Stats show why Tottenham Hotspur’s European campaign is one to forget

Tottenham Hotspur have suffered Champions League and Europa League elimination this season, calling into question the team’s ability to compete on the elite stage.Mauricio Pochettino’s men failed to get out of the group in the Champions League, and they were undone by Gent in the last-32 stage of the second-tiered European competition.Things looked promising for Spurs in Thursday night’s tie at Wembley when Christian Eriksen put them ahead in the 10th minute, but an own goal from Harry Kane meant more work needed to be done.[ad_pod id=’now-tv’ align=’centre’]When Victor Wanyama scored in the second half, Tottenham had their tails up again, but Jeremy Perbet’s 82nd-minute goal knocked Spurs out of the competition.Not only that, Dele Alli was sent off in the first half for a horror tackle that could have brokenÂBrecht Dejaegere’s leg.Spurs’ European record this season is miserable reading, with Opta proving that Wembley has not been kind to the team.

As pointed out by Squawka in the tweet below, Tottenham have failed to master Europe having won just two of their last 10 fixtures.

It is difficult to put a finger on why they have under-performed in the competitions.

It could be down to priority, with the Premier League on top of the list, but it could also be due to a lack of experience.

Tottenham have a relatively young team and they could be struggling to find the balance between European and domestic commitments.

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The perfect money-making treble this FA Cup weekend

We’re back in FA Cup action this weekend as the world’s oldest association football competition gets into the quarter-final stages with ties that are certain to get punters flocking to their nearest bookie to have a flutter.

The FA Cup is renowned for it’s upsets and can often be the ideal place to make some big money when it comes to your betslip.

The quarter-final draw has thrown up some fantastic ties, with non-league Lincoln City’s visit to Arsenal and another Chelsea return for Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho the standout clashes.

Meanwhile Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City, who were forced to a replay by Championship promotion chasers Huddersfield in the last round take on Premier League strugglers Middlesbrough for a place in the Wembley semi-final, whilst free scoring Harry Kane and his Tottenham side take on London rivals Millwall.

There will be thousands of punters looking to go bold and win some big money by backing the likes of Millwall and Lincoln to upset the odds, however, now we’re in the latter stages the Premier League big boys will not be holding back. With that in mind, you’ll need to be taking a look at the various combinations to maximise your winnings, a simple treble of the favourites will get you nowhere this weekend.

Having been humiliated by German giants Bayern Munich in the Champions League, Arsenal will be in no mood for a cup upset, although they always have a goal (or five) for their opponents, the Gunners to win and both teams to score is a canny pick this weekend.

Add to the Mourinho’s return to Stamford Bridge. The Portuguese will take a very different side to that which lost 4-0 in London earlier in the season and will be seeking vengeance. Again, there will be goals in this one but we fancy the visitors to take it, United to win and keep their hopes of a cup treble alive, with both teams to score could get you a nice profit.

Finally, Pep Guardiola’s side will be in the mood for goals this weekend. Having rested Raheem Sterling for their mid-week draw with Stoke City, the Sky Blues will have a bit between their teeth against Boro, the Citizens to win with over 2.5 goals in the game completes our FA Cup treble, which could give earn you some decent spending money this weekend at 50/1, good luck!

Three reasons why Motherwell could burst Caixinha’s Rangers bubble early

On the weekend that Celtic can finally get themselves over the line to win the Scottish Premiership, Rangers have their own key challenge. The Gers started a new project at Ibrox and will pay no mind to the celebrations on the other half of the city shoukd they, as is expected, come.

For Pedro Caixinha and his men, it’s all about showing gradual improvement and preparing themselves for a massive Scottish Cup clash at Hampden in late April.

The first victory under Caixinha against Hamilton was a fine showing and with two weeks work done on the training ground since then, supporters are hoping to see an even better performance against Motherwell on Saturday.

It may not go all their own way, though, as the Steelmen themselves have a new boss in Stephen Robinson and will be looking for a big result to kickstart his new reign.

Here are THREE reasons why Motherwell could burst Caixinha’s bubble…

They’ve run them close at Ibrox twice this season

Rangers haven’t had an easy time of it against Motherwell at Ibrox this season. The Steelmen have taken the lead in both matches between the two at the home of the Light Blues. On both occasions Rangers need very late winners and it was Kenny Miller who bagged them.

That’s a big warning sign ahead of their visit this Saturday. Although struggling, Motherwell are going to push them all the way to the very death of the game in order to try and win a point or more.

As we know, Rangers probably need to win every match between now and the end of the season if they are going to haul in Aberdeen’s 2nd place lead, so a point isn’t good enough this weekend.

Can Pedro Caixinha have his team come out of the blocks and prevent going behind, or will this one follow the pattern of the previous two matches at Ibrox and see Motherwell take a shock lead?

Louis Moult is due a goal

With 14 goals to his name this season, Motherwell striker Louis Moult is having another fine campaign leading the Steelmen’s attack.

In the Scottish Premiership he’s averaging a goal ever 182 minutes, so you’ll be interested to know he hasn’t scored in his last two matches. That means that, going by his average, he’s due to bang one in against the Gers this weekend.

You’d be silly to bet against it considering he’s already netted against the Light Blues at Ibrox this season. With exceptional goals against the likes of Celtic also to his name this term, he cannot be taken for granted by Pedro Caixinha’s defence.

If Motherwell can string possession together in the final third and create a chance for Moult, he’s more likely to stick it away than not.

Motherwell have more on the line

Rangers may consider Saturday’s match vital but for Motherwell, it’s a match with many potential consequences. Lose and they could find themselves at the very bottom of the Scottish Premiership, if results elsewhere go against them.

They’re very much locked in a relegation scrap and know from past experience how easy it is to slip into the relegation play-off position.

Hamilton and Inverness CT are just three points behind and know with ‘Well travelling to Ibrox that they have a great chance of gaining ground.

Motherwell will be fighting for their Premiership lives and that could be enough to give them an edge in the match and secure a massive result.

Wilfried Zaha: The man Spurs need to root themselves in top six

When Wilfried Zaha returned to boyhood club Crystal Palace in summer 2013, most assumed the one-time Manchester United signing would never get another chance at the elite end of the Premier League table.

His Old Trafford tenure certainly didn’t give much evidence otherwise; just two league appearances in six months, before an underwhelming loan spell at relegation-bound Cardiff City and his subsequent return to Selhurst Park. Whatever David Moyes saw in the explosive wideman, he clearly didn’t like, despite his predecessor – the great Sir Alex Ferguson – being convinced enough to spend an eight-figure sum on a then-Championship player just a matter of months prior.

But Zaha returned to Palace with a bang, netting four times and playing a pivotal role in the Eagles recording a tenth-place Premier League finish during the first season of his second spell. His output has remained a continuous subject of debate, but Zaha’s overall form and contributions have been on an upward trajectory since his switch back to south London. Now aged 24 and verging upon traditionally peak years for a winger, the Ivory Coast international appears to be edging back towards the big time – with Spurs repeatedly mooted as potential suitors since last summer. The latest murmurings come courtesy of Bleacher Report’s Dean Jones.

“Wilfried Zaha should have been on the verge of greatness when he joined Manchester United in 2013, but the move did not go to plan, and within two years, he was back at boyhood club Crystal Palace.

“That could have proved a career setback, but he responded with consistent good form for the Eagles, which has put him back in the shop window. Palace know it is only a matter of time before a big offer comes along, and Tottenham Hotspur are set to test his loyalty this summer.”

Dean Jones, Bleacher Report 2017

On the surface, Zaha seems more like a squad addition than a signing who can take Tottenham to the next level. Six goals and seven assists in 26 Premier League outings is a decent return for an attacker plying his trade with a side who’ve been battling relegation all season, but not the kind of return that suggests Zaha would revolutionise Spurs’ starting XI or make them ore clinical in the final third. For starters, Harry Kane, Dele Alli, Heung-min Son and Christian Eriksen – Mauricio Pochettino’s four main attacking options – have all scored equal or more goals than him this season, albeit in a considerably more successful team.

Wingers are inevitably judged upon how much they produce, but Zaha’s about much more than that. He’s prepared to roll his sleeves up and commit to the more thankless side of what Premier League wingers are all about; driving their team up the pitch on the counter-attack, drawing fouls to win free kicks in crucial areas of the pitch and closing down opposition full-backs off the ball. Rather tellingly, he’s averaged the most tackles per match – a staggering 2.6 – of any wideman in the division this season.

That suits Mauricio Pochettino’s philosophy of industrious yet creative football perfectly, and the other obvious asset Zaha offers Spurs is his scintillating pace – one of the only weapons the White Hart Lane gaffer lacks in his current arsenal. Eriksen can unlock defences with the ball, Alli can provide goals from midfield and Heung-min Son can glide through tight areas, but no player truly trusted by Pochettino can stretch defences, create width and expose teams so quickly on the break in the same way.

But Zaha’s true value to Tottenham Hotspur may well lay in his performances against elite opposition, something that has become particularly prevalent during the 2016/17 campaign and most recently during a stunning performance to silence table-toppers Chelsea last weekend.

To say Spurs aren’t in second place on merit would be unfair, but it’s certainly not a consequence of their results against top six rivals, winning two and losing three of eight. Chelsea’s record is similar; this title race has been mostly decided by consistency against the rest of the top flight. But with both Manchester clubs growing stronger, Liverpool progressing under Jurgen Klopp and Arsenal expected to make wholesale changes in the summer, next term could well come down to who dominates the mini-league at the top of the table.

That could squeeze Spurs out of the picture, but also highlights why Zaha could prove so vital. 43% of his assists this season have come against top six teams, but it’s the consistency he’s shown against such opposition that truly stands out, both with and without the ball. Five successful dribbles per match is a phenomenal return, whilst those 3.3 fouls won double or even triple in importance when put in the context of a top-of-the-table six-pointer – where one set piece expertly delivered into the box can make all the difference.

Likewise, three tackles per match highlights Zaha’s commitment to the cause. In fact, from the seven games in question this season, he’s failed to provide less than two tackles in ninety minutes just once. To give some context, no Spurs player has averaged more than 2.8 tackles this season, whilst the highest return from an attacking player is Dele Alli with 1.4.

Of course, the counter-argument is that the setups of these matches flatter Zaha statistically. Palace average just 48% possession per match and from those seven games against the top six in which Zaha has largely excelled, they’ve averaged 6% less. That gives him more room to operate on the counter and obliges him to make more tackles.

But to say Tottenham won’t find themselves in similar positions next season would be naive – they saw just 45% of the ball during a 2-2 draw against Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium in January – and it’s Zaha’s industry that could make him such a success at White Hart Lane. We’ve seen Pochettino mercilessly cull countless players who couldn’t meet what he demands in workload; Zaha, on the other hand, has the potential to raise the bar for his accomplices in attack.

“We would love to keep Wilfried. We will sit down and talk to him as soon as we’re safe and I’m very hopeful of doing so”

Palace chairman Steve Parish

Of course, it’s not as simple as Spurs putting some money on the table and Zaha moving from south to north London. Palace have plans to offer him a new contract that would underline his importance to the club. But it feels like Zaha is on the verge of proving Sir Alex Ferguson right and David Moyes wrong by moving back to the top end of the table one way or another. Tottenham would be wise to act on his efficiency against top six opposition before one of their divisional rivals beats them to it.

Mourinho should know that tough love with Shaw is not the right approach

“He was in front of me and I was making every decision for him. He has to change his football brain.

“We need his fantastic physical and technical qualities but he cannot play with my brain,

“He must accelerate the process. 21 is old enough to have a better understanding. He has a future here but Manchester United cannot wait.”

Another day, another twist in the Jose Mourinho-Luke Shaw saga. Far be it from us to question ‘The Special One’ when it comes to managing his team and his players, but how does calling out a young footballer after a rare outing in which he contributed to a vital equalising goal help matters at Old Trafford?

Had it not been for Shaw, who came on as a second-half substitute, shooting towards goal, Ashley Williams’ handball would not have occurred and Zlatan Ibrahimovic would have been unable to convert from the penalty spot to spare blushes at the Theatre of Dreams. Granted, the former Southampton man didn’t do much in his 25-minute cameo to suggest that he’s ready to be the left-back Mourinho needs at this most vital stage of the season, but digging him out publically has effectively guaranteed that this will not change between now and mid-May.

With just 16 matches under his belt and only 622 minutes of league football played, Shaw’s 2016/17 has not been a walk in the park. It was never going to be, though, with the long road to recovery from a horror leg-break suffered in September 2015 during a Champions League clash with PSV Eindhoven still one he is journeying down. It has been around 18 months since this incident, but building up fitness and, most importantly, overcoming the mental side of the set-back was always going to be tough. To make it tougher still by magnifying his flaws and in turn increasing the pressure on him is as short-sighted as it is nasty from Mourinho.

It’s clear to see what he’s doing. The Portuguese boss wants to eek the potential out of Shaw that saw him signed at such a tender age from Southampton in 2014. An England international in his teenage years, the defender was tipped to be the answer to his country’s issues in the position long-term very early in his career, but the move to Man United perhaps came too early at 18, especially with a £30m transfer fee thrown into the mix. The drop off in his development was alarming under Louis van Gaal initially, which made the leg-break all the more infuriating for all involved as he was showing signs of maturing and adapting in his second season with the club.

The ‘tough love’ approach is one Mourinho has often used. His managerial career is one in which he’s demanded plenty from his players, asking them to run through brick walls for him. While it may seem counter-intuitive to act in a ‘strict father’ manner, some footballers respond to this, seeking to prove their manager wrong, which in turn is a win for the tactician, even though it’s come via the man in question actually working hard to spite him. Rafa Benitez was known for this approach at Liverpool with Steven Gerrard, and Mourinho has already acted this way at United, excluding Henrikh Mkhitaryan during the early phase of the season – which was ballsy given that the Armenian was one of the club’s big summer signings.

Why not use the same approach with Shaw, then, you might ask. Well, Shaw is 21 and has little senior club experience to call upon, while Mkhitaryan is the captain of his country and in the prime of his career – he’s surely more mentally hardened than a rookie defender coming back from an injury that could feasibly have ended a footballer’s career 20 or 30 years ago. There is also the example of Louis van Gaal using the same tactic to attempt to right the youngster’s career in his first season at the club. The Dutchman, another manager known for his hardline approach, was strict with the player, criticising him (albeit not so vociferously) in the media, which produced a negative effect on his performance. It’s believed that senior players at the club went to LVG after seeing Shaw retreat into his shell and an altered approach from Van Gaal contributed to his bright start to 2015/16.

Maybe following suit might be the way forward for Mourinho. He’s already hailed Shaw as “the one that should be in a couple of years the best of all” when discussing his left-back options this season, so why let stubbornness rob him of having such a player at his disposal? Mourinho has a responsibility as the player’s manager to give him the best possible platform to develop and improve, and while pandering to him is not the right approach, highlighting his flaws in the full glow of the media spotlight is equally as incorrect.

Luke Shaw has a long way to go as a footballer and many more hurdles to leap over if he is to fulfil his promise, which he might ultimately fail to do. However, it would at least be nice to see him given the right environment to at least have a fair shot at doing so.

Caixinha doesn’t care about Celtic ambitions

The countdown continues to Rangers’ massive clash with Celtic on Sunday and as reported by STV, manager Pedro Caixinha is not interested in all the chatter surrounding the Hoops going into the game.

What’s the story?

Much of the focus in the build-up to this weekend’s fixture has been on Celtic’s unbeaten run and their ambitions of winning a treble for the first time in 16 years.

However, Rangers boss Pedro Caixinha hasn’t given much thought to all that and when asked about it gave a brilliant, simple response.

As quoted by STV, he said:

I’m not worried about [Celtic being unbeaten], and I don’t think that they are so obsessed with that.Everyone is talking about stopping a treble and I don’t care about it. I’m just focused on my team.

With all the hype and focus on the Gers’ rivals across the city, Sunday’s game is a massive opportunity for Caixinha to truly arrive on the Scottish scene and lay down a marker that next season may not be the cakewalk that some think for the Hoops.

Rangers showed a fantastic fighting spirit in the last match between the two clubs at Celtic Park and if they can tap into that again and find a determination to stop the treble at all costs, then it could be a fine afternoon for Gers fans despite their team being massive underdogs.

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Arsenal fans furious as they suffer north London derby defeat

Arsenal’s hopes of finishing in the top four suffered another blow as they were beaten 2-0 by Tottenham Hotspur in the final ever north London derby at White Hart Lane on Sunday.

After seeing Everton lose against Chelsea and Manchester United and Manchester City drawing against relegation strugglers Swansea City and Middlesbrough respectively, the Gunners knew they had an opportunity to close the gap on the top four and boost their chances of qualifying for next season’s Champions League.

However, second half goals from Dele Alli and Harry Kane instead saw Arsene Wenger’s men suffer their ninth Premier League defeat of the campaign and they are now six points behind fourth-placed City with five fixtures remaining, while they are guaranteed to finish behind their arch-rivals for the first time since 1995.

Arsenal supporters were quick to have their say on the result via social media, and they didn’t hold back in their description of the performance.

Here is just a selection of the Twitter reaction…

Transfer Focus: Liverpool target Van Dijk perfect for Chelsea’s 3-4-3

According to reports from The Independent, Chelsea believe Liverpool and Manchester City transfer target Virgil van Dijk favours a summer move to Stamford Bridge.

What’s the word?

Since moving to Southampton from Celtic two summers ago, Virgil van Dijk has consistently impressed, offering a unique mix of physicality and ball-playing quality, and during the first half of 2016/17, until a season-ending tackle from Jamie Vardy, his form was arguably the most impressive of any centre-back in the Premier League.

Saints have developed an unfortunate reputation of surrendering their key players to the division’s biggest clubs – albeit, picking up some hefty profits in the process – and inevitably, the Netherlands international seems pretty certain to move on this summer.

The Independent claim Liverpool and Manchester City are both interested in signing van Dijk, but there is a growing belief in west London that the 25-year-old would prefer a summer move to Stamford Bridge.

Why do Chelsea want more defenders?

At first glance, Antonio Conte is pretty well-endowed when it comes to centre-halves, with a wide variety of options to choose from – not to mention the highly-rated Andreas Christensen returning from his affluent loan spell in the Bundesliga this summer. But John Terry will leave the club when his contract expires and Conte’s 3-4-3 system requires plenty of depth in that department. Likewise, if the Italian is to push his side up a level for next season’s title defence, they need centre-backs ideally suited to a back three.

That’s where Van Dijk comes into the equation; famed for his ability to build attacks from deep positions, roam forward and occasionally score goals, he seems perfect for Chelsea’s defensive setup. He’s pretty handy on his left foot as well, which relates to comments Jamie Carragher made earlier this week about Gary Cahill being a weak link at left centre-back because he’s naturally right-footed. Van Dijk would be an impressive addition regardless, but he could well be the defender that pushes Chelsea’s 3-4-3 system up a gear.

Controversial send-off shows why John Terry deserves our paradoxical respect

John Terry and Wayne Rooney’s farewells were so sharply polarised they could have come from different dimensions. The Manchester United skipper’s one of understated, almost unnoticed humility; his Chelsea counterpart’s, on the other-hand, a world of shamelessly orchestrated self-indulgence.

Indeed, whereas Rooney sheepishly entered the fray during the dying embers of a European cup final his side had sewn up well before the hour mark, both teams prioritised Terry’s ultimate appearance at Stamford Bridge over the result, Sunderland enacting on a pre-arranged agreement to kick the ball out of play after 26 minutes and Chelsea’s remaining ten men performing a guard of honour as the tear-soaked Blues skipper trod over the west London touchline for the last time.

The co-ordination involved has sparked controversy, and not just because of the three men who not-so-coincidentally placed sizeable bets on Terry to be subbed off in the same minute as his iconic kit number. We’re used to utter humility from the Premier League’s departing greats, especially the English ones – Paul Scholes retired twice yet his exits were so absent of fuss hardly anybody noticed until the following season – but Terry was unabashed by the near-nauseating saccharinity of his final goodbye.

In fact, after the full-time whistle, he revealed it was his own idea, symbolic passing of the armband to Gary Cahill included, colluding with his own manager Antonio Conte and Sunderland’s David Moyes to ensure his send-off loosely echoed a scene from Gladiator. Alan Shearer quite rightly asked whether Terry’s farewell impeded the integrity of the game on Match of the Day and former Liverpool striker turned pundit Stan Collymore has since dubbed it ‘vomit-inducing’. It certainly wasn’t easy for some neutrals to stomach.

Yet, the controversy surrounding what will likely be Terry’s final moments on the pitch as a Chelsea player (assuming he won’t be involved in this Sunday’s FA Cup final) is exactly what makes the send-off so perfectly befitting of footballer who has consistently divided opinion like few of his peers throughout an affluent Premier League career. Whilst doubters of his ability have only really come to the fore over the last few seasons, Terry’s talent and exceptional leadership has always been juxtaposed by a penchant for mindless trouble.

At this point, Terry’s misdemeanours as well known – sex scandals involving a former team-mate’s better half, allegations of racism and a fair few brushes with the law – but when a player is hanging up his boots, it feels almost spiteful to trawl through their indiscretions once again. Nonetheless, the controversy surrounding Chelsea’s send-off slots into that narrative, and perhaps highlights why – albeit, paradoxically – the wider Premier League audience should have a lot more respect for Terry, even if his actions do often lead us to question his moral code.

Football – Queens Park Rangers v Chelsea – Barclays Premier League – Loftus Road – 15/9/12 QPR’s Anton Ferdinand fails to shake the hand of Chelsea’s John Terry (L) before the match Mandatory Credit: Action Images / Henry Browne Livepic EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or live services. Online in-match use limited to 45 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications. Please cont

After all, with perhaps the exception of his former team-mate Ashley Cole, it’s hard to think of a figure more actively detested by fans of rival clubs. Since a drunken incident on 11th September 2001, practically the start of his career, Terry has been the pantomime villain, the primary target of jeers and abuse from opposing fans and the pejorative poster-boy for the tabloids, ever-looking to lament the disgraceful ungratefulness of the modern-day money-mad generation. They don’t know they’re born, and all that.

Terry’s had to contend with that for his entire career and there’s been plenty of infamy on the pitch as well; the missed penalty in the Champions League final shootout against Manchester United, the sending off against Barcelona in the same competition five years later, his shock axing as England captain, not to mention the attempts of several managers – namely Andre Villas-Boas and Rafa Benitez – to dethrone him from his place in Chelsea’s starting XI. Along the way, there have always been murmurings of Terry’s sinister influence on managerial sackings, questionable behaviour in night clubs and unruly incidents of affluenza. Even his family have been pushed into the firing line, in the coarsest manner possible.

Whereas other players would have buckled under such intense, relentless and long-standing scrutiny, however, Terry has always battled on, returning better and tougher-skinned than ever before. To not only produce the near-impervious form he has over the last 19 years but also perform his duties as a captain and leader to such an impeccable standard is not only commendable under those circumstances, it verges on extraordinary. Not simply a public hate figure refusing to shy away, but consistently excelling in defiance of the angst endlessly vented towards him. That requires a unique kind of character and a truly elite quality of footballer.

And thus, the paradoxical respect we have for Terry suddenly becomes evident; whilst his actions may appal many, his undying ability to persevere through the criticism, the abuse, the media pressure and the anger – all of which have reached near unprecedented levels for an England international playing in his own country – and still maintain his status a world-class player for majority of his career undoubtedly deserves our recognition.

Terry’s indiscretions may leave a sour taste, ones that induce dry heaving when combined with his sickly-sweet send-off, but the 36-year-old’s ability to bounce back over the last two decades – albeit, mostly from self-inflicted episodes – has been genuinely remarkable. Ever-defiant until the end, Terry’s shared his thoughts on the division over his send-off. Unsurprisingly, he’s got no time for the haters.

“I couldn’t care less, I promise you. I couldn’t care. All I care about is celebrating with my Chelsea fans. Me and them have an unbelievable rapport and have had for 22 years and no-one, whatever you write or someone says or someone’s opinion, can ever get in the way of that. So if that’s the way I wanted to go out, that’s the way I go out. You know what, because I’ve been 22 years here, won so many trophies, if I wanted to play one minute and come off I would have done. I wanted to play 26 minutes and come off because it, the shirt number. The supporters, as long as they are happy, I am over the moon with the reception I got. I promise you I couldn’t care a less.”

Chelsea fans delighted as Eden Hazard hints he will stay

Chelsea forward Eden Hazard hinted that he will still be at the club next season after picking up the Player of the Year accolade at the end of season awards on Sunday night.

The Belgian has become a key player for the Blues over the last few seasons and he scored 16 goals and provided a further five assists as Antonio Conte’s side won the Premier League title this term.

His fine form has consistently seen the 26-year-old linked with a move to Real Madrid throughout the campaign, but he looks to have quashed those rumours after reacting to being asked whether he will be at Stamford Bridge next season by saying: “Yes, why not?”

Chelsea supporters were quick to have their say on Hazard’s comments via social media, and they were understandably ecstatic that he looks set to be at the Bridge next season.

Here is just a selection of the Twitter reaction…

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