Branislav Ivanovic and John Terry celebrate after Chelsea's goalless draw against Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday. Adrian Dennis / AFP / April 26, 2015
Branislav Ivanovic and John Terry celebrate after Chelsea's goalless draw against Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday. Adrian Dennis / AFP / April 26, 2015
Branislav Ivanovic and John Terry celebrate after Chelsea's goalless draw against Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday. Adrian Dennis / AFP / April 26, 2015
Branislav Ivanovic and John Terry celebrate after Chelsea's goalless draw against Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday. Adrian Dennis / AFP / April 26, 2015

Chelsea have rightful Player of the Year, but it’s not Eden Hazard


Richard Jolly
  • English
  • Arabic

It is often tempting to assume Chelsea's motives are not pure. They have cultivated a reputation as cynical winners. Jose Mourinho was asked in a recent interview if Machiavelli is an influence in his management style.

So when John Terry announced he had voted for Philippe Coutinho for the PFA Player of the Year award, his choice invited suspicion.

Was the Chelsea captain really such an admirer of Liverpool’s Brazilian who, though terrific since the middle of December, was nonetheless a surprise presence on the six-man shortlist?

Or, with players unable to vote for their teammates, was this a way of indirectly helping Eden Hazard’s candidature by depriving his principal rival, Harry Kane, of more support?

If it was a case of tactical voting, it worked. Hazard was duly anointed his peers' choice on Sunday. He is officially the Premier League's finest.

It amounted to recognition of the Belgian’s talent, his greater consistency and his capacity to make telling contributions in a title run-in when Diego Costa has either been injured or ineffective.

Terry’s own recent form has prompted suggestions he should have been a contender. Instead, no defender has won the PFA award since Terry himself in 2005; none has been named the Footballer Writers’ Footballer of the Year since Steve Nicol in 1988/89. None is likely to this year, either.

But this vote has been cast for a Chelsea defender. It was done in the uncomplaining assumption that Hazard will be the winner and in the knowledge that, having plumped for Robin van Persie in 2013 and Yaya Toure last year, rather than Gareth Bale and Luis Suarez, respectively, this observer is often in the minority.

Still more so this year, in all probability, especially as the Chelsea defender in question is not Terry but Branislav Ivanovic. Terry has indeed been excellent, a player who performs his tasks with such masterly assurance that he seems to have eliminated errors.

Yet Mourinho has devised a system and style of play where his captain has to patrol only a comparatively small area. He is shielded by the division’s best defensive midfielder, Nemanja Matic, and has a left-back, in Cesar Azpilicueta, who tucks in close to him.

In contrast, Ivanovic assumes a huge responsibility. He can be a buccaneering, barnstorming presence, almost a one-man right flank.

While Chelsea have Hazard to create on the left, Ivanovic has more assists than the right winger Willian. No defender scores more vital goals, either, and the Serbian’s extra-time winner in the League Cup semi-final against Liverpool was the most significant strike in ending Mourinho’s three-year title drought.

Goals tend to be the headline contributions, but Ivanovic has forged a deserved reputation as a big-game player. No defender, arguably, is such an important presence on the major occasions.

Consider Chelsea’s past two matches, against Manchester United and Arsenal. Often a marauding attacker, Ivanovic became a dogged defender, exhibiting great positional discipline.

United had enjoyed great success on their left flank in previous games. Arsenal had Alexis Sanchez. Ivanovic snuffed out both threats.

It felt as though Mourinho, with a lead to protect in the title race, had simply decided he would keep a clean sheet in both games. Ivanovic was a major reason why he did.

Those shutouts amounted to demonstrations of authority. A redoubtable team will be crowned champions because they have lost only two of 33 league games.

Ivanovic epitomises that consistency: an ever-present in the division, his blip lasted one game – last month’s win at Hull City – and Chelsea are defined by their defiance.

While Hazard sprinkles fantasy at the other end of the pitch, the core of the team, including Matic, are essentially defensively minded.

Ivanovic embodies them, with his steel and resolve, his physical power and mental strength, his ruthlessness and determination to will at all costs.

His capacity to contribute in the final third is a sign defenders have often proved Chelsea’s best form of attack.

He is a player of such distinction that, if deployed infield, he could challenge Terry for the title of the Premier League’s best centre-back. Instead, he is its outstanding right-back.

The job description almost debars him from the individual honours. It should not.

sports@thenational.ae

Follow us on Twitter @NatSportUAE

US PGA Championship in numbers

Joost Luiten produced a memorable hole in one at the par-three fourth in the first round.

To date, the only two players to win the PGA Championship after winning the week before are Rory McIlroy (2014 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational) and Tiger Woods (2007, WGC-Bridgestone Invitational). Hideki Matsuyama or Chris Stroud could have made it three.

Number of seasons without a major for McIlroy, who finished in a tie for 22nd.

4 Louis Oosthuizen has now finished second in all four of the game's major championships.

In the fifth hole of the final round, McIlroy holed his longest putt of the week - from 16ft 8in - for birdie.

For the sixth successive year, play was disrupted by bad weather with a delay of one hour and 43 minutes on Friday.

Seven under par (64) was the best round of the week, shot by Matsuyama and Francesco Molinari on Day 2.

Number of shots taken by Jason Day on the 18th hole in round three after a risky recovery shot backfired.

Jon Rahm's age in months the last time Phil Mickelson missed the cut in the US PGA, in 1995.

10 Jimmy Walker's opening round as defending champion was a 10-over-par 81.

11 The par-four 11th coincidentally ranked as the 11th hardest hole overall with a scoring average of 4.192.

12 Paul Casey was a combined 12 under par for his first round in this year's majors.

13 The average world ranking of the last 13 PGA winners before this week was 25. Kevin Kisner began the week ranked 25th.

14 The world ranking of Justin Thomas before his victory.

15 Of the top 15 players after 54 holes, only Oosthuizen had previously won a major.

16 The par-four 16th marks the start of Quail Hollow's so-called "Green Mile" of finishing holes, some of the toughest in golf.

17 The first round scoring average of the last 17 major champions was 67.2. Kisner and Thorbjorn Olesen shot 67 on day one at Quail Hollow.

18 For the first time in 18 majors, the eventual winner was over par after round one (Thomas shot 73).