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“He can do it for us” – Jamie Redknapp claims this England midfielder can replicate Kevin De Bruyne

https://www.caughtoffside.com/2020/10/12/mount-can-be-englands-de-bruyne-claims-redknapp/

Sky Sports pundit Jamie Redknapp claimed that Mason Mount can be England’s answer to Kevin De Bruyne after the Chelsea man’s man of the match performance against Belgium last night, report the Daily Mail.

Mount’s tireless 88 minute display against Roberto Martinez’s ‘Red Devils’ showed exactly why Gareth Southgate opted to include him in his starting eleven. His work on and off the ball for both club and country is truly commendable.

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Lampard and Southgate love Mount – and the trolls won’t change that

https://theathletic.com/2134576/2020/10/14/mason-mount-chelsea-england-southgate-lampard/

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Has anyone got a legitimate explanation as to why they dislike Mason Mount so much?

There are many reasons why a footballer becomes very unpopular with members of the general public. It could be because they’re arrogant in interviews, guilty of terrible tackles on the pitch or that they behave badly in their private lives.

Mount is guilty of none of those things. So, what is his crime? Being selected regularly for club and country by Frank Lampard and Gareth Southgate.

It has become a common occurrence for the 21-year-old’s name to be trending on Twitter lately and when you click to find out why, a stream of negative, abusive comments flash up on the screen. It is all rather bizarre.

Rightly or wrongly, many will explain it away by saying, “That’s just the way it is with social media”. There isn’t a professional player in the sport who doesn’t get something nasty written about them at one time or another. However, it is the level of outcry over Mount that is particularly surprising.

Throughout the Roman Abramovich era, Chelsea fans have called for their academy players to be given a chance. Lampard obliged last season by playing the youngsters regularly, none more so than Mount, who made a remarkable 53 appearances.

Lampard’s backing has continued into this campaign so far, too, the Chelsea manager starting the midfielder in the first five matches before naming him on the bench against Crystal Palace last time out.

But among sections of Chelsea’s global fanbase, his constant presence in the first XI has not been greeted warmly. The vitriol among this group reached new heights when Mount missed a decisive spot kick in the Carabao Cup shootout defeat to Tottenham Hotspur last month. His omission from the Palace fixture was cause for celebration in their eyes.

The international break has provided no respite. Being with England on international duty has only succeeded in putting a new target on his back. He is public enemy No 1, especially among Aston Villa fans, for being picked ahead of Jack Grealish.

The Villa playmaker certainly impressed during a 3-0 victory over a weakened Wales side and many expected him to feature in Sunday’s UEFA Nations League fixture against Belgium but there was outrage when Grealish was on the bench and Mount appeared in the first XI instead.

Whether Mount was a conservative option or not, it seemed to evade the hate mob’s attention that he actually played on the right, a position that was filled against Wales by Danny Ings. It was Marcus Rashford who played in the position on the left that Grealish had filled three days before.

Mount ended up scoring the winner, albeit via a deflection, but that didn’t stop one national broadcaster from adding fuel to the flames by inviting callers to ring in, with the host saying: “I’d rather not win a World Cup with Jack Grealish entertaining us in the side than not win a World Cup with Mason Mount’s quality pressing.”

Should Southgate make the same decision against Denmark on Wednesday evening, inevitably, the Chelsea man’s presence will be seen in a negative light once more.

Football will always generate differences of opinion and there is nothing wrong in debating why you think one individual should be in the team ahead of another, but surely there is room for a little perspective? Mount isn’t the bad guy here.

Amid all the protests, one suitable question can be asked but no one seems to want to explore the answer: why is it that Lampard and Southgate choose Mount in their teams so often?

Well, whether you think he is not as gifted as Grealish for England or Mateo Kovacic or Hakim Ziyech for Chelsea, that doesn’t mean he is not a good player. Lampard and Southgate have played at the very highest level alongside team-mates boasting tremendous skill, so they know what it takes.

When you speak to people around the scene at club and international level, they talk in glowing terms about Mount’s attitude, desire and work rate. Sure, he has the flair — many players over the years can say that — but this youngster has the hunger to improve, too.

It is understood that when the Chelsea players are put through physical tests, he is up there with N’Golo Kante as one of the fittest players within the ranks. As a club insider puts it: “One of the reasons Lampard likes Mount is because he trains every day as if it is his last. He has the ambition to be one of the best. When the club made all the signings during the window, he reacted positively and made it obvious he was going to fight for his place.”

Mount said as much in an interview with Sky Sports ahead of the new season: “Chelsea are a massive club and they will always bring players over so, as an English player from this club, you know that’s going to happen.

“When you have players coming in, they are going to help the team out. You always have to have that outlook on it. There is always going to be that little bit of a feeling they could be coming into your position but with me, I am always positive and up for the challenge.

“The manager is massive on training, having that standard, so that when we go into the games, we are all ready. I love competing against my fellow players.”

He will know that many of the new arrivals are on a lot more money than he is. Sources at the club suggest Mount, who signed a five-year contract in July 2019, is one of the lowest-paid members of the Chelsea squad. Yet there has been no sulking or demands for a meeting to negotiate a pay-rise.

Mount has clearly earned Lampard’s trust. A credible nine goals and eight assists from 58 appearances means he either creates or finds the net for Chelsea almost once every three games. That helps.

But he is also prepared to put the team first before himself. Mount’s best position is as a No 8, where he can get between the lines, see the play in front of him and threaten in the final third. This is where he operated to help Chelsea come back from 3-0 down at West Bromwich Albion last month, scoring the opening goal with a sublime shot from 25 yards.

Yet he is not played there very often. Indeed, he has been used in a variety of roles, some of which don’t complement his creative instincts. For example, against Bayern Munich in the Champions League at home last season and for the visit of Liverpool in September, Lampard asked him to play on the right — primarily, that move seemed to be designed for the midfielder to press and help defensively.

Southgate did the same for last weekend’s Belgium contest. Mount offered more protection for Trent Alexander-Arnold at full-back but using up all that energy chasing opponents and the cautious nature of England’s tactics meant he did little with the ball when it did come to his feet, especially in the first half. If Grealish had been switched from the left to the right for this match, would he have had the discipline to curb his own game for the good of the side? One can imagine that is the question Southgate asked himself and thought otherwise.

Speaking to Talksport following the victory, the England coach said: “In a tactical game, where it’s just as important defensively what the forwards do, to have a player like him (Mount) who can do both sides… the way that Marcus Rashford did, the way Dominic Calvert-Lewin did. I read a lot of things about Mason and I think he’s a very underappreciated player — but not by us.”

Southgate’s appreciation of Mount isn’t a new thing. Chelsea’s academy graduate first came to his attention when he had the role of England Under-21 coach. They spoke a few times at St George’s Park, conversations that continued after Southgate had been promoted to the senior job. Mount’s performances to help England win the 2017 Under-19 European Championship, where he was named player of the tournament, didn’t go unnoticed.

Sources in the England camp suggest they also shared an exchange after Mount was loaned to Vitesse Arnhem by Chelsea in the 2017-18 season. Before England departed for the last World Cup in Russia, he spent a week training with the squad. Mount also joined Phil Foden and Ryan Sessegnon on a trip to Russia during the tournament with team sponsors Nike, where he got to see how the team and Southgate prepare for a game.

Despite playing in the Championship for Derby County on loan at the time, Mount’s first call-up to the senior ranks was for the UEFA Nations League fixtures games with Spain and Croatia in October 2018, so it is clear Southgate had Mount earmarked as a potential member of his side for some time. It is not a sudden decision or should be taken as an insult to anyone else.

Naturally, there is a lot of room for improvement at club and international level but the midfielder is only in his second season playing in England’s top division, so that is understandable. His potential is vast.

Lampard had a legion of critics at West Ham at the start of his career. With his uncle as manager (Harry Redknapp) and his dad working as assistant, he was often accused of only playing because of nepotism. There is no better man to help Mount as he experiences a similar thing with Chelsea and England.

Earlier this month, Lampard said: “There’s a fascination with Mason. He’s homegrown and he’s a young player who’s got regularly into the team.

“He is a humble lad, who has had a real dream to play for Chelsea. The thing that makes him special is he’s gone and attacked that dream with the talent he has and made it through pure hard work.

“He’s been picked regularly in the England squad because I know Gareth Southgate and (assistant) Steve Holland have absolute respect for how he comes and trains and performs for them. What Mason’s done is exceptional and there is a lot more to come. That’s part of the great thing about working with someone who has that attitude, mindset and quality.”

What’s wrong with that?

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  • 2 weeks later...
19 minutes ago, Tomo said:

So our five games against United since Mount became a full member of our squad he's only started in two.

But he's an untouchable apparently. 

What a weird stat you found to use.

Last season only Azpi played more minutes of all Chelsea players. And if we had just a solid LB, Azpi would played less because he needed to cover that position so that would put Mount to number one.

This season from 9 games we played, him, Kai and Timo are only players who participated in 8. And Kai overall played just 20 minutes more.

 

 

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11 minutes ago, NikkiCFC said:

What a weird stat you found to use.

Last season only Azpi played more minutes of all Chelsea players. And if we had just a solid LB, Azpi would played less because he needed to cover that position so that would put Mount to number one.

This season from 9 games we played, him, Kai and Timo are only players who participated in 8. And Kai overall played just 20 minutes more.

 

 

But if he was the managers love child (or whatever go to phrase is being used this week) surely he wouldn't constantly get benched for these games, no?

And it's not just United. He's started only 1 in 2 vs City, 3 in 5 vs Liverpool (and hauled off in one of said starts), 2 in 3 vs Arsenal, was also benched for the last two CL group games last year when qualification was at stake and not to mention hauled off at half time twice in quick succession after the restart. 

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Mason Mount a victim of the lack of live fans as cowardly trolls swoop

 

The Telegraph

Wednesday October 28 2020

Matt Law's Chelsea briefing

 
Matt Law
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Mason Mount is one of Chelsea’s own - the fans, along with the club, have a responsibility to look after him

By Matt Law,
Football News Correspondent

Pre-Covid, the online trolls were just that, online trolls. But with no football fans inside stadiums, the opinions of those who like to use social media to abuse and ridicule have, unfortunately, become harder to block out.

Which brings this column around to Mason Mount, a player the majority of Chelsea fans admire and cherish, given he has been at the club’s academy since the age of six.

The support he received from the Stamford Bridge stands would have been more than enough to drown out the so-called supporters, who hide behind their laptops and direct hatred towards the 21-year-old on Twitter.

But with every week that passes and stadiums remain shut, the backing from the stands becomes harder and harder for footballers to recall, particularly young ones who are still in the early stages of their senior careers.

Just think, for instance, how Mount’s superb free-kick goal against Wolverhampton Wanderers that helped to clinch Champions League qualification would have been received at the end of last season? It would no doubt have been one of his career highlights, but those moments are easier for the trolls to drown out, when there were no fans inside the stadium to recall the celebrations.

Mount is in danger of becoming a victim of the lack of live fans, as the online trolls attempt to seize their moment. Still aged only 21, he made a total of 53 appearances for Chelsea in his first season as a senior player for the club, scored eight goals, one of which came in the FA Cup semi-final success against Manchester United, and he was rewarded with international recognition.

The statistics-based website whoscored.com also included Mount in an under-21 team of the season based on players’ average ratings, with only five players of his age-range scoring better than him.

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Mount was recently rewarded with international recognition aged only 21

Mount was perhaps the player Lampard leaned on most for much of last term, playing him in several different positions and barely giving him a rest, so it is perhaps no surprise that he has yet to produce his best form this season.

Nobody, especially Lampard and Mount, expect anybody to be given a free pass at Chelsea and they will accept constructive criticism over where he has been asked to play and some of his performances.

But Mount, just like Harry Kane at Tottenham Hotspur, Jack Grealish at Aston Villa, Trent Alexander-Arnold at Liverpool and Phil Foden at Manchester City, is one of Chelsea’s own, and the fans, together with the club, have a responsibility to look after him.

It was with genuine horror that this correspondent read through some of the replies to Chelsea’s Twitter account teasing the announcement of the team for Saturday’s game against Manchester United.

This column will not give the trolls any further oxygen by repeating any of the messages, but one could only hope that Mount and his family were far too focussed on the forthcoming game to be scrolling down Twitter or typing in a search on his name.

Mount and his family will no doubt realise that most of the supporters who will flood back into Stamford Bridge when coronavirus guidelines allow it and those who make weekly sacrifices to their personal lives to tune in from overseas remain fully behind the midfielder.

But the abuse is not going unnoticed, as Lampard himself made reference to the accusations that Mount is in some way his favourite by relating it to his own experiences at West Ham United when Harry Redknapp was famously forced to defend his nephew at a fans’ forum.

Sitting in front of a room full of middle-aged men, supping pints of lager in their ill-fitting leisure wear, questioning his selection cannot have been easy for Lampard and yet Redknapp was able to shout back them, unlike the faceless cowards who are sitting in front of their screens to target Mount.

And not one of them will be brave enough to make themselves known the next time Mount comes up with a vital goal.

As ever, feel free to get in touch at @Matt_Law_DT or via [email protected].

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He will still play a lot but now he will finally have status he deserves.

He was way overplayed last season.

This season first 5 games Mount played: 90, 90, 90, 90, 90. 

Last 5 games: 0, 72, 62, 18, 19. 

This is something I can accept. Also all the hate for him will disappear because no one has anything against him, people were just annoyed because of the way Frank treated him.

As shown again today, he had no business starting over CHO as a winger. He is not a winger, he is not a AM. Number 8 is his best position so if we do move to 4-3-3 again he would play more and be more effective.

But what about Kai? He is best in the final third of the pitch and number 8 is not really his position. Ziyech would be good there too.

 

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8 hours ago, NikkiCFC said:

He will still play a lot but now he will finally have status he deserves.

He was way overplayed last season.

This season first 5 games Mount played: 90, 90, 90, 90, 90. 

Last 5 games: 0, 72, 62, 18, 19. 

This is something I can accept. Also all the hate for him will disappear because no one has anything against him, people were just annoyed because of the way Frank treated him.

As shown again today, he had no business starting over CHO as a winger. He is not a winger, he is not a AM. Number 8 is his best position so if we do move to 4-3-3 again he would play more and be more effective.

But what about Kai? He is best in the final third of the pitch and number 8 is not really his position. Ziyech would be good there too.

 

It's gonna have to be 6 - 8 - 10 midfield 3. Kai at the 10, Mount at 8, and for now, Kanté as the 6. 

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True. The reason people started taking the mickey was because FL overplayed him even at LW when we had CHO and then Southgate starts him when Grealish was on form, both reasons were not his fault.

Hopefully the hate and memes of Mount dies down, he seems like a nice fella.

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