Biggest blow for Chelsea as Real Madrid go for the World Cup’s biggest star

Gone from the World Cup are Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, the old guard deservedly vanquished. Neymar, for many a pretender to the throne, has also been sent packing, his most meaningful impact on the tournament being a series of dives that sparked a million memes. And so it is step forward, Eden Hazard.On Tuesday night, Belgium’s Pringle-shirted golden generation tee off against rivals France in the semi-final. It is a mouthwatering local derby on the world stage between two nations who make jokes about each other.Nobody on the French side will be smiling should Hazard, who grew up worshipping France’s turn-of-the-century heroes, continue his rise to the top of the global game.

This feels like Hazard’s time. The talk is that Real Madrid, always keen on big statements following big tournaments, want to make him the successor to Ronaldo.For all his success in west London, becoming the main man at the Bernabeu would elevate him from the ranks of tier two to tier one. There is business to attend to first. Without wanting to downplay the achievements of England and Croatia, the winners of this semi-final will justifiably view themselves as tournament favourites. Hazard will be instrumental in how the game pans out This is a player clearly in a better place now than he was just a few months ago. In the quarter-final defeat of Brazil, his 10 successfully-completed dribbles broke Selecao hearts and a 52-year World Cup record. Often, he left the South Americans – and legions of fawning commentators – clutching at straws.

Watching him unshackled and out-Brazilling Brazil, it was hard not to recall a miserable, wet March Sunday afternoon at the Etihad Stadium. This was peak Antonio Conte trough. Hazard became the footballing equivalent of a caged animal, spending 89 minutes as the falsest of false nines.Conte remains in post, for now. His departure is expected shortly. If, as expected, Maurizio Sarri takes over, all may not be lost for those hoping he remains in England.A clue to the Hazard’s intentions may come from an interview he gave to The Guardian in late 2016, during Chelsea’s march to the title in Conte’s first year.

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