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Costa's late strike sends Conte wild on his Stamford Bridge debut... but should the Chelsea striker have been on the pitch?

Written By CCMdijitali on Monday, August 15, 2016 | August 15, 2016

Chelsea 2-1 West Ham: Diego Costa goes from villain to hero as late strike seals first 

Premier League win for new manager Antonio Conte
  • Costa could have been sent off for a crude challenge on West Ham goalkeeper Adrian

  • The hot-headed striker had already been booked for arguing with referee Anthony Taylor

  • Costa also clashed angrily with team-mate Nemanja Matic after he was shown a yellow card

  • Forward Eden Hazard put Chelsea ahead in the 47th minute by scoring from the penalty spot

  • West Ham defender James Collins equalised with a wicked left-footed half-volley in the 77th minute

By Martin Samuel for the Daily Mail

 CHELSEA 2-1 WEST HAM - MARTIN SAMUEL AT STAMFORD BRIDGE: Diego Costa swung a right boot, more in desperation than expectation. The night was not going to plan at all. There was a minute to go and Chelsea were on the brink. Not of victory, although not really of calamity, either; this was hardly an echo of last season. But they were poised to drop points to West Ham at home. And that's not good around these parts. It would constitute an inauspicious start for manager Antonio Conte. So Costa tried his luck. Michy Batshuayi, a £33million signing but a late arrival from the bench here, headed the ball down. Costa brought it under control and shot. The ball travelled low, through the legs of James Collins. It meant Adrian saw it late. Too late. In at the far corner it went. The game would be won, after all. The Conte era was off to a flyer. And so was Conte.

Diego Costa swung a right boot, more in desperation than expectation. The night was not going to plan at all.

There was a minute to go and Chelsea were on the brink. Not of victory, although not really of calamity, either; this was hardly an echo of last season. But they were poised to drop points to West Ham at home. And that’s not good around these parts. It would constitute an inauspicious start for manager Antonio Conte.

So Costa tried his luck. Michy Batshuayi, a £33million signing but a late arrival from the bench here, headed the ball down. Costa brought it under control and shot. The ball travelled low, through the legs of James Collins. It meant Adrian, the West Ham goalkeeper, saw it late. Too late. In at the far corner it went. The game would be won, after all. The Conte era was off to a flyer. And so was Conte.

Diego Costa slotted Chelsea's winner one minute from time to get Antonio Conte's reign off to a flyer

Costa was lucky to be still on the pitch to score the winner after a crude challenge on West Ham keeper Adrian

Goalkeeper Adrian was clearly incensed by the crude challenge from the Chelsea striker in the second half

Costa protested his innocence over the mis-timed tackle but the West Ham keeper was angered by the foul



New signing N'Golo Kante had a big impact in the Chelsea midfield despite being booked after just three minutes for a foul. More more stats visit the

MATCH FACTS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE

Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Courtois 6, Ivanovic 6.5, Cahill 6.5, Terry 6.5, Azpilicueta 6.5, Kante 7.5, Willian 7 (Pedro 80, 6), Oscar 6.5 (Batshuayi 85, 6), Matic 6.5, Hazard 8.5 (Moses 85, 6), Costa 7.
Subs Not Used: Begovic, Fabregas, Loftus-Cheek, Aina.
Booked: Kante, Costa, Azpilicueta, Pedro.
Goals: Hazard 47 pen, Costa 89.
West Ham (4-3-3): Adrian 7.5, Antonio 5 (Byram 52, 6), Collins 7.5, Reid 7, Masuaku 7, Kouyate 6.5, Nordtveit 6 (Payet 67, 6.5), Noble 6.5, Ayew (Tore 35, 6), Carroll 6.5, Valencia 6.
Subs Not Used: Randolph, Obiang, Ogbonna, Oxford.
Booked: Collins, Antonio.
Goals: Collins 77.
Ref: Anthony Taylor (Cheshire).


Down the touchline he ran, high-fiving a row of outstretched hands. This is why the foreign coaches come. It’s not just the money. It’s the Premier League. Not the best, not always the classiest — but there really is nothing like it for drama, for excitement, for sound, for fury.

Should Costa have been on the field? Well, that’s another story. Booked in the first half for dissent, he should have received a second yellow for a late lunge on Adrian with 25 minutes to go. The ball was a good yard away when he hit West Ham’s goalkeeper, late and high.

Anywhere else on the field, it would have been a booking. Had Costa not already been booked, it may well have been a booking, too. Yes, Adrian was struggling to bring the ball under control and was fair game. Costa was entitled to make a challenge, and a robust one, too.

But he cannot play the man if he does. So Anthony Taylor, the referee who had seemed so strict in the first half, messed up or lost his nerve. We applaud the Premier League crackdown on dissent, which brought Costa’s first yellow. But it’s all well and good giving referees protection; referees have to ensure that players get it, too.

West Ham defender James Collins equalised with a wicked left-footed half-volley in the 77th minute

The leveller had West Ham boss Bilic jumping for joy on the touchline, but that elation proved all too short-lived

Eden Hazard stepped up to fire Chelsea ahead from the penalty spot in the 47th minute against West Ham

Chelsea were awarded a penalty after Cesar Azpilicueta went down under a clumsy challenge by Michail Antonio

Harard's clinical strike at Stamford Bridge on Monday night was Chelsea's 5,000th top-flight goal

New Chelsea manager Antonio Conte celebrated wildly after Hazard opened the scoring against the Hammers

Still, the best team won and Conte will have been impressed with his team’s resolve. More disturbing is the fact it took pretty much a single West Ham attack to break them down. In the 77th minute, they won a free-kick and, from it, a corner. They had barely been inside Chelsea’s penalty area until that moment, but Chelsea cracked.

They had looked so comfortable, too. So in control. West Ham were at arm’s length. Eden Hazard was running the game. Chelsea looked quick, often slick, and energetic. Watched by England manager Sam Allardyce, Andy Carroll was getting no joy from Conte’s central defenders, nor N’Golo Kante sweeping in front of them. True, it had needed an horrendous mistake from Michail Antonio and a penalty to give them the lead, but Chelsea were good for it. If there was to be a second goal in the game, it was going to the boys in blue.

Willian went close to breaking the deadlock in the first-half with a free kick which went just over the bar

West Ham's club-record signing Andre Ayew limped off after just 35 minutes with a muscle injury

Then Dimitri Payet came on, and changed the dynamic. Suddenly, Chelsea looked less assured, vulnerable, much like last season. West Ham won a free-kick, then another.

The second was in Payet’s range, just outside the area to the right. Stamford Bridge seemed edgy. He hit the wall, to a relieved cheer, but the ball went out for a corner. And, from there, calamity struck Conte’s men. Chelsea have not kept a clean sheet at home in the league since November; and it will be hard to win the title unless that changes.



Chelsea felt they should have been awarded a penalty in the first-half after Oscar went down in the box

The Brazilian midfielder was caught by the outstretched arm of West Ham defender Winston Reid

 Costa was not happy with the Oscar decision and made his feelings known to referee Anthony Taylor

  Referees have been told to crackdown on dissent and the Chelsea striker was duly shown the yellow card

 Costa appeared to exchange words and shove team-mate Nemanja Matic after being booked in the 20th minute

 Payet swung the corner to Collins. His glancing header may have struck Cesar Azpilicueta’s arm but as several West Ham players appealed Enner Valencia continued playing and clipped the ball back to Collins. He shot, first time, past Thibaut Courtois.

Collins celebrated deliriously, the travelling fans serenading the ‘Ginger Pele’. Someone will have to explain it all to Conte later, when he has calmed down. They may have to explain that this is fairly standard for the Premier League, too, because for a manager used to the order of Serie A, it is going to take some getting used to.

Good grief, it was frantic at times. A game of few chances but plenty of action and early yellow cards. Not so many late ones, though, Taylor displaying the inconsistency for which Premier League officials are renowned. So Kante was booked after three minutes for a foul on Carroll, but not late on for the same challenge on Payet.

As for Costa, if there is to be an instant reckoning for dissent, the penny needs to drop and quick if Chelsea’s striker is not to spend more time suspended than a circus trapeze act. In the 19th minute, Oscar dispossessed Mark Noble, turned and ran on goal. He passed Winston Reid on the outside and there was contact, but it was minimal and barely impeded his run.

 Diego Costa was soon in the thick in the action and tangling with West Ham defender James Collins

 Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois was keen to make a good early impression following a disappointing spell

 Summer £30m signing Kante was shown a yellow card for a foul on West Ham striker Andy Carrolll

Oscar fell, dramatically. A bit soft. Taylor was having none of it. On the touchline, Conte hopped around like a live prawn on a hot plate. Costa chased 40 yards down the pitch to berate Taylor. Big mistake. There is zero tolerance of dissent this season and he became the second name in the book. Third was Collins for kicking Costa; something several of his team-mates may feel like doing if he doesn’t learn to keep his mouth shut.

 West Ham were tenacious but, without Payet in the starting line-up and after losing Andre Ayew to a right leg injury after 34 minutes, posed little threat. The home team had the best of the chances.

In the 12th minute, a delightful backheel from Oscar found Branislav Ivanovic on the overlap. He cut inside Cheikhou Kouyate and hit a snap shot, low, at the near post, needing Adrian to have his wits about him to keep it out.

Hazard also came close, making enormous ground on the left after 31 minutes, darting inside and striking a shot just wide of the far post. With virtually the last kick of the first half, Willian struck a free-kick from 25 yards that was deftly flicked over the bar.

Something had to change and Slaven Bilic, the West Ham manager, could be seen in conversation with Payet shortly before the second half began — but it was too late. Within a minute of the restart, Antonio had given away a penalty.

Two mistakes for the price of one. First, he gave the ball straight to Azpilicueta just outside the West Ham area. Then, attempting to limit the damage, he went in on him clumsily as he attacked and sent him tumbling. No doubt in Taylor’s mind this time and Hazard stepped up and smashed his shot high into the roof of the net.

Six minutes later, Antonio was taken off for Sam Byram and Bilic did not even look at him as he marched down the tunnel. It was a foolish, petulant display by the player. Antonio may see himself as more winger than full back, but good wingers don’t pass the ball to the opposition and then foul them in the penalty area. Bilic had every right to be angry.

 New signing N'Golo Kante, who made more tackles than any other player last season, was booked in just the third minute

 New Chelsea manager Antonio Conte applauds the fans before his first Premier League match on Monday night

 Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich watched on as Conte began his reign at Stamford Bridge on Monday night

 New England manager and former West Ham boss Sam Allardyce was also an interested spectator at Stamford Bridge

 New Belgium manager Roberto Martinez talks to Premier League executive chairman Richard Scudamore in the stands

Former Chelsea midfielder Michael Essien was spotted among the crowd making their way to Stamford Bridge
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