Abraham & Mount on target in impressive Chelsea win

By Matthew Howarth

BBC Sport

Southampton 1-4 Chelsea

Chelsea manager Frank Lampard says his Blues side can get “a lot better” after they swept past Southampton to move up to fifth in the Premier League.

Tammy Abraham’s looping finish from Callum Hudson-Odoi’s pass gave the visitors the lead, before Mason Mount doubled Chelsea’s advantage from close range.

Danny Ings reduced the arrears from Yan Valery’s cut-back, but N’Golo Kante’s deflected effort off Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg and Michy Batshuayi’s neat finish put the seal on a comfortable victory for Lampard’s side.

“I didn’t think we started that well, even though doing so had been something we’d talked about before,” said the former England midfielder. “[Abraham’s] goal came at the right time and after that I felt pretty comfortable.

“Getting four away from home – we’re scoring – so it’s a nice afternoon.”

“Let’s not get carried away, it’s a long season and we feel we might have picked up more points than we’ve actually got. We’ve not been at our absolute best and we can be a lot better.

“We shouldn’t be sloppy, and after going 2-0 up we should make it 3-0. We’re scoring goals, but can we tighten up? Yes.”

Plain sailing for in-form Blues

After a stuttering start to the campaign, there are signs that this youthful Chelsea side are beginning to build up a head of steam under Lampard.

This was the Blues’ fourth successive win in all competitions – a result which lifts them level on points with fourth-placed Leicester City and only two behind champions Manchester City, who lost 2-0 at home to Wolves.

Youngsters Abraham and Mount have taken the top flight by storm after spending last season on loan at Aston Villa and Derby County respectively, and the duo were heavily involved here as the visitors raced into an early lead.

Hudson-Odoi – making his first league start under Lampard – sent a long ball over the top of the Southampton defence and Abraham was first to it, his looping finish over Gunn crossing the line before Yoshida could clear the ball to safety.

Chelsea capitalised on a poor piece of Southampton defending to double their lead seven minutes later, Mount latching on to Willian’s precise pass before slamming home his fourth goal of the campaign.

There appeared to be no way back for the Saints at that stage as Chelsea continued to lay siege to the home goal, but Ralph Hasenhuttl’s side pulled a goal back out of nothing when Valery wriggled his way past several Blues defenders before setting up Ings, who was left with an easy finish.

There was an element of fortune about Chelsea’s third – Kante’s speculative drive deflecting off Hojbjerg and wrong-footing Gunn – but the dominant visitors could have won by a higher margin.

Hudson-Odoi was thwarted by Gunn four minutes after the restart, before Batshuayi eventually completed the scoring in the final minute of normal time with a confident finish from Christian Pulisic’s through-ball.

“It’s a transitional team but we don’t have that in our heads,” Mount told Match of the Day afterwards. “We want to get as high in the table as we can.

“A lot of the young boys around us have played together for a long time. It’s good having these boys around you in the senior team – it’s a massive achievement and now we’re looking forward to the international break.”

Sloppy Saints leave Hasenhuttl with plenty to ponder

The last time Southampton suffered five defeats in their opening eight league games, they were relegated from the Premier League.

Hasenhuttl reverted to a four-man defence at St Mary’s, with Ryan Bertrand dropping to left-back and Yan Valery replacing the absent Jannik Vestergaard.

The tactical switch did little to solidify the Saints’ rearguard, however. Nathan Redmond sent a dipping effort inches over Kepa Arrizabalaga’s crossbar within the opening minute, but it proved to be a false dawn for the hosts as Chelsea quickly gained a stranglehold on proceedings.

Southampton were culpable in their own downfall, giving the ball away on numerous occasions in the first half in particular. Indeed, it was Jan Bednarek’s poor header to Oriol Romeu which gifted Chelsea possession in the build-up to Mount’s goal.

Ings’ clinical finish from Valery’s cut-back appeared to spark the hosts briefly into life. Redmond fired into the side-netting from a tight angle and Ings also had a goal-bound effort blocked, but their self-belief drained away with Kante’s deflected effort shortly before the break.

With games against Wolverhampton Wanderers, Leicester City and Manchester City coming up, it is hard to see where Southampton’s next victory is going to come from.

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