He looked more like Kevin the Teenager than the double Player of the Year.

And the end of the season cannot come soon enough for Eden Hazard.

What was Guus Hiddink doing even starting him against PSG on Tuesday night, anyway?

In the build-up to that match, Hazard gave an interview to the French daily Le Parisien in which he made it clear that he fancies a move to PSG in the summer.

Out of order. As escape bids go they don’t come more brazen.

The comments were made before the defeat that left the struggling Premier League champions with a fair bit to do in the second leg at Stamford Bridge next month.

Hazard made no effort to either deny them, suggest that they’d been taken out of context, or distance himself from them altogether.

So, in the end, it was left to Hiddink to at least suggest in his pre-match press conference that the Belgian would be better off aiming higher than the French league.

If the Jose Mourinho of last season had been in charge, with the currency that he had back then, Hazard would have found himself on the bench in Paris.

For all his faults, Louis van Gaal would have reacted similarly. So too Mauricio Pochettino or Arsene Wenger.

Instead, remarkably, he was allowed to go through the motions as Chelsea slumped to defeat.

Now he surely has to be dropped for Manchester City on Sunday.

What are Chelsea getting for the £200,000-a-week that they are paying him these days? Nothing.

He has crawled back to the first team after injury.

He produced a few fancy flicks and a couple of decent passes on Tuesday night and in the Premier League against Newcastle last Saturday.

But he is actually offering zero.

For industry, work rate and ingenuity in Paris you had to look at PSG’s Lucas Moura and Angel Di Maria - or even Hazard’s own team-mates Willian and Pedro, who shamed the Belgian on Tuesday night.

As they busted a gut in a fiercely-contested confrontation, Hazard tiptoed around the periphery before, finally, he was taken off with 20 minutes to go.

But then Hazard’s display - and his pre-match flirting - provided an insight into the lack of commitment that has come to characterise his campaign.

In fact, his season can be summed up with that contemptuous wave of his right arm at Leicester back in December, as Jose Mourinho tried to persuade him to dig deep and find a bit of character in order to play through the (slight) pain barrier. Hazard was having none of it. He brushed off the Special One and stomped down the tunnel towards the end of the defeat that would cost Mourinho his job.

The Portuguese later confirmed that Hazard had “substituted himself,” claiming he could no longer continue.

The Belgian has shown us that he is your go-to man when the going is good, although he's dreaming if he thinks he is even in the same league as his idol Zinedine Zidane.

He'll produce assists, conjure up goals out of nothing and run himself into the ground.

Find yourself in the trenches as Chelsea have done this season, however, and you needn’t hold your breath.

Hazard wants out. Simple.

He wants a move to PSG, Bayern Munich, basically anyone that will roll out the red carpet, throw him a few bob and provide him with the platform to get us all gushing over him again.

What he doesn’t want any more is to fight.

To fight for Chelsea, to fight for the fans who pay his wages, he doesn’t even want to fight for Hiddink, the low-maintenance fixer with whom it appears impossible to fall out.

The Dutchman gave a hint of the fact that maybe something was amiss last month when, asked whether Hazard needed an arm around the shoulder, he replied: “I’m not his mother.”

That is saying something from the man who probably does getting players back on side better than anyone.

During the last days of Mourinho back in December this column suggested that there was not a single player that Chelsea fans would have kept ahead of the Special One.

The improved form of the last two months has done little to change that.

If anything it has crystallised that view, especially with Manchester United soon set to benefit from the petulance of players like Hazard.

If PSG, the Chinese or anyone else is willing to pay big money then Chelsea should snap their hands off.

In the meantime, Hiddink would be better off fielding Oscar behind Diego Costa with Pedro and Willian either side of him against City on Saturday.

At least Chelsea would be getting their money’s worth instead of funding Hazard’s stroll through what looks certain to be his final four months at Stamford Bridge.

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