is the indispensable man on the best side in the country. No-one else at Chelsea can do what he does and without him, Antonio Conte’s 3-4-3 system, his 93-point team, would collapse.
After spending the previous three seasons being shipped
around on loan, it might be a surprise. Never able to make much of an
impression at Liverpool, Stoke City or West Ham United, Moses looked set
to be sold last summer. Just another youngster who could not cut it at
Chelsea.
But the unlikely reality, Moses as Premier League champion,
on the brink of a double, is not a surprise to everyone. Certainly not
to the people who remember him from his time at Crystal Palace. They all
say the same thing: that Moses was the most naturally talented teenage
footballer they had seen, or have seen since. Fast, strong, skilful and
decisive, Moses was a phenomenon in school and academy football long
before he played as a senior.
Though that does not mean that they all knew that Moses
would definitely reach the top. In fact, the talk at Crystal Palace at
the time was that he would either do what he has done, playing in the
European elite, or he would vanish without trace as a professional
player.
So says James Scowcroft, who played for Palace for Moses’
first seasons and always knew there were only two outcomes for the
youngster.
“I remember saying to the academy manager Gary Issott,” Scowcroft tells The Independent,
“that Moses will either play in the Champions League or on Hackney
Marshes. One or the other, but he was never going to be a mid-level
journeyman footballer. He had that much ability.”
Neil Warnock tells a similar story. Before Moses met Conte
last summer, Warnock was the most important manager of his career, the
man who brought him into senior football and showed him what he needs to
do.
It all started in October 2007 when Simon Jordan, who says
that none of Moses’ success has surprised him, sacked Peter Taylor and
appointed Neil Warnock, with the team struggling in 19th place in the
Championship.
Warnock recalls it very clearly. “I remember we didn’t have
any pace. I shouted over to Gary Issott, ‘do we have any pace in the
kids?’ He said we had two lads, Victor Moses and Sean Scannell. ‘Are
they good enough for the first team?’ ‘No, not yet.’ ‘Well they are
now!’ So I screamed at them over. They wouldn’t say boo to a goose
either of them, such quiet lads. ‘He says you’re not ready for the first
team, what do you think?’ They hardly said anything. ‘Will you play in
the first team if I pick you? ‘Yeah’, they said. That’s how they were.”
Moses was thrown into first team football at the age of 16 and
immediately showed that he could handle it. “You could see from day one
training with the first team that he wasn’t out of place,” Scowcroft
says, “he would drop his shoulder, go the other way and embarrass the
senior pros.” He took to Championship football quickly too, scored his
first goal away at West Bromwich Albion and celebrated with backflips.
Some at the club were not impressed at the risk he was taking but they
did not want to fine him. He was only on £300 per week.
But Moses’ explosive attacking power was not enough. Not to
play for a Neil Warnock team in the Championship. So Warnock told the
16-year-old that there were two very different paths his career could
follow, and it was up to him.
“He couldn’t defend for England, he played out wide with his
gloves on, he never tackled back,” Warnock remembers. “Players were
capitalising on his weakness there, and I’d just about had enough of
him.”
“One night we were playing away, I pulled him and said:
‘Listen Victor, the time has come now son. You’ve got to decide now. I
can’t do any more. You’ve either got to decide whether you’re going to
play for Bromley, or you can go all the way to the very top with your
ability. But you’ve got to contribute more team-wise.’”
Warnock’s warning worked. “That night we played it was
absolutely bucketing down. I’ve never seen him work so hard in his life,
up and down, back and around, tackling, heading, unbelievable. I
remember saying to him after, ‘welcome to the real Victor Moses’. After
that he never had a problem with defending.”
Fast forward 10 years and Moses has found his perfect role,
with plenty of defending. His future was uncertain when he joined
Chelsea’s pre-season tour last July. It always would be, after three
loans in three years but no permanent move. But Antonio Conte saw in
Moses the attributes he values most: hard work, athleticism, and the
ability to follow instructions.
I realised quickly that Victor could stay with us,” Conte
recalled. “I saw his potential quickly and told him he will stay with
us.” That was a start but the crucial moment came in October when Conte
switched to a 3-4-3 system. The right wing-back role was perfect for
Moses, getting up and down, defending in a five but always there as an
overlapping option going forward.
All Conte had to do was to methodically teach Moses the fine
details of the role. This took hours of training ground work. Conte is
not a manager who leaves anything to chance but he is one of the very
best at coaching and improving his players and getting his points
across. All that rigorous positioning work, dragging players around the
pitch, had the desired effect. Moses became the player Conte needed him
to be.
Conte has given Moses the two things he always needed the
most: total support and detailed instruction. That is what he had been
lacking ever since Rafael Benitez left Chelsea in 2013 and Jose Mourinho
decided Moses was not for him. But now he has them both, Moses has
become the top player he was expected to be.
I realised quickly that Victor could stay with us,” Conte
recalled. “I saw his potential quickly and told him he will stay with
us.” That was a start but the crucial moment came in October when Conte
switched to a 3-4-3 system. The right wing-back role was perfect for
Moses, getting up and down, defending in a five but always there as an
overlapping option going forward.
All Conte had to do was to methodically teach Moses the fine
details of the role. This took hours of training ground work. Conte is
not a manager who leaves anything to chance but he is one of the very
best at coaching and improving his players and getting his points
across. All that rigorous positioning work, dragging players around the
pitch, had the desired effect. Moses became the player Conte needed him
to be.
Conte has given Moses the two things he always needed the
most: total support and detailed instruction. That is what he had been
lacking ever since Rafael Benitez left Chelsea in 2013 and Jose Mourinho
decided Moses was not for him. But now he has them both, Moses has
become the top player he was expected to be.
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/victor-moses-chelsea-news-linchpin-unlikely-rise-premier-league-epl-winner-a7757761.html
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