
Chelsea
have some work to do to match the levels of Jose Mourinho’s 2005
title-winning team, says Gary Neville.
Eden Hazard scored the winner as the Blues beat Manchester United 1-0 on
Saturday Night Football to edge closer to their first Premier League title
in five years.
The visitors had 70 per cent of the possession but Chelsea’s dogged
performance was enough to secure victory to move 10 points clear at the top.
Mourinho’s side romped to the title 10 years ago, losing just once as they
finished 12 points clear in a dominant season, but on The Gary Neville
Podcast the Sky Sports pundit said, while there are similarities, this
season’s squad has work to do to reach those levels.
“I think Chelsea will have to improve again, because I think the others will
catch them up,” he said.
“I don’t think it’s a Chelsea team like the first Chelsea team in 2005 that
Mourinho had, but it’s a very good team that needs to improve to get to that
next level.
“They were always so tough to play against, when you think of Ricardo
Carvalho and William Gallas, John Terry, Michael Essien in midfield, Frank
Lampard and Claude Makalele.
“There’s a little bit of that coming back with Nemanja Matic and obviously
the two centre-backs, Gary Cahill and Terry. The full-backs are very good
defensively, the goalkeeper’s excellent as Petr Cech was first time round
for Jose Mourinho.
“There are a lot of similarities – Arjen Robben is Hazard, Diego Costa is
Didier Drogba first time round – there are some similarities building in
this Chelsea team.”
Neville won eight Premier League titles with United, in a team which often
managed to grind out a result despite not performing at its best.
The Sky Sports expert believes Chelsea’s display at Stamford Bridge was
similar to that team, and it’s a trait shared by champions.
“It was a resolute performance from Chelsea,” he added.
“It was a team that knew what they needed to do during the game. They
recognised that they probably couldn’t take Manchester United on punch for
punch at football in passing terms, but they had the power, the strength,
the determination and the physicality.
“They played like champions. There are times over the years where I’ve been
part of championship-winning teams and it had to be ugly.
“Mourinho has no problem going out there and destroying games. You saw that
with his substitutions in the end – he’s shameless in that sense, and why
shouldn’t he be?
“You always felt the jab of Chelsea was keeping United at arm’s length, and
that’s what the game was – United just couldn’t get past the jab.”