arguably faulty footwork once more when Fran Kirby intercepted a slapdash exchange between the keeper and Tottenham’s Canada defender Shelina Zadorsky. With Zadorsky bypassed, Kirby advanced down the right before pulling the ball back for Pernille Harder to polish things off. As the Denmark striker’s shot deflected in off Abbie McManus’s head Skinner’s side were effectively sunk. It was hardly the sort of debut contribution McManus can have hoped for when the defender joined on loan from Manchester United this month.
By half-time her new team had conceded again. The scorer this time was Kerr, the Australia forward heading home from six yards after connecting with a Harder cross from the left facilitated by Ji’s stellar long pass. It was Kerr’s ninth WSL goal of the campaign.
If Spurs hoped their hosts might relax in the second period, a side increasingly unable to string more than a couple of passes together were mistaken. It took a tremendous headed clearance off the line from Percival to keep out Harder’s volley before Leupolz made it four from the penalty spot.
Beth England had barely stepped off the bench before her attempted cross was diverted by Kerys Harrop’s elbow. As Leupolz delighted in sending Mikalsen the wrong way, Tottenham’s players stared at the ground.
“Until the first goal we were slow and sloppy and played into their hands,” said Hayes. “But we have the maturity and experience to be calm under pressure, we made some adjustments and, after that, we dominated.”
Chelsea’s manager was happy to highlight Leupolz’s leading role in such omnipotence. “Melanie has been an unbelievable signing for us this season,” she said. “She brings an energy and tenacity but also composure, calmness and leadership.”
from Football | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3tdGO4Q
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