Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Chelsea. Premier League.
MolineuxAttendance30,631.
Match report and free highlights as Chelsea were held to a goalless draw by Wolves at Molineux amid Covid-19 frustrations for head coach Thomas Tuchel
Monday 20 December 2021 06:13, UK
Chelsea were left frustrated by a 0-0 draw at Wolves that saw them slip further behind in the Premier League title race.
Daniel Podence's first-half finish that was ruled out following a VAR check was as close as the game got to a goal with incidents at a minimum in the Molineux fog.
Chelsea pushed and probed for the goal but created very little against a resilient Wolves side and the draw means they are now six points adrift of leaders Manchester City.
The build-up to the game had been overshadowed by Chelsea's failed attempt to get the match postponed because of seven positive Covid-19 cases in the squad.
"It is very hard for us to understand," Thomas Tuchel told Sky Sports before the match. "We are very concerned about the health of the players."
Chelsea were at least able to welcome back N'Golo Kante to the starting line-up but with only four outfield substitutes it was clearly not the ideal preparation for the away side.
Wolves fans were eager to see some action, having been waiting almost a month to see their side score at Molineux, and they thought they had found the breakthrough early on.
Podence slotted home but the celebrations were cut short when it was ruled out for offside as a result of Raul Jimenez's attempt to play the ball from Fernando Marcal's cross.
Chelsea enjoyed lots of possession in the first half but were unable to penetrate a defence that had conceded just two goals in their previous six Premier League games.
Christian Pulisic came closest before the interval when he stole in behind the back-line but was pushed wide by Wolves goalkeeper Jose Sa and the threat was averted.
Instead, it was Leander Dendoncker who had the best chance of the half, an unmarked header from Podence's cross that was easily saved by Edouard Mendy in the Chelsea goal.
The second half was a largely turgid affair with the game at an impasse as Chelsea controlled possession and Wolves were content to maintain their defensive shape.
Brilliant interplay did result in Pulisic going through on goal in the 78th minute but his left-footed finish when one-on-one with the goalkeeper was expertly saved by Sa.
It was as close as Chelsea came and while Wolves threw on Adama Traore late on to provide some threat on the break, neither side did enough to take the three points.
For Wolves, it was a job well done. For Chelsea, it was an afternoon of frustration.
Wolves boss Bruno Lage: "I think in the first half, the players did everything I asked. We created two good chances to score a goal. After the second half, they have time to talk, to adapt, they are a big team and they come with everything and create one good chance. It is a good point for us. We move on, it is one point. More important is how we are playing."
Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel: "After a strong start in the first five minutes we struggled to adapt to Wolves' shape. It was a very strong performance in the second half. That it is hard to score goals here, that is clear. To analyse this game in isolation, I am fine with it. I am very happy with how we played in the second half. The points that hurt are the points we lost at home to Burnley, Manchester United and Everton, they are the six points that hurt."
Chelsea have lost just one of their last 12 Premier League games so this is hardly a crisis for Thomas Tuchel but this was a fourth draw in eight games and those results are proving costly. There is a real danger of them slipping out of this title race now.
With Manchester City in relentless form, Chelsea need to be churning out results but two points from two games against Everton and Wolves this week leaves them under pressure at a time when the squad is severely depleted. The mood music has changed.
This was a still a strong line-up - N'Golo Kante's inclusion making it arguably better than the one seen at Stamford Bridge in midweek - but expecting the same front three to make things happen twice in four days was perhaps too much. That urgency was not quite there.
Without Romelu Lukaku and Timo Werner to change things up, Tuchel found himself turning to the woefully out of form Saul Niguez at half-time. It never looked like being enough.
Wolves, of course, are a tough nut to crack. They have conceded only twice in seven games - a 94th-minute winner against Liverpool and a controversial penalty at Manchester City. Throughout the game, it felt like Chelsea needed something special to break through.
Some neat interchanges on the left just about engineered the space for Christian Pulisic late on with his wonderful first touch taking him in behind the Wolves defence. But Jose Sa made the save and Chelsea are going to need to create more to be sure of winning.
Tuchel was keen to stress that, in isolation, this was not a bad result. The three draws in their last four Premier League games at Stamford Bridge are the ones that frustrate him more. But allowing another two points to elude them adds to the feeling that they might fall short.
Increasingly, it seems that the more expansive approaches of City and Liverpool might just edge them ahead over the course of the season, too many games slipping by in which Tuchel's team cannot press home their advantage. They are good. Maybe not quite good enough.
Wolves host Watford at Molineux on Boxing Day at 3pm while Chelsea are in Carabao Cup quarter-final action on Wednesday as they visit Brentford; kick-off 7.45pm.
Thomas Tuchel's side travel to face Aston Villa on Boxing Day, live on Sky Sports Premier League; kick-off 12.30pm.