Chelsea will look to collect a sixth Premier League title this season and become the first side since Manchester United in 2008-09 to retain their crown.
They will do so buoyed by the news head coach Antonio Conte has signed an improved two-year contract.
New signing Antonio Rudiger and Tiemoue Bakayoko are already in the building but, with a replacement for marginalised hitman Diego Costa still required, how many of these memorable triumphs from last time around will they be able to match or better?
ARSENAL 3-0 CHELSEA (24/09/2016)
A devastating first-half display from Arsenal at Emirates Stadium propelled the Gunners into an early title challenge and left Chelsea fans feeling wretched.
Alexis Sanchez, Theo Walcott and Mesut Ozil all scored before the break to leave the visitors winless in three games and with an eight-point deficit to early leaders Manchester City after only six matches.
It seems counterintuitive to choose a defeat like this as a vital moment in a title win, but this game proved to be the final straw for Conte s experiment with a back four.
For the next game away to Hull City, the Italian reverted to the 3-4-3 set-up that brought him such success with Juventus. Chelsea won that game 2-0, and every match afterwards until January 4.
It hurts a lot to be dropping points again but we must stand up strong and learn from our mistakes.
+Thank you so much for the love.
— Cesc Fàbregas Soler (@cesc4official)
CHELSEA 4-0 MANCHESTER UNITED (23/10/2016)
Although arguably their best home performance of the season would come two weeks later in a 5-0 thrashing of Everton, this result went a long way towards banishing memories of 2015-16 and instilled real hope of an assault on the summit.
Jose Mourinho s return to Stamford Bridge, less than a year after his dismissal in a dreadful campaign for the Blues, ended in utter humiliation from start to finish.
Pedro opened the scoring after 30 seconds and Gary Cahill made it 2-0 before the break, and superb solo efforts from Eden Hazard and even N Golo Kante completed the rout.
Mourinho had been taunted by home fans throughout and took exception to Conte s exuberance on the touchline in the closing stages, his mood only enhancing the scenes of celebration around the Bridge.
Congratulations to , who has been voted the 2017 Footballer of the Year by the Football Writers Association!
— Chelsea FC (@ChelseaFC)
CHELSEA 2-1 TOTTENHAM (26/11/2016)
Tottenham came into this match smarting from a Champions League group-stage exit but looked determined to preserve their unbeaten start to the league campaign.
Indeed, Mauricio Pochettino s side were dominant from kick-off and took the lead through a fine Christian Eriksen goal 11 minutes in, with a first win at Stamford Bridge since February 1990 looking firmly on the cards.
But Chelsea, who dug out a 1-0 win away to Middlesbrough the week before, once again found the response when they needed it. Pedro equalised against the run of play with a brilliant strike before the break, and Victor Moses a standout star of the season as a whole blasted in the winner via deflections from Hugo Lloris and Jan Vertonghen early in the second half.
The win put them back to the top of the table and opened up a seven-point gap to Spurs that would never be completely closed.