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Havertz at his best in Chelsea's win at Everton, a return to form that illustrates how Tuchel has saved Blues' season

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Havertz at his best in Chelsea's win at Everton, a return to form that illustrates how Tuchel has saved Blues' season

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Breaking down Kai Havertz's 'best game' in a Chelsea shirt (1:09)

LONDON -- There is something about Kai Havertz that makes it impossible to gauge the Chelsea forward's mood. Whether he is good, bad or indifferent, the 21-year-old carries the same unassuming expression like an impenetrable mask and it can hint at an air of indifference, which has not helped him at times during a difficult first season at Stamford Bridge.

To suggest he has struggled since his £62 million transfer from Bayer Leverkusen would be an understatement, but against Everton on Monday, the Germany international finally showed us why Chelsea were so determined to win the race to sign him.

Havertz has still only scored one Premier League goal this season -- against Southampton last October -- but it wasn't for lack of trying that his barren run continues after Chelsea's 2-0 victory over Carlo Ancelotti's team that puts them firmly in control of their pursuit of Champions League qualification. Havertz was the central figure for Thomas Tuchel's team, with the player directly influencing both goals, and it would have been 3-0 had his second-half goal not been correctly ruled out due to a handball.

A heavy deflection off Ben Godfrey, following Havertz's shot from Marcos Alonso's 31st-minute pass, ensured that the opening goal was attributed to the Everton defender rather than Havertz, despite the best efforts of the Stamford Bridge announcer to give the goal to the Chelsea man. And a reckless challenge by Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford on Havertz led to a 65th-minute penalty that Jorginho scored to assure Chelsea of the three points.

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Havertz, having made both goals, smiled briefly on both occasions before returning to his usual look of nonchalance. Too often this season, he has given the same expression after poor performances and missed chances, but this time at least, he had a spring in his step and his shoulders did not appear to be carrying the weight of the world on them.

"I am very pleased with Kai," Tuchel said. "It was the trust we gave him and he used the trust we gave him. He is a player who has all the ability to be a dominant figure in [attack] and he stepped up."

One impressive performance, against a top-six rival, should not be regarded as indisputable evidence that Havertz has finally arrived as a Chelsea player, but it is a positive sign and another example of the impact that Tuchel has had as coach since replacing Frank Lampard in January.

Two months on, Chelsea are undefeated in 11 games under the former Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-Germain coach and in the top four. Tuchel has turned Chelsea around, but he has also transformed players individually, too.

Lampard, to his cost, could not get any kind of form out of Havertz. He seemed to have no idea how best to use the languid youngster, and Havertz flopped in whichever role Lampard asked him to perform.

Tuchel believes his compatriot's best position is in the forward line and he deployed him alongside Timo Werner as a split striker against Everton. Werner, whose performances have also improved under Tuchel despite his ongoing search for goals, offers boundless energy and work rate while Havertz prefers to glide around the pitch, looking for pockets of space.

But while their qualities failed to deliver for Lampard, they knitted together against the Toffees.

Werner will get fans on his side because of his work rate, but Havertz needs to have something tangible to show for his efforts because his style -- half Dimitar Berbatov and half Mesut Ozil -- could be misconstrued as laziness and lack of commitment when things aren't going well. Tuchel's demanding persona on the touchline may be just what is required to keep Havertz on track because the coach is quick to bark out orders at any player he perceives to be underperforming, but when Havertz influences games as he did on this occasion, any coach will forgive what appears to be a half-hearted approach to the game.

In time, Tuchel's abrasiveness may work against him if his players grow tired of the constant hectoring, but his style is working at this moment in time and Chelsea are getting results. Defensively, they have kept clean sheets in all five Premier League home games under the German.

Havertz, meanwhile, is not the only player to be benefiting from Tuchel's tough love. Werner has raised his game, while Alonso, Andreas Christensen and Mason Mount have also kicked on under the new coach.

It is perhaps why Chelsea are averaging 2.33 points per game under Tuchel compared to 1.53 under Lampard. They are enjoying a greater share of possession in games, registering more passes and winning more tackles with Tuchel than Lampard, so the progress is clear. And Chelsea now have a cushion in fourth, one that enables them to start looking up the table and target Leicester City and Manchester United, who are three and four points ahead of them in third and second respectively.

When Tuchel arrived in January, he was tasked with saving Chelsea's season, but he has already gone beyond base camp and is now improving the collective and the individuals. And getting the best from Havertz shows that Tuchel really is making a difference.

"You see the quality of the players and the club," Tuchel said. "It is a pleasure to be on the sideline and work with the team. Everybody in the club is doing everything to compete at this level."

Chelsea's Tuchel says 'strong from bench' Pulisic needs to have patience

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Breaking down Kai Havertz's 'best game' in a Chelsea shirt (1:09)

Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel said one reason Christian Pulisic hasn't been in his starting XI is that he is "strong" coming off the bench, following his team's 2-0 win over Everton in the Premier League on Monday.

Pulisic, 22, came on as a very late substitute for Chelsea and has played just 134 of a possible 810 minutes since his former manager at Borussia Dortmund arrived to take over for the departed Frank Lampard.

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Are Pulisic's lack of minutes cause for concern at Chelsea?

"Maybe Christian's problem is I know from Dortmund how strong he is from the bench," Tuchel said after the match. "I think he started only in the cup game and in the end that's my responsibility and my fault. It's a bit unfair because I know what an impact he can have in 20 or 30 minutes. He was a bit unlucky in the last games but there's no lack of trust or quality. He just has to be a bit patient.

'We also have another guy I would love to mention, which is Emerson [Palmieri], who suffers from bad decisions against him from me. He does not play but he is an amazing guy who trains at the highest levels and never lets the team down with his mentality.

"This was a super hard decision today to have him out of the squad and the same with Tammy [Abraham]. It tells us we are a strong group and the guys just have to keep on fighting."

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1:09

Breaking down Kai Havertz's 'best game' in a Chelsea shirt

ESPN FC's Shaka Hislop praises Kai Havertz for his performance vs. Everton.

Tuchel said in February that he understood Pulisic's quality and wanted to keep him at Stamford Bridge, but that no decisions had been made over the U.S. international's future thus far.

The German boss was also keen to compliment his defence after their win over Everton -- Tuchel extending his unbeaten run as Blues boss to 11 games, including clean sheets in nine of those games and five in a row at home in the league.

"It's about principles, it's about being reliable, it's about trust that your back is covered if you step out and attack up front," Tuchel said.

"It's a high quality of defending right now in the group and of course they're super hungry to fight to not give chances away because it's a good feeling and it makes us self confident."

As well as beating Everton on Monday, Chelsea have also recently stopped Liverpool and Manchester United from scoring in the league and Atletico Madrid failed to get past the Blues' back line in the Champions League.

That defensive consistency belies how Tuchel has chopped and changed who plays in front of goalkeeper Edouard Mendy, alternating Marcos Alonso and Ben Chilwell at left-back and on Monday replacing Antonio Rudiger with Kurt Zouma in the back three.

"It's not about having clean sheets and parking the bus in front of a goal," the German said. "It's about a certain style of defending and we try to defend up as high as possible to have high ball recoveries...It's about trust, it's about courage."

Information from Reuters was used in this story.

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