Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Finally, up and down Blues are clicking into gear
Evening Standard
|October 09, 2023
OF THE many things Chelsea have proven money cannot buy over the last couple of seasons, momentum would be somewhere close to top of the list.
Too often, under successive managers, it has been a case of one step forward, at best, followed by two steps back, at least.
On Saturday, at last, then, was something to buck the trend: a third victory in as many matches across competitions in the space of 11 days and, for the first time since March, a second in a row in the League.
True, it was ‘only’ Burnley, Turf Moor a place where the Blues have now won on eight of their nine Premier League visits, drawing the other, and where Vincent Kompany’s side, far from creating the newcomers’ obligatory home fortress, have failed to take a single point in five games.
True, as well, that a 4-1 scoreline suggests a stroll not dissimilar to that against Luton, which was so straightforward that no one had even bothered declaring a new dawn by the time the subsequent Nottingham Forest loss rendered it false.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 09, 2023-Ausgabe von Evening Standard.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Evening Standard
The London Standard
Revival of an American classic is a luridly weird study in power dynamics
A study of two damaged brothers whose lives are disrupted by an outsider, Lyle Kessler's blend of absurdism and realism could be a Philadelphia-set companion to Pinter's The Caretaker.
1 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
My adult gap year changed my life — I fell in love with the whole crazy world again
didn't imagine I'd meet the man I would marry in a queue for the long drop on the side of a mountain in Peru.
4 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
'HOLLYWOOD IS A MACHINE — IT CAN BUILD YOU UP AND KNOCK YOU DOWN'
Kate Hudson on growing up in an acting dynasty, her own rock'n'roll ambitions — and why she paused Botox, gained weight and ditched make-up for her hit new film.
7 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Love, sex and a real sense of an ending
Julian Barnes will be 80 on January 19, an anniversary he is celebrating with the publication of this book, which he says will definitely be his last, although he'll continue journalism, plus a sold-out conversation with his old mucker Ian McEwan at the Union Chapel next week.
3 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Thrills, chills and unadulterated splendour: the travel wanderlist 2026
Make like a castaway in Panama, set sail from Chile's hotel at the end of the world, dine at a lkm-long Finnish table — your guide to this year's hottest destinations. By Alicia Miller
10 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
BOARDING NOW: A NEW GOLDEN AGE OF LUXURY AIR TRAVEL
Opulent private cabins, built-in speakers and extra perks in first class — and this year even economy is getting the jet-set treatment. The sky’s the limit for airlines now, reports John Arlidge
5 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
A dapper anti-Sherlock Holmes
Hard on the publication of Sherlock Holmes, there came another book of crime stories, with a shrewd, fearless protagonist, a master of disguise, and his less clever sidekick.
1 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
First Night This baffling re-hoofofthe classic Westernis aludicrous high
London theatre never ceases to surprise and this boggling staging of the classic 1952 Gary Cooper Western is a case in point.
2 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
'I WOULD NEVER BE PART OF A RACIST PARTY'
Laila Cunningham is in the bathroom of Reform HQ, trying to decide which blazer to wear.
8 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Stop me if you think you've heard this one before
Ruth's? Lower Richmond Road, SW15
3 mins
January 15, 2026
Translate
Change font size
