
Roy
Hodgson said Chelsea were the better team and deserved their 1-0 victory
over his Crystal Palace side at Selhurst Park.
A second-half strike from N'Golo Kante saw Chelsea claim the three points
from a game in which Palace were restricted to just a few late efforts.
Hodgson was pleased with the effort from his side but admitted Chelsea were
better, telling Sky Sports: "I thought we worked as hard as we could work
and we were playing a very good team who made it difficult for us to disturb
their passing rhythm
"I thought they were very good on the ball, but I thought our discipline,
particularly in the first half, was very good. We kept them in front of us,
they had a lot of the ball but they weren't creating chances.
"But when they score the goal, everything changes. We've then got two
options - fly at it like we did in the final 15 minutes, and run the risk of
conceding two, three or four, or to keep it tight for a little bit longer in
the hope that you'll then create something, or the ball will fall your way
and you would get what would have been an undeserved point.
"So I don't know if we could have done much more in terms of our approach to
the game. We played against a very good side and they were much better than
we were."
Crystal Palace nearly nicked a point in the 89th minute when Connor Wickham
fired over the crossbar from close range, and Hodgson tried to see the
positives in defeat.
"There were a couple of moments," he said. "I thought we had the ball in
their final third a lot more and we were trying our very best to find that
opening, but, unfortunately, in one or two moments our technique let us down
in those areas.
"But at least we produced a few clearances that went our way for throw-ins.
We had the goalkeeper wasting time and not kicking the ball out of the
penalty area so I suppose that's something positive.
"But there is not very much positive I can say today. A 1-0 defeat is a 1-0
defeat and they aren't positive things, even though it came against a team
that most people would expect to beat us.
"We don't go on the field expecting to be beaten, we go on the field
thinking we can get a result from the game and at half-time, I still
believed that it was possible.
"But at 1-0, we didn't have the wherewithal to disturb them enough to win
the ball from them and to get enough possession of the ball ourselves to
make certain we could create some chances. So, today, we have to accept we
were beaten by a better team."