Chelsea bounced back to form with a comprehensive 2-0 victory in an eventful and ill-tempered contest at Tottenham – who had Heung-min Son sent off.
The game had the good, the bad and the ugly side of football in spades as Frank Lampard’s side produced probably the performance of their season both tactically and performance-wise, especially the excellent Willian who scored both goals.
The second came from the penalty spot after a bad, and ugly, flying tackle from Spurs goalkeeper Paulo Gazzaniga on Marcos Alonso – but Willian’s calmly-taken effort only came after VAR had intervened as referee Anthony Taylor had somehow given a free-kick the other way.
Thing went from bad to worse for Spurs when VAR was involved again in ensuring Son was sent off for the second time this season, after he petulantly kicked out at Antonio Rudiger.
By far the ugliest event of the game came off the pitch, though, with reports of racist chants coming from Spurs fans aimed at Rudiger, with referee Taylor informing both managers of the situation and the public address system giving three warnings during the second half.
Back on the pitch, and it was a masterclass from Lampard against his old boss Jose Mourinho as Chelsea dominated from the very first whistle, looking more balanced, pressing Spurs high up the pitch and not letting them pass through into midfield.
Mason Mount was electric throughout, Tammy Abraham was a constant danger and Willian pulled strings all game – but while Chelsea were threatening going forward they were even better at the back, with a regimented and disciplined performance for the full 90 minutes.
The opener was a prime example of the difference between the two teams, as a sharp and switched-on Willian collected a short corner as Serge Aurier dawdled before cutting in side and whipping a curling drive into the far corner.
Chelsea could have scored more before first-half stoppage time, when Gazzaniga suffered from a huge brain fade and instead of coming to gather a simple bouncing ball, for some reason went with the flying bicycle kick approach as Alonso chased the ball down.
Perhaps surprised by the bizarre nature of the tackle, referee Taylor awarded a free kick to Spurs, but VAR soon put him right and correctly gave Chelsea a penalty, allowing Willian, who famously almost joined Spurs before a late change of heart, to slot home with aplomb.