Watch incredible moment Chelsea star Wesley Fofana completely takes out steward in Leeds clash | The Sun

WESLEY FOFANA netted the winner as Chelsea ended a six game winless run against Leeds.

And an eventful afternoon for the defender also saw him accidentally wipe out a steward at the side of the Stamford Bridge pitch.



The incident came with ten minutes left of the match, which Chelsea won 1-0.

Fofana, 22, found himself in a footrace to the ball with Leeds ace Wilfried Gnonto.

It was the Chelsea man who got there first, and a slight nudge from Gnonto sent him tumbling to the turf.

Fofana then slid along the surface and accidentally took out a steward who was standing at the side of the pitch.

Read more in Football

Why Petr Cech wears a different shirt number in ice hockey than for Chelsea

Football free bets: Get £40 bonus when you stake £10 with William Hill

The £70million summer signing hit the steward in the legs, causing them to lose their footing and crash to the ground.

Fofana had earlier headed the Blues in front from a Ben Chilwell corner.

And that was how it finished, as Graham Potter's side held on to claim a valuable three points against relegation threatened Leeds.

Fofana's goal was just the seventh time Chelsea have found the back of the net since November 6.

Most read in Football

DIEGO WOE

Ex-Chelsea ace Costa carried off with serious-looking injury for Wolves vs Spurs

BOURNE SUPREMACY

Cherries take shock lead at Arsenal after 9 SECONDS with 'kick-off glitch'

SILVER-GLARE

Spurs board fume at FA Cup exit with Kane benched as Levy expected trophy push

GAS-TON VILLA

Moment Aston Villa's Leon Bailey inhales 'laughing gas' after all night party

HOW TO GET FREE BETS ON FOOTBALL

But despite the win, the Blues are still tenth in the Premier League table.

Potter and Co are 11 points off Tottenham in fourth, with a crunch Champions League meeting with Borussia Dortmund coming up on Tuesday.

Chelsea go into the match at Stamford Bridge 1-0 down from the first leg.



Source: Read Full Article