Arsenal v Chelsea: Mythbusting - is Diego Costa a dirty player?
In a new series, we analyse popular myths to assess whether they are based on fact - or fiction. Do they stand up to scrutiny, or are they nothing more than tired cliches?
The myth: Diego Costa is dirty
Diego Costa has earned a reputation for being confrontational but he has not yet received a red card in his Chelsea career
The Chelsea striker has twice been banned for three games in his two seasons in England, once for stamping on Liverpool's Emre Can and once for a clash with Arsenal's Laurent Koscielny.
Manchester City boss Manuel Pellegrini suggested earlier this season that he should tone down his aggressive side, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has accused him of always being "involved in provocation", while his international manager, Spain boss Vicente del Bosque, described his conduct during the Blues' 2-0 win over the Gunners in September as "unedifying".
So as Costa's Chelsea prepare to travel to Arsenal on Sunday, we look at whether the 27-year-old's reputation is deserved.
Does the myth stack up?
This is a tricky one to prove or disprove.Does being dirty mean being caught by the officials - and shown a card - or is it more about cynical, off-the-ball incidents which might be missed by referees?
Since the latter are not recorded by statisticians, we can only really judge Costa on those offences he is penalised for.
For a player with such a combative reputation, he doesn't actually make that many tackles when compared with other Premier League forwards.
In two seasons, Costa (28) has made 67 fewer challenges than Alexis Sanchez (95), who tops the list.
His 1.43 fouls-per-game rate leaves him well down the list of all Premier League players, way below Marouane Fellaini, who commits 2.18 fouls per fixture - more than anyone else in the division.
Note: Only includes players with a minimum of 20 appearances
Ashley Barnes (Burnley), Marouane Chamakh (Crystal Palace), Connor Wickham (Sunderland/Crystal Palace), Graziano Pelle (Southampton), Leonardo Ulloa (Leicester), Bobby Zamora (Queens Park Rangers), Glenn Murray (Crystal Palace, Bournemouth), Mame Biram Diouf (Stoke) and Andy Carroll (West Ham) have all been more regular offenders than him.
And, to further suggest he is not as dirty as you might think, he has yet to receive a red card since arriving at Stamford Bridge.
So that's that then... Costa isn't dirty?
It's not quite that simple.He might not make that many tackles or commit that many fouls, but when he does, they tend to have an impact - either on his opponent or with the referee.
Costa has scored 27 league goals for Chelsea, including seven this season
0 comments:
Post a Comment