FABREGAS
Cesc Fabregas has lost his place at Chelsea and he is not
involved in the Spain squad to face England on Tuesday night. Here, we look at
why he has fallen out of favour under Antonio Conte and assess his chances of
winning back his place in the team...
Chelsea's recent ascendancy
has received plenty of coverage but the numbers bear repeating. Since October,
they have won five consecutive Premier League games, scoring 16 goals without
conceding and climbing from eighth to second in the table. After the chaos
of last season, optimism is flooding back to Stamford Bridge.
The switch to a 3-4-3 formation has been the catalyst.
Antonio Conte's three-man defence is flanked by hard-running wing-backs Victor
Moses and Marcos Alonso and protected by midfield duo N'Golo Kante and Nemanja
Matic, and the forward line of Eden Hazard, Pedro and Diego Costa are freed up
and running riot at the other end.
It's a winning formula, but
it has left Cesc Fabregas on the fringes. It's unfamiliar territory for a
player who has averaged 46 appearances per season since 2004. Fabregas played a
starring role in Chelsea's 2014/15 title triumph and featured in all but one of
their Premier League games last year, but he has started only once under Conte.
It's thrown his future into doubt.
Conte insists Fabregas remains in his plans, but there are
big question marks over his suitability to the new manager's style. His single
Premier League start was a case in point. He struggled badly in a three-man
midfield against Arsenal. His old club exposed Chelsea's soft centre to go 3-0
up before half-time, and Fabregas suffered the ignominy of a 55th-minute
substitution.
A thigh injury has kept him sidelined recently, but it was
telling that Fabregas was an unused substitute in the 2-0 win over Hull City
directly after the defeat to Arsenal. He watched from the bench as Oscar,
Nathaniel Chalobah and Pedro made it on ahead of him at the KCOM Stadium.
Fabregas laid out the issues himself back in September.
"If he doesn't play me there is always a reason," he said of Conte.
"He wants the midfielders to be very complete. To be physically strong.
Maybe I'm a bit more the playmaker, creative going forward, and he wants me to
be a little bit more stable and compact in defence."
It's not his natural game and he knows it. The 29-year-old
has few equals for vision and passing ability, but he does not fit Conte's
midfield mould like Matic and Kante. The defensively-minded duo have
played every minute of Chelsea's winning streak, with their power and dynamism
satisfying the demands of a coach who operates at full throttle.
In his defence, Fabregas
could point to the Premier League tracking data which shows he covered more
distance per game (12.1km) than any other Chelsea starter last season. But
Conte's aggressive pressing system demands a particular kind of intensity. It's
all about explosive bursts of energy, overwhelming opponents in numbers and
transitioning from defence to attack at lightning speed.
The relentless tempo
is a challenge for some. Fabregas has already got more games in his legs than
most players manage in an entire career having burst onto the scene as a
16-year-old, and while he may have ranked highly for distance in 2015/16, he
was close to the bottom for sprints.
Fabregas has plenty of
strengths, but speed over short distances is patently not one of them. His
style contrasts with that of the all-action Kante, and it's no coincidence that
John Obi Mikel, the only Chelsea midfielder who sprinted less frequently than
Fabregas last season, has also slid down the pecking order under Conte.
If the Chelsea manager had reservations about Fabregas in a
three-man midfield, then his prospects look even bleaker in the new formation.
The former Barcelona man did flourish when paired with Matic in 2014/15, but
there is less protection now. There is no space for a No 10 in the 3-4-3, and
Fabregas would be exposed without that extra body in midfield.
Matic and Kante's box-to-box
running sets the tempo in Conte's side, and it is perhaps even more ominous for
Fabregas that Chelsea aren't struggling for creativity without him. The Blues
ranked sixth for chances created in 2015/16, but this season only Liverpool and
Manchester City have fashioned more openings.
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