Frank Lampard confident his tactics can unlock Chelsea’s ‘dangerous’ attacking potential

The Blues are without a win in three in the league and have dropped to ninth place

Nick Purewal
Monday 11 January 2021 12:27 GMT
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Frank Lampard
Frank Lampard (POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Frank Lampard believes his midfield system of deploying two number eights can become "more dangerous" for Chelsea and allow his attacking talents to flourish.

Lampard has developed a bespoke 4-3-3 formation in a bid to squeeze Kai Havertz and Mason Mount into the same midfield, while at the same time generating space for two wingers.

The under-pressure Chelsea boss admitted he is aware of question marks around his set-up, with some calls to find space for a natural central playmaker. But the former Chelsea and England midfielder insisted that, at its best, his Blues blueprint can harness the greatest potency from his myriad attacking talents.

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"I've heard some people talk about the system with two eights as though they have to run in straight lines up and down the pitch," said Lampard.

"It doesn't have to be that way when you have players with different qualities like Mason Mount, Kai Havertz, Mateo Kovacic, N'Golo Kante. These players play in different ways and arrive between the lines and sometimes into the area inhabited by an orthodox number 10.

"And that can be more dangerous than a number 10 that just stands there all day. They can be, for me, more dangerous, but those are the things that need time."

Chelsea coasted past League Two Morecambe 4-0 at Stamford Bridge in Sunday's FA Cup third-round encounter.

Goal-scorer Callum Hudson-Odoi and Billy Gilmour stepped in to start and impressed throughout, with Lampard insisting both young stars are already integral to his Chelsea plans and are already in contention for regular first-team starts.

"Callum is improving and improving, yet there is also much more to come from Callum," said Lampard.

"I think his application in training, his desire to look at his game, is great. And his goal was a fantastic example of someone running to break the lines and ending up where a striker would be. That is what modern-day wingers have to do. In terms of how long until he makes his case, he's making it now.

"In this team we have three natural wingers and another who can play in that position. At times I am going to have to make selection decisions and sometimes he will be in, and other times he won't be.

"But right now the way he is playing, he's assisting and scoring goals and that is making me really happy. There has been an uplift from Callum and there are more gears for him to go up. When he is playing like he's playing, it's good to expect more from him.

"I think Billy Gilmour is pushing too and I think Billy has been pushing since he made his breakthrough last season against top-level opposition against Liverpool. He played brilliantly then, got man of the match and reproduced that against Everton, but then his injury came pretty soon after that.

"From those moments and even before, I knew Billy would be a very, very good player for this club, to say the least, even at his young age. He came in and moved the ball well and he did it when he came on against Man City last week."

Morecambe boss Derek Adams challenged the Shrimps to channel their Stamford Bridge experience on their return to League Two.

"If we'd gone in at 1-0 at half-time we could have had a different gameplan for the second half," said Adams.

"There's not too much for us to learn ultimately, but we fought hard and made sure it was respectable.

"Now we've got to get back to the day to day and be excited about the league challenge."

PA

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