Cesc Fabregas's first-half strike ensured the Blues took full
advantage of Tuesday's slip-up by second-placed Arsenal to leave
Liverpool, 3-0 winners at Middlesbrough, and Manchester City, who beat
Watford 2-0, to keep up the chase.
Manchester United continued
their recent improvement with a 2-1 victory at Crystal Palace and West
Bromwich Albion's Salomon Rondon took the individual honours with a
hat-trick of headers in a 3-1 win over Swansea City.
Chelsea's win was particularly welcome because it came without the injured Eden Hazard.
One
of the secrets behind their success has been continuity of selection so
manager Antonio Conte will be delighted at the way his revamped
midfield of Fabregas and Willian combined beautifully just before
halftime for the Spaniard to score the goal which confirmed Chelsea's
best run since 2005-06.
"Cesc is a good player for us," Conte told reporters.
"I
have four midfielders and it is important for me to evaluate the form
of the single players, some games you need players more physical and
some games more technical. It is important that Cesc had a good game.
"I
prefer my players not to look at the table and to focus on the next
game in three days. We must prepare very well to have a good Christmas."
That
seems guaranteed since Chelsea will definitely top the table on Dec.
25. On each of the previous four occasions they have done that they have
gone on to win the title.
Liverpool overtook Arsenal in second
place after a comfortable 3-0 win at Middlesbrough with Adam Lallana
involved in all three goals, scoring twice and laying on another for
Divock Origi.
Manager Juergen Klopp reacted to dropping five
points in the last two games by picking Simon Mignolet in goal ahead of
Loris Karius and the Belgian responded with one outstanding save in a
clean sheet.
Manchester
City also put recent stutters behind them as goals from Pablo Zabaleta -
his first in two years - and David Silva secured a 2-0 win over
Watford, only their fifth victory in 16 games.
Fifth-placed
Tottenham Hotspur comfortably overcame Hull City 3-0 while Jose
Mourinho's Manchester United are starting to get a return on the huge
money they invested in Paul Pogba and Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
James
McArthur looked to have earned Palace a point after cancelling out
Pogba's opener but Swede Ibrahimovic struck two minutes from time to
delight his manager.
"It was an amazing performance for a guy who
is 35 years old, scoring goals, being a leader, amazing," said Mourinho
after overseeing United's first back-to-back league wins since August.
West
Bromwich Albion moved up to seventh, one place behind United, after
Rondon became the first player to score a headed hat-trick in the
Premier League since Duncan Ferguson in 1997.
The goals came in a
devastating 13-minute burst early in the second half as Swansea
succumbed to the defensive frailty that has dogged them all season.
Their
only consolation was that most of the sides around them also lost, West
Ham being the exception after beating Burnley 1-0 with a goal from Mark
Noble after his penalty was parried by Tom Heaton.
Stoke City
striker Marko Arnautovic was sent off in his side's 0-0 draw with
Southampton, Stoke boss Mark Hughes's 400th game as a Premier League
manager.
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