In the 18
matches that John Obi Mikel has played under Chelsea ’s interim coach Guus Hiddink over two
sessions, the Blues are yet to lose, winning 15 and drawing three.
charm,
you can go ahead, but we still need to answer the pressing question, "what
it is really about Mikel’s game that suits Hiddink’s plans to a tee?"
The
midfielder was lauded to the heavens after his display against Crystal Palace
last Sunday as he helped the Blues record their biggest win in 12 months.
After the
win over Palace, Hiddink had the following to say about the Nigerian
midfielder, “He is the ideal player in my option to bring balance to the team.”
Mikel
under Mourinho
Unfortunately
for many a Jose Mourinho fan, the Super Eagles talisman was not deemed worthy
of a starting berth in the Special One’s tactical plan – which worked very well
last season but faltered spectacularly this term.
In five
games under the regime of Mourinho this season, Mikel played only 177 minutes
[including coming on for Cesc Fabregas in the 92nd minute against Arsenal] and
starting only twice; at home against Liverpool, and he was replaced with scores
tied at 1-1 and away at Everton, where he provided the assist for Chelsea’s
goal, scored by Nemanja Matic. He was again taken off with the Blues chasing
the game at 2-1.
In the 17
matches that Chelsea played before sacking Mourinho, the preferred midfield duo
of Matic and Fabregas showed that there was an imbalance but Mourinho persisted
with the two players and got sacked – appropriately if performances since his
exit indicate.
Mikel has played in all three matches under Hiddink, a total of 225 minutes. Former Liverpool midfield enforcer, and now television analyst, Graeme Souness said after the Crystal Palace win, “I don't think I've ever seen John Obi Mikel play so well. He bossed that area.”
Hiddink also continued his lavish praise: “He played very well but also in the previous game.
"If the team is not willing to defend well, or hasn't got the right balance, then you'll concede a lot of goals. I think John Obi can be one of the key figures in bringing back that balance.
“On this podium very talented players can explore their qualities. He reads the game very well, he knows where the strength of the opponent is and knows how to combat that.
“He has very good sense, he doesn't do it in a brutal way, he's very elegant. Someone who can defend so smoothly is very beautiful. According to Goal”
Reading those words, it's little surprise that Mikel is being known as the African Zidane!
We are talking about Mikel here – a player that divides Chelsea fans one way or another. That eulogy reads like Shakespearean poetry, and the plaudits did not stop there, the Chelsea fans who travelled to the Palace game at Selhurst Park were singing his name to the rafters by the end of the contest – the first time he has had such adulation since he joined the club in 2006!
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