
Adam
Bate on why Eden Hazard gets his vote for the FWA Footballer of the Year
award.
The chants of “boring, boring Chelsea” that rang around the Emirates Stadium
at the weekend and the subsequent debate it has inspired, make it clear that
not everyone is enamoured by the champions-elect. But the critics need only
set their gaze on the Chelsea No 10 to be reminded of the flaw in the
argument. Eden Hazard is not boring.
The esteemed Uruguayan journalist Eduardo Galeano passed away earlier this
month at the age of 74 and recognised better than most the conflicting urges
of artist and artisan that exist in the modern game. Rarely is that struggle
– and the potential benefits it can bring – more apparent than when watching
Hazard’s role within Jose Mourinho’s Chelsea team.
“Organised not to facilitate play but to impede it, the technocracy of
professional sport has managed to impose a soccer of lightning speed and
brute strength,” wrote Galeano in his magnificent work Soccer in Sun and
Shadow. “A soccer that negates joy, kills fantasy and outlaws daring.
“Luckily on the field you can still see, even if only once in a long while,
some insolent rascal who sets aside the script and commits the blunder of
dribbling past the entire opposing side, the referee, and the crowd in the
stands, all for the carnal delight of embracing the forbidden adventure of
freedom.”
Hazard is that rascal. Mourinho’s magician who has elevated Chelsea far
above the rest in this season’s Premier League. While some might dwell on
the power of John Terry and Nemanja Matic, others will highlight the
additions of Diego Costa and Cesc Fabregas as the crucial components in the
team’s success. But to do so is to underplay the singular quality of the
best footballer in England.
Hazard has already claimed the PFA Player of the Year award. He is also the
recipient of this writer’s vote for the FWA Footballer of the Year award
too, a prize given to “the professional player who by precept and example is
considered by a ballot of members to be the footballer of the year” in the
words of Football Writers’ Association co-founder, and former Arsenal
forward, Charles Buchan.
Imaginative
The Belgian’s brilliance was understated at Leicester. Even so, there was a
lofted pass to put Fabregas through early on and when Chelsea were behind
and looking for the breakthrough in the second half, it was Hazard’s
imaginative scooped pass that took out three opponents to get Branislav
Ivanovic into the space to set up Didier Drogba for the equaliser.
All season there has been the dribbling – there have been 53 more of those
than any other Premier League player. And there has been the end-product –
Hazard has also created more chances than anyone else this season. Alexis
Sanchez is the only other Premier League player to have assisted at least
eight goals as well as scored that many too.
He is no imitator of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo – “they have won
things I haven’t” – but nevertheless, there are times when Hazard is the
only man on this island who appears capable of giving the impression he’s
playing the same sport. There is that control of the ball at speed and the
low centre of gravity to evade the endless obstacle course of opposition
arms and legs.
Progression
This season will mark not only his first Premier League title but also a
genuine progression in Hazard’s game. “He's not the kind of player ready to
sacrifice himself 100 per cent for the team,” said Mourinho following
Hazard’s defensive negligence in their Champions League semi-final defeat to
Atletico Madrid last May. That’s changed. “His evolution has been
fantastic,” says Mourinho now.
This season the 24-year-old has shown he has the intelligence to gild his
talents to the team as well as provide the moments of individual quality
that have set Chelsea apart. From his stunning opener at Hull to the winner
against Manchester United, there have been times in the run-in when it’s
felt as though Hazard has been dragging Chelsea over the line with his
decisive interventions.
Hazard has been far more than a cog in the wheel. Instead he has provided
the fantasy in this Chelsea team. The wide-man who’s a central figure. The
precocious youngster who’s already a leader. The devastating dribbler who’s
shown he can be a team man. Mourinho has been appeased but the rascal
remains. One senses Eduardo Galeano would approve.