Chelsea
 had a middling 2015-16 season to put it very mildly. The incumbent 
champions leapt from one crisis to another both on and off the field and
 finished the season in the 10th place, which was unthinkable
 when the season began. The tone of the season, however, was set in the 
early days with the club playing an uninspiring brand of football and 
the manager (Jose Mourinho) getting into a distasteful controversy with 
the team doctor.
The appointment of Antonio Conte as the new man in the helm for this season was good news
 for the fans. Here was a man who in charge of Juventus and Italy had 
shown good tactical nous coupled with a strict disciplinarian approach. 
While that makes him similar to Mourinho, the area of dissimilarity was 
the lack of controversy with Conte. Chelsea were getting a new manager 
who had the good traits of the “Special One”, minus the baggage. The 
summer transfer window till date has helped to shore up some of the 
cracks in the squad, with N’Golo Kante slotting in the engine room of 
the midfield and Michy Batshuayi providing an able substitute striker 
for Diego Costa.
While the transfer window is still not shut, the early results in the Premiership have been somewhat promising for the team. Two come from behind victories against West Ham
 and Watford, and a decisive 3-0 triumph over Burnley last Saturday have
 calmed the nerves of the supporters and have laid down the marker for 
Chelsea’s title aspirations.
One
 major concern has been the area of defence with Chelsea only having 
five defenders in their squad – the foursome of Terry, Cahill, Ivanovic 
and Azpilicueta and the youngster in Ola Aina. The center of the defence
 looks shorn of pace and there are no ball playing defenders who can 
start moves from the deep defence. On the right-back, Ivanovic was 
disastrous in the previous season and his lack of game reading in that 
position is apparent this term too. Azpilicueta has been in good touch 
and has made the left back position a fortress for the Blues.
Two 
major areas that lend to worries about the defence: the glaring lack of 
defensive cover in case of injuries, and inadequate protection against 
quick attackers working the channels and nippy left wingers cutting 
inside to create waves of attack. Conte proved himself to be a master of
 defensive gameplay in his earlier stints, and with transfer targets 
like Kalidou Koulibaly, Nikola Maksimovic or Marcus Alonso it looks like
 his primary concern is to improve the defence, but questions still 
remain whether he would be able to create a much grittier unit in a 
short time.
The midfield looks solid with Kante and Matic 
providing a solid base – Kante particularly seems to be reprising his 
role with Leicester which is a Makelele kind of a role with vastly 
improved attacking gameplay. Matic has recovered substantially from the 
car wreck of a midfielder last season. The attacking half of the 
midfield has started off in good nick – both Oscar and Willian look 
composed and comfortable in transitioning from defence to attack and 
also pressing the opposition at their halves. Cesc Fabregas has made 
most of the limited opportunities he has got – though it remains to be 
seen how Conte finds a place for him in the starting eleven. He remains 
the imperious passer, and with shifting preferences of the squad, might 
get more regular chances. On the flanks, Pedro and Victor Moses have 
been solid while attacking. Although not world beaters on their day, 
this is an improvement over last season and provides alternate tactical 
opportunities.
In attack, Diego Costa has looked in good touch in 
all 3 games and is regularly getting into the right positions that a 
striker in form does. His disciplinary problems are out there, but by 
now it’s considered a part of the package for the fearsome striker and 
Conte might not want to change too much. Batshuayi has also looked the 
epitome of the modern striker – strong, speedy and comfortable with the 
ball even in deeper areas. His age masks his maturity of link-up play 
with the midfield. Loic Remy has had no chance this season, and would go
 out on loan to Crystal Palace in all probability. Even with two 
strikers, the unit looks a healthy one till the winter transfer window.
Finally
 – the phenomenon called Eden Hazard. He looks like the version of the 
POTY of 2014-15 and not the flop of 2015-16. His sophisticated 
attributes of dribbling at speed and precision of shooting at the goal 
are back at their very best on early evidence. The energy of Kante in 
deep midfield has also relieved Hazard of the duty to track back while 
in defence, a part of the game which he doesn’t seem to enjoy at any 
rate. Hazard is the factor that makes the Chelsea squad competitive when
 compared to the squad strength of star-studded Manchester giants.
On
 the balance of things, Chelsea under Conte is a very functional unit 
with specialists at every position playing their parts and there are no 
overarching structures like Tiki-Taka or gegenpressing. It’s football at
 its simplest or however simple as it can be is the era of managerial 
sophisticates. The defence needs additional resources, the midfield and 
attack (and goalkeeping too) look settled to mount a title challenge. 
The Blues clearly are not on par with the Manchester teams in quality on
 the team sheet but are a very good collective led by one of the best 
attackers in the world and under the stewardship of a no-nonsense and 
tactically sound manager. Based on their outings so far and the 
expectation that weaknesses in defence are mended, the team looks to be a
 serious contender for the Premiership title.
 
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