Norwich vs Chelsea prediction: How will the Premier League game go tonight?

Chelsea visit Norwich in the Premier League tonight as Thomas Tuchel’s side look to get away from resurgent Arsenal in the race for third place.
Mikel Arteta’s side have narrowed the gap to Chelsea to five points with four Premier League wins in a row, and the Gunners are one game short.
The Blues responded to their post-Christmas four-game winless streak with three straight wins, including Saturday’s 4-0 victory at Burnley.
Having beaten Norwich 7-0 earlier this season, Chelsea will be ready to add to the misery of the Canaries. Dean Smith’s side were beaten 3-0 at home by Brentford on Saturday to leave Norwich bottom of the table and their hopes of survival are fast fading.
Here’s everything you need to know ahead of tonight’s game.
When is Norwich vs Chelsea?
The match kicks off at 7:30 p.m. BST on Thursday, March 10.
How can I watch Norwich vs Chelsea?
The match is not available to watch live in the UK. Highlights will be available for viewing on Sky Sports’ YouTube channel shortly after the full-time whistle.
Cesar Azplicaceuta and Marcos Alonso returned to training this week after missing the trip to Burnley through injury and Covid-19 respectively. That leaves Ben Chilwell, who is out for the season, as the only reported absentee in Chelsea’s squad.
Norwich are expecting Lucas Rupp to be available after missing the Brentford game with a hamstring injury. Billy Gilmour is unable to face his parent club while Adam Idah and Ozan Kabak are absent.
Planned compositions
Norwich: Krul; Aarons, Gibson, Hanley, Williams; Lees-Melou, Normann, McLean; Rashica, Pukki, Sargent
Chelsea: Mendy; Chalobah, Silva, Rudiger; Hudson-Odoi, Jorginho, Kovacic, Alonso; Werner, Lukaku, Ziyech
odds
Norwich: 13/1
Draw: 5/1
Chelsea: 3/10
Prediction
Norwich have struggled a lot against the teams at the top of the table this season, losing 7-0 to Chelsea, 5-0 to Manchester City and Arsenal and 3-0 to Liverpool. It could be more or less the same. Norwich 0-3 Chelsea