A blog of two halves

Friends Reunited

How should Chelsea approach the Saturday lunchtime clash with Manchester United?

15 October 2018
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Jose Mourinho (left) speaks to Frank Lampard at Old Trafford. PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES

How should Chelsea approach the Saturday lunchtime clash with Manchester United?

Obviously by ensuring Eden Hazard is fully recovered after Belgium's grudge derby against neighbouring Netherlands on Tuesday night.

Hazard said this week that of all the managers he'd worked for, the one he'd like to link up with again was Jose Mourinho.

The timing of the remark is unfortunate. Mourinho inherited Alex Ferguson's mantle as Master of Mind Games on the old Scot's retirement, and he's wily enough to know that a well-timed word in the tunnel could distract the Blues' wizard.

Hazard is such an asset to Chelsea – more than anyone else in the squad by a country mile – that Morrie Sarri's handling of the mercurial maestro holds the key to the Blues' season.

Meanwhile, waiting round the corner and eagerly anticipating a return to Stamford Bridge, is none other than Frank Lampard.

His Derby County visit in the Carabao Cup on Halloween in a game sandwiched between Chelsea's league clashes against Burnley and Palace.

After he caused an upset by beating Man U on penalties in the previous round, Lampard will be keen to do something similar against a weakened Chelsea second string in front of home crowd lustily singing his name.

Yes, it's Friends Reunited month at Stamford Bridge, with plenty at stake for two returning figures more familiar with SW6 than almost anywhere else on the planet.

The views expressed in this blog are those of the author and unless specifically stated are not necessarily those of Hammersmith & Fulham Council.

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Tim Harrison

Tim is our Chelsea FC blogger.

He also writes our Shepherds Bush Cricket Club match reports during the football close season.

Tim has been writing Chelsea match reports since the late 1980s for newspapers and, more recently, websites.

When he first reported on the Blues, the press box was a metal cage suspended over the lip of the old west stand - and you reached it via a precarious walkway over the heads of the fans.

But he has been a Chelsea fan since his father took an excited seven-year-old to watch Chelsea v Manchester United in the mid 1960s... and covered his ears every time the chanting got too ripe.

In July 2005 he wrote The Rough Guide to Chelsea, published by Penguin, which sold 15,000 copies.

His favourite player of all time is Charlie Cooke, the mazy winger who lit up Chelsea's left wing in the 60s and 70s.

When he isn't watching the Blues, Tim acts, paints, writes and researches local history.

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