Football: Conte warns Chelsea not to rest on laurels with 'easier' games coming up

Chelsea manager Antonio Conte has warned his side not to let up in spite of a string of upcoming matches against weaker teams over the festive period. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON (AFP) - Antonio Conte has warned his Chelsea stars to guard against complacency as the English Premier League leaders travel to Crystal Palace on Saturday.

The Italian manager's side secured a 10th straight victory by winning 1-0 at Sunderland in midweek and can register 11 successive league wins within the same season for the first time if they take three points at Selhurst Park.

Chelsea are guaranteed to top the table on Christmas Day, but the Blues boss does not want his players to rest on their laurels, especially with a series of matches against supposedly inferior teams coming up over the festive period.

"When you arrive from 10 wins and there is a great respect for you," said Conte, whose team are six points clear at the top.

"But this situation is a good situation for the opponent, because now when the opponent has nothing to lose.

"It's more difficult for us to continue this way than for our opponent."

All-too-familiar questions about courage, backbone and durability surround Arsenal ahead of their trip to Pep Guardiola's Manchester City on Sunday.

Arsenal's 14-game unbeaten run had lain strong foundations for a determined tilt at the festive fixture list, only for Arsene Wenger's men to come unstuck in Tuesday's 2-1 defeat at Everton.

The Frenchman was left to voice time-worn complaints about an opponent's "physical" approach, after his side shrivelled amid the Goodison Park roar, but Petr Cech is desperate to show Arsenal are no pushovers.

"You have to pick yourself up," the Gunners' Czech goalkeeper told the club website.

"Sometimes I think it is best if after a big game you play another big game. It's a kind of a six-pointer. It's probably a perfect game for us."

Arsenal's defeat, courtesy of an 86th-minute header by Everton centre-back Ashley Williams, was their first in the league since a 3-4 loss at home to Liverpool on the season's opening weekend.

Compounding their disappointment, they now trail leaders Chelsea by six points, while all of the teams around them - Liverpool, City, Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United - won their midweek matches.

If there is a consolation for Arsenal, it is that City are by no means firing on all cylinders themselves.

Guardiola's side went four home games without victory in the league prior to Wednesday's 2-0 defeat of Watford and recently fell to damaging losses against Chelsea (1-3) and Leicester City (2-4).

In the absence of the suspended Sergio Aguero, Nolito started up front against Watford and the Spanish forward is anticipating an open encounter at Eastlands on Sunday.

"It will be a hard game, but I guess Arsenal will come and try to get the three points, as that is their philosophy of football," he said.

"It is also ours, so we will have to see who gets the points."

Liverpool stole past Arsenal into second place courtesy of a 3-0 win at Middlesbrough and now face the London club's conquerors, Everton, in a Monday night Merseyside derby.

Adam Lallana, who scored twice at the Riverside Stadium, said Liverpool's display was "not too far off the complete performance", but revealed that manager Jurgen Klopp was not fully satisfied.

"The manager has already quickly said to us that there are things we can improve on," the England international said.

"At times we can maybe get a little bit carried away and all of us maybe want to attack at times when we need to protect a bit more."

Sixth-placed United visit seventh-placed West Bromwich Albion on Saturday buoyed after snatching a 2-1 win at Palace on Wednesday, via Zlatan Ibrahimovic's 88th-minute strike.

Bottom club Sunderland and struggling Middlesbrough also lie in wait for Jose Mourinho's men over the festive season, but midfielder Ander Herrera says United can take nothing for granted.

"If we were in Spain I could tell you, 'these are the games we are going to win', but in the Premier League you never know," said the Spaniard.

"If you think you are just going to beat West Brom, Middlesbrough or Sunderland, maybe you don't do that, so you just think about the next game." .

Fixtures Saturday (1500 GMT unless otherwise stated): Crystal Palace v Chelsea (1230 GMT), Stoke v Leicester, West Brom v Manchester United (1730 GMT), Middlesbrough v Swansea, Sunderland v Watford, West Ham v Hull .

Sunday (1600 GMT unless otherwise stated): Manchester City v Arsenal, Tottenham v Burnley, Bournemouth v Southampton (1330 GMT) .

Monday (2000 GMT): Everton v Liverpool.

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