LONDON — Chelsea’s Antonio Conte and his Manchester City counterpart Pep Guardiola are among the Premier League managers who will sample England’s Boxing Day football extravaganza for the first time Monday.
While the rest of the population gorges on Christmas turkey dinners, 16 teams will be gearing up for matches as part of a custom that stretches back over 150 years.
With Chelsea six points clear at the summit and chasing a 12th consecutive win, which would set a new club record, Conte is approaching the visit of Bournemouth with a spring in his step.
“This is the first experience for me and my family, to work, to play football (at this time of year),” said the Italian.
“It can be, and I hope it will be, a fantastic experience. The atmosphere we find in this period is very difficult to find in another period. It’s fantastic.”
Chelsea has registered 11 consecutive wins within the same season for the first time after winning 1-0 at Crystal Palace last weekend.
Another victory will leave it one win from equaling Arsenal’s 2002 record for successive wins in the same campaign, which it extended to 14 the following season.
But Conte will be without both top scorer Diego Costa and midfield lynchpin N’Golo Kante after they picked up suspension-incurring bookings at Palace.
Guardiola, too, is full of festive cheer following his side’s 2-1 comeback win over Arsenal last weekend, which left City seven points below Chelsea in third place.
While the former Barcelona and Bayern Munich coach appreciates the novelty of Christmas football, he is preparing for his side’s match at bottom club Hull City by pretending it is a regular fixture.
Arsenal slipped to fourth, nine points off the pace, after their loss at the Etihad Stadium, which followed hot on the heels of a 2-1 defeat at Everton.
Arsene Wenger’s side welcome West Bromwich Albion to the Emirates Stadium on Boxing Day and center-back Gabriel says his side cannot afford to be distracted by seasonal excitement.
Jose Mourinho has long been an avowed admirer of England’s Boxing Day traditions and with his Manchester United team chasing a fourth straight win, he is relishing the prospect of Sunderland’s visit.
Sunderland manager David Moyes will return to Old Trafford for the first time since he was sacked by United in April 2014.
Champions Leicester City will hope to give its supporters some Christmas cheer when it hosts Everton in a repeat of the fixture that preceded last season’s title coronation.
Two points back in 17th place, Palace begins life under new manager Sam Allardyce — appointed as the successor to Alan Pardew Friday — with a trip to Watford.
Liverpool, second, host Stoke City Tuesday, with fifth-place Tottenham Hotspur visiting Southampton the following day. — AFP