Monday, February 27, 2012

AVB wants Lampard to stay

Lampard and AVB no ideal partner at Chelsea

Chelsea boss
Andre Villas-Boas wants Frank Lampard to stay at the club next season after he was on the scoresheet in the win over Bolton Wanderers.

Lampard has admitted that there are "certain issues" between himself and the manager, and Villas-Boas has defended his team selection which has often seen the England midfielder benched.

The 33-year-old has still started 19 Premier League games this season, and on Saturday became the first player to reach double figures for goals in the Premier League in nine consecutive seasons.

Asked if Lampard will remain at Stamford Bridge, Villas-Boas said: "I hope soLink. It does not depend on me. It depends on three parts - I want him, the person wants to stay and the club wants him.

"Frank goes on and on breaking the club's records and that is important for him. I congratulate him for that. He is a player who has been involved with all managers before and played in most of the games.

"The only difference this year from the years before is that we have more competition in midfield and things become more difficult for everybody. But Frank is now in the top five of players most used so he is up there with the best."


Sunday, February 26, 2012

Chelsea 3 - 0 Bolton Wanderers

Didier Drogba celebrates doubling Chelsea's lead

Andre Villas-Boas enjoyed some much-needed respite in front of Roman Abramovich as Chelsea stopped the rot to return to the Premier League top four.

The Blues looked every inch a side that had failed to win any of their previous five games in another dire first half against Bolton at Stamford Bridge.

But they turned on the style after the break, defender David Luiz doing what he does best by firing them ahead before Didier Drogba and the recalled Frank Lampard sealed a desperately-needed three points.

Chelsea also hit the woodwork twice as Bolton's first-half solidity deserted them to leave them second bottom of the table.

Villas-Boas recalled Lampard, Ashley Cole and Michael Essien, who were controversially left out of Tuesday night's Champions League defeat at Napoli, sparking further reports of dressing-room unrest.

The Chelsea boss stood by his Naples line-up, insisting it was picked purely on footballing reasons, but he admitted on Thursday he was forced to explain it to owner Abramovich.

That merely fuelled speculation Villas-Boas was on borrowed time at Stamford Bridge, with the club's season in danger of unravelling completely. But today's opponents might have been hand picked for the home side, with Bolton enduring an even more miserable campaign.

Chelsea certainly made the more impressive start, Daniel Sturridge testing Adam Bogdan inside five minutes after a burst from the halfway line before finding Lampard with a superb through ball, the midfielder just failing to shake off his marker.

Drogba also had a couple of sniffs but the lack of confidence that has dogged the Blues' play of late was soon evident as they struggled to fashion a meaningful opportunity.

Abramovich, attending his first game since the 3-3 draw against Manchester United three weeks earlier, looked on pensively as well-drilled Bolton continued to frustrate his expensively-assembled side.

They finally had Bogdan at full stretch in the 29th minute when he palmed away Drogba's left-foot curler, while David Wheater had to be alert to stop Sturridge finishing Luiz's raking pass.

Chelsea were only really looking dangerous on the break and their half was summed up when Branislav Ivanovic and Drogba ran into each other running onto Lampard's inviting ball.

Bolton were even less of a threat and Darren Pratley - making his first league start for more than two months - was booked for an obvious dive trying to win a penalty before Ryo Miyaichi had their first real effort when he fired over on the stroke of half-time.

Chelsea were in dire need of inspiration and it arrived less than three minutes after the restart.

Luiz - clearly under orders to rampage forward - won the ball high up the pitch, carried on his run forward and profited when Wheater failed to clear, curling a lovely finish beyond Bogdan.

The celebrations were hardly raucous, with the nervousness of a side that had kept only two clean sheets at home in the league all season quickly apparent when Nigel Reo-Coker drilled wide from the edge of the box.

That almost subsided when Chelsea then hit the woodwork twice inside two minutes, Luiz's header from a corner glancing the post before Drogba curled Juan Mata's pass against the top of the crossbar after another breakaway.

There was no stopping the striker in the 61st minute when he shook off Fabrice Muamba to nod in Lampard's corner, the midfielder significantly taking the plaudits as the home fans sang "super Frankie Lampard''.

It should have been 3-0 when Ivanovic finished weakly after Essien's drive was parried by Bogdan before Bolton threw on Marvin Sordell for David Ngog.

The change had little effect and Chris Eagles soon joined Sordell, with Tuncay Sanli coming off, before Chelsea suffered a blow when Drogba limped off to be replaced by Fernando Torres for the last 14 minutes.

A goal arrived three minutes later, but it was Lampard who got it, stealing in at the back post to cushion Mata's cross past Bogdan for his 12th goal of the season.

Sturridge then came off for Salomon Kalou, Torres - axed by Spain yesterday - curled over from a tight angle with his only chance and John Obi Mikel replaced Ramires.

Kalou almost nodded in number four in stoppage-time as Chelsea enjoyed a rare trouble-free final 10 minutes.


Teams

Chelsea Bolton Wanderers
1 Petr Cech1 Adam Bogdan
4 David Luiz32 Tim Ream
24 Gary Cahill31 David Wheater
3 Ashley Cole18 Samuel Ricketts
2 Branislav Ivanovic2 Gretar Rafn Steinsson
5 Michael Essien6 Fabrice Muamba
8 Frank Lampard19 Nigel Reo-Coker
7 Ramires30 Ryo Miyaichi
10 Juan Mata9 Tuncay Sanli
11 Didier Drogba24 David Ngog
23 Daniel Sturridge21 Darren Pratley
Substitutes
15 Florent MaloudaPaul Robinson 4
9 Fernando TorresJussi Jaaskelainen 22
22 Ross TurnbullZat Knight 12
21 Salomon KalouIvan Klasnic 17
12 John Mikel ObiChris Eagles 7
16 Raul MeirelesMarvin Sordell 29
34 Ryan BertrandDedryck Boyata 25
Substitutions
Fernando Torres for Didier Drogba (76)
Marvin Sordell for David Ngog (66)
Salomon Kalou for Daniel Sturridge (80)
Chris Eagles for Tuncay Sanli (75)
John Mikel Obi for Ramires (88)
Yellow Cards
Darren Pratley (42)
· Squads: Chelsea | Bolton Wanderers

Match Stats

Chelsea

Bolton Wanderers

26(13) Shots (on Goal) 11(1)
8 Fouls 14
14 Corner Kicks 7
4 Offsides 2
59% Time of Possession 41%
0 Yellow Cards 1
0 Red Cards 0
1 Saves 10


Scoring Summary

Chelsea Bolton Wanderers
David Luiz (48')
Didier Drogba (61')
Frank Lampard (79')

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

We must sort this mess!

Chelsea defender Cahill demands more with Villas-Boas' job on the line

Gary Cahill insists Chelsea's beleaguered players must raise their game quickly with Andre Villas-Boas job on the line.

The England centre-back was among those who failed to deliver on Tuesday night as they relinquished the lead to lose 3-1 at Napoli.

The partnership of Cahill and David Luiz was brutally exposed by the Italians as Chelsea slumped to their latest defeat.
Juan Mata fired Chelsea ahead but Ezequiel Lavezzi's brace that sandwiched Edinson Cavani's strike put them on the brink of Champions League elimination.

Boss Andre Villas-Boas - who benched key men Ashley Cole and Frank Lampard - is now desperately clinging to power at Stamford Bridge, with owner Roman Abramovich considering removing his another boss.

But Cahill says the blame should be laid at the feet of the players who were caught out at the Stadio San Paolo.

He said: 'It started off brilliantly. We were frustrating them early doors, they made a mistake and we got the goal.
'For some reason, it seemed really open after that instead of really solid. We should have shut the door, made everything really compact and gone in at half-time 1-0 up, but it wasn't to be. I think we were too easily cut open.'

Cahill, who suffered a nightmare Champions League debut, claimed a soaking pitch saw the players 'slipping all over the place'.

'But it's no excuse for simple, basic things,' he added. 'The goals came for a lot of long balls, which is bread and butter for people like myself.

'If we were getting caught open it might be different, but it was bread and butter things that went wrong.

'They had good players all around the pitch, but I think we made their job a little bit easier.

'We are still in it. To score two goals at Stamford Bridge is by no means beyond the realms of possibility.

'The third goal killed us a little bit, but we need to pull our finger out in the next leg and put in a better performance.

'I'm ridiculously disappointed. Disappointed with the result, the night, the Champions League debut. So it was a pretty low night for myself, actually.'

Chelsea have now gone five matches without a win and it is hard to see them turning the tie around unless they can stop the rot before the second leg in two weeks' time.
Cahill added: 'It's a sticky situation at the minute. I have come in right in the middle of it. As soon as we get results, I think it will turn the corner, but it's difficult times.'

Next up is Saturday's Barclays Premier League clash with the Bolton side Cahill left just over a month ago.

'It has come round pretty quickly,' he said. 'It is going to be a weird situation knowing the lads and knowing how they play. But, if selected, we need to get a result and put in a better performance in that game, for sure.'

Napoli take control

Double trouble: Lavezzi nets his second strike to give Napoli a two-goal lead

Smile lads: Chelsea's bench look on before the start of the game

Andre Villas-Boas is in greater need of a vote of confidence than ever after Chelsea lurched to another defeat that left them in real danger of crashing out of the Champions League.

Villas-Boas has repeatedly insisted his job would not depend on the outcome of the last-16 tie with Napoli but, despite an improved attacking performance, his players heaped more pressure on him with another defensive horror show.

Having thrown away winning positions countless times both at home and abroad since Villas-Boas took charge, Chelsea did so again in Naples to make it five matches without a win.

Their defending for the outstanding Ezequiel Lavezzi's double was simply shocking.

A 3-1 win was no more than Champions League surprise package Napoli deserved - despite gifting Juan Mata the opening goal - with their attacking trio wreaking havoc against a defence once again badly missing the leadership of injured captain John Terry.

Villas-Boas may also come under fire for not starting with Frank Lampard or Michael Essien in what is regarded one of the most hostile atmospheres in Europe.

Indeed, the cacophonous Napoli fans, swirling wind and driving rain gave the whole occasion an almost apocalyptic feel.

The visitors were immediately under pressure, Petr Cech needing to be alert to race off his line, while captain-for-the-night Didier Drogba briefly stayed down after a clash of heads.

Both were a prelude for worse to follow in the 10th minute when Cech produced real heroics after Cavani looked certain to convert Lavezzi's pass, the goalkeeper just getting his foot to the ball.

Injury really did then strike when Jose Bosingwa limped off with what looked like a hamstring pull, forcing a half-fit Ashley Cole on far earlier than expected.

More brilliance from Cech denied Christian Maggio from a tight angle but Napoli were looking far from secure at the back themselves and, from nothing, they gifted Chelsea the lead.

Drogba found Daniel Sturridge, whose cross was inexplicably flicked back towards his own goal by Paolo Cannavaro, falling perfectly for Mata to fire left-footed beyond Morgan De Sanctis.

A stunned San Paolo struggled to process what had happened, with the visiting fans finally able to make themselves heard.

They might have been celebrating again when Sturridge wasted a glorious opportunity to play in Mata for goal number two, instead greedily trying to beat his man, while the resultant corner saw David Luiz power a header narrowly over.

Chelsea were in the ascendancy but they allowed Napoli to level seven minutes before half-time, Lavezzi given an age with which to curl a beautiful 25-yard shot beyond Cech.

Ramires should have restored the visitors' lead when the home defence parted in front of him but he blazed over the bar.

Raul Meireles was booked for handball, suspending himself for the second leg, and there was a suspicion of the same as Napoli scored again two minutes into first stoppage-time.

Gokhan Inler's cross reached the far post and Edinson Cavani leant his shoulder into the ball to turn it home, the home fans letting off a firework in jubilation.

Villas-Boas refused to shut up shop after the interval and Marek Hamsik was forced to clear off his own line, while Florent Malouda drilled a volley too close to De Sanctis.

But Napoli should have punished another error when Meireles gave Cavani the chance to feed Lavezzi, who dragged wide.

Gary Cahill was booked for clattering into the livewire forward and Mata volleyed another shot straight at De Sanctis before a desperate Salvatore Aronica clearance denied Drogba a possible equaliser.

Napoli were not sitting back either and the latest Luiz howler saw them double their lead in the 65th minute, the defender kicking a long ball straight against Cavani, who squared past the stranded Cech for Lavezzi to steer into an unguarded net.

Villas-Boas responded by throwing on Lampard and Essien for Malouda and Meireles, with Lavezzi soon withdrawn for Blerim Dzemaili.

Branislav Ivanovic was unable to make the most of a goalline scramble and Napoli almost killed the match - and perhaps the tie - when Cole cleared Maggio's open-goal effort off the line.

Goran Pandev came on for Hamsik and he too might have made it 4-1 but Drogba also went close to giving Chelsea a tie-changing second away goal when he hooked wide.

endI

Napoli v Chelsea

Napoli v Chelsea: Preview

Andre Villas-Boas tonight admitted his insistence he was at Chelsea for the long haul would carry more weight if publicly backed by the club's hierarchy.

Blues boss Villas-Boas was once again bombarded by questions about his future this evening ahead of tomorrow night's Champions League last-16 clash at Napoli.

The 34-year-old reiterated he was confident Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich would not sack him should he fail to reach the quarter-finals and that his three-year project to revamp the squad had the Russian billionaire's "full'' backing.

Villas-Boas claimed on Thursday that he did not want a vote of confidence from Abramovich, joking that would mean "the end''.

But he suggested tonight he was beginning to sound like a broken record in his claims of unequivocal backing and it might be better if someone at the top explained they were finally going to allow a manager to see things through.

In front of watching chairman Bruce Buck and chief executive Ron Gourlay, Villas-Boas said: "You have to understand that this club, from 2004 up to now, has made a dramatic change for the best in terms of their past.

"It's the richest part of Chelsea's history, full of trophies and success, and you want to perpetuate that into the future.

"To do that, you have to sometimes make changes because you cannot sustain the same habits that you had in 2004, when this environment and team was created to make a winning team.

"These words would be more valuable coming from the top. I cannot keep saying them but, as the voice of the club, I will continue to perpetuate this message because this is what we believe in.''

Villas-Boas, who has overseen what is currently the club's worst season of the Abramovich era, admitted speculation over his future was inevitable based on the Russian's previous habit of firing managers.

He said: "In terms of the results this year, the speculation is normal given the cultural past of this football club, but you have to understand that there's a different perspective now.''

The Portuguese added: "I'm really confident about next year.

"That doesn't take any responsibility for what's happening now, but we had a three-year project to change not only the team, but the culture and structure of the club.

"There's a lot we needed to do, a lot of plans, so that's why I'm excited about the future. Having said that, we have to build a team to win trophies from the start.

"With that in mind, the fact that we're no longer in the Carling Cup and don't have a chance to win the (Barclays Premier League) title is a shame.

"But we are still confident we can do well in the Champions League and the FA Cup.''

Standing in their way in Europe are Napoli and the Italian side's boss Walter Mazzarri has ordered his side to think like underdogs, claiming only a "perfect'' performance would beat Villas-Boas' men.

"Tomorrow, we will face a team, Chelsea, who have played more than 100 Champions League matches,'' he said.

"We are proud to play this match but I don't want to hear anyone saying we are the favourite for this game.

"We can find a result only if we play a great match.

"All the team has to play not only a special game, but the perfect game.''

Mazzarri was banned from the tie for pushing Villarreal forward Nilmar during Napoli's final group game in December.

Assistant Nicolo Frustalupi will deputise, with the Italians having won all their previous games when he has done so.

Mazzarri said: "Nicolo Frustalupi is probably better than me as tactical coach and I'm sure that he will be a perfect coach tomorrow.''

Napoli boast one of the most feared attacking trios in Europe in Edinson Cavani, Marek Hamsik and Ezequiel Lavezzi.

The latter is the only one of them yet to score in the Champions League - something he was planning to change tomorrow.

"I really hope so - it would be pretty nice to score my first Champions League goal against a team like Chelsea,'' he said.

Chelsea rocked by Terry injury blow

John Terry: Fitness race

Chelsea captain
John Terry will miss Tuesday's Champions League tie at Napoli amid reports he could be out for two months with an ongoing knee problem.

Chelsea were hoping to have Terry back for the daunting trip to the Stadio San Paolo and the centre-back pushed himself through a pre-match training session on Monday, despite clearly struggling.

According to the Daily Mirror, Terry woke in agony at the team hotel as his knee problem worsened overnight, instantly ruling him out of contention for a game that could define manager Andre Villas-Boas' reign.

Chelsea have failed to keep a clean sheet in Terry's absence and needed a defensive boost as they prepare to face Napoli's highly-rated attacking trio of Ezequiel Lavezzi, Marek Hamsik and Edinson Cavani.

Terry has missed the last four games after being forced to give way to the knee injury he sustained when he collided with the post making a goalline clearance in the FA Cup win over Portsmouth on January 8.

It was hoped that rest and recuperation would cure the problem of bruising on the bone, which Terry had initially played through, but the defender will now undergo what was described as a "small procedure" by club medics when Chelsea return to London.


Sunday, February 19, 2012

Mourinho speaks to Chelsea, Inter fans

Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho has called on fans of his former sides Chelsea and Inter Milan to get behind their teams and respective managers.

"Mourinho one of the best in history"

Chelsea coach Andre Villas-Boas and Inter coach Claudio Ranieri are both currently struggling to live up to the legacy left behind by Mourinho at their respective clubs.

The bad feeling surrounding two of Europe's football heavyweights came to a head over the weekend when both sets of supporters could be heard singing for Mourinho's return during Inter's 3-0 loss to Bologna on Friday and Chelsea's 1-1 draw with Birmingham on Saturday.

Mourinho, whose own future at the Bernabeu has come under question in the past, downplayed the significance of the events.

"I love my former sides Inter Milan and Chelsea, and their fans as well," Mourinho told the Real Madrid website.

"I'd rather those fans supported their teams and their coaches rather than me. I'm their past, and a very good one at that, so they remember me.

"I'm no longer there and they should fight together instead of thinking about those who aren't there any more."

The desire for fans of both Inter and Chelsea to see Mourinho back at their clubs is understandable. The Portuguese guided Inter to a famous treble in his last season at the San Siro while he was also the architect of unprecedented success at Stamford Bridge when he was in charge of the Blues.

On Saturday, Mourinho led Real Madrid to a 4-0 win over Racing Santander which leaves them 13 points ahead of rival Barcelona, who play on Sunday, for the race for La Liga this season.

"I like the final score, but what I most like is taking another three points and having one game less to play," Mourinho said.

"We won without much brilliance, but without much effort either."

Sao Paulo goalkeeper Rogerio Ceni recently declared Madrid boss Mourinho as one of the best coaches in football history following a visit to the club's training ground earlier in the week to watch the Portuguese in action.

Chelsea 1 - 1 Birmingham

Daniel Sturridge rescued Chelsea from FA Cup humiliation but they did nothing to ease the pressure on Andre Villas-Boas as Birmingham secured a shock FA Cup fifth-round replay with a 1-1 draw.

The home side's season was in danger of hitting a new low when their latest defensive calamity allowed David Murphy to give the visitors a shock half-time lead at Stamford Bridge.

Colin Doyle also brilliantly saved a Juan Mata penalty and, although Sturridge eventually equalised, Chelsea simply did not do enough to find a winner.

The performance showed Sunday's summit meeting in which Villas-Boas' players reportedly challenged their manager did nothing to address the problems which led to their worst display of the season at Everton last weekend.

Villas-Boas insisted it did not matter if some of his squad did not back him as he had the support of Roman Abramovich, but the club's billionaire owner would not have been happy with what he saw.

The man he spent £50million on - Fernando Torres - again failed to impress, hauled off at half-time for Didier Drogba, who was a surprise substitute following the African Nations Cup.

But others, too, let themselves down as Chelsea's winless run extended to four matches.

The travelling fans taunted Villas-Boas with chants of, "You're getting sacked in the morning", as Chelsea toiled from the start.

The hosts were almost embarrassed when David Luiz's attempted clearance deflected off a Birmingham head before Stephen Carr was forced off injured, Jonathan Spector coming on.

The defending that cost Chelsea at Goodison Park resurfaced when they fell behind in the 20th minute, Luiz and Raul Meireles failing to deal with a near-post corner, allowing Murphy to drill home.

Chelsea finally woke up and urgent attacking immediately won them a penalty when Wade Elliott tripped Ramires but Doyle produced a world-class save to tip Mata's spot-kick onto the post.

Curtis Davies produced a brilliant interception to stop Torres reaching a cross from Sturridge, who then screamed in vain for another penalty when he crumpled under Pablo Ibanez's challenge.

Luiz tried to inject some inspiration when a typical surge forward saw Jordon Mutch rightly booked for the crudest of challenges, which the defender almost punished with a superb free-kick that Doyle tipped over.

Sturridge then unleashed a blistering volley that just dipped too late and Mata directed a header too close to Doyle before Chelsea trudged off to muted jeers.

The boos turned to cheers after the interval when Torres, who had another half to forget, was hauled off for Drogba.

The Ivorian immediately showed the kind of commitment lacking from Torres by retrieving the ball for a goal-kick.

But Chelsea showed little sign of improvement and Gary Cahill was booked for a tangle with Adam Rooney before more shocking set-piece defending saw Redmond blast over a corner.

Salomon Kalou replaced the ineffective John Obi Mikel, although it was someone else the crowd wanted, judging by the chants of "Super Frankie Lampard".

However, the change paid off, Mata drilling wide after brilliantly taking down Luiz's crossfield pass before Sturridge equalised in the 62nd minute.

Branislav Ivanovic was given time to deliver a cross and Sturridge rose unmarked to power home a header via the inside of the post.

Elliott threw himself in front of Ivanovic's attempted follow-up before Rooney was withdrawn for Jake Jervis.

Meireles' low drive through a crowd of players was deflected just over the bar while Mutch tested Petr Cech with a low free-kick.

Lampard finally joined the fray when he replaced Mata for the last seven minutes in another unpopular substitution, with Elliott also withdrawn for Chris Burke.

Ivanovic appealed half-heartedly for a penalty after a coming together with Murphy before Birmingham wasted a glorious chance to snatch it when Redman shot tamely at Cech after racing clear.

Lampard drilled a free-kick straight at the wall in stoppage-time, Luiz was cautioned for clattering into Spector, and Davies headed too close to Cech as the visitors held on for a deserved replay.

Teams



















Chelsea


Birmingham


















1 Petr Cech


13 Colin Doyle


















24 Gary Cahill


5 Pablo Ibañez


















2 Branislav Ivanovic


24 Curtis Davies


















34 Ryan Bertrand


2 Stephen Carr


















4 David Luiz


3 David Murphy


















16 Raul Meireles


15 Wade Elliott


















12 John Mikel Obi


18 Keith Fahey


















7 Ramires


14 Morgaro Gomis


















9 Fernando Torres


12 Jordan Mutch


















23 Daniel Sturridge


22 Nathan Redmond


















10 Juan Mata


17 Adam Rooney


















Substitutes


















40 Henrique Hilario


Jack Butland 26


















17 Bosingwa


Steven Caldwell 4


















8 Frank Lampard


Jonathan Spector 23


















5 Michael Essien


Chris Burke 7


















15 Florent Malouda


Callum Reilly 35


















11 Didier Drogba


Jake Jervis 36


















21 Salomon Kalou


Akwasi Asante 25


















Substitutions


















Didier Drogba for Fernando Torres (46)



Jonathan Spector for Stephen Carr (12)


















Salomon Kalou for John Mikel Obi (57)



Jake Jervis for Adam Rooney (71)


















Frank Lampard for Juan Mata (83)



Chris Burke for Wade Elliott (83)


















Yellow Cards


















Gary Cahill (55)



Jordan Mutch (34)


















David Luiz (90)






















· Squads: Chelsea | Birmingham

Match Stats

Chelsea Birmingham

12(5) Shots (on Goal) 6(5)
10 Fouls 13
6 Corner Kicks 3
4 Offsides 4
54% Time of Possession 46%
2 Yellow Cards 1
0 Red Cards 0
4 Saves 3

Scoring Summary

Chelsea Birmingham
Juan Mata (pen miss 23')David Murphy (20')
Daniel Sturridge (62')




Saturday, February 18, 2012

Is Torres Feeling The Love?




I was in a cab when I heard we’d signed Andriy Shevchenko. I remember it because I’d been saying for two seasons we should sign him. I remember how I took the absolute piss out of the other passenger in the cab with me – a Milan fan who’d sworn all along Shevchenko would never leave AC. More than that though, I remember how it felt – I can even imagine the look on my face when it came through on the radio. I’d seen plenty of what Sheva could do and been to the San Siro enough times myself to know what an important player he was – and suddenly he was a Chelsea player – bloody overjoyed just doesn’t cover it.

Needless to say then, I was gutted the way his spell at Chelsea went. In fact, the longer it went on, the more painful it got. For those who know anything aout the 7 stages of grief, well that was me, I did the lot. From doing my best ostrich impression, through arguing with everyone around me (except the big man upstairs, who of course I was still bargaining with by way of a few Hail Mary’s), right up to downright sulking. I held off the acceptance bit, right up until I realised it was more cruel for us to keep him.

Sort of a standing joke for us though really – Stamford Bridge is where strikers come to ‘end’ their careers. Shevchenko certainly wasn’t the first player whose goals seemed to dry up the minute he pulled on a Chelsea shirt (he was just the most expensive) and he wasn’t to be the last either…..

A couple of years and an extra £20million later, Step up Fernando Torres.

Similarly to Shevchenko’s signing, I remember where I was when our £50million signing was announced – mainly because I’d hardly left the room during the transfer window. Glued to SkySports and the internet, I spent the whole night dreading another ‘Robinho’ fiasco, crossing my fingers whilst frantically updating the blog, being wound up by an opposition supporter on msn, whilst trying, in turn, to wind up as many scousers as was humanly possibly in a day.

And then, whilst not in the realms of Shevchenko (mainly because he’d come from Liverpool so not a player I’d ever particularly cared for), I still remember how I felt. Not elation exactly but close enough to feel a bit smug. We’d got our ‘big’ signing. After the embarrassment of Robinho (little did we know!) and the utter disappointment of United getting Berbatov – it was our turn – and I knew they didn’t like it.

You see, not only had we just signed Fernando Torres – whose career of course, we were going to resurrect – but we had the strike force of Didier Drogba and Torres combined! Imagine that! Of course it made the opposition unhappy, but whilst they were left pretty deflated from that particular transfer window, Stamford Bridge was awash with happiness – and ‘awash’ is certainly an apt description considering the hard-ons it undoubtedly induced. Unfortunately for us though, this isn’t something that’s been reciprocated so far because, over the last 12 months, the only thing stiff about Fernando Torres has been his ability to finish.

Similarly to Shevchenko, I’ve refused to believe Torres needs to go and right before the United game, I was still at the point where I could only see his every move through blue-tinted glasses. Even on the tube, I almost accepted someone’s “but how many does he set-up?” argument. And to an extent, whilst I mentioned the minor issue of us not paying £50million for him to ‘set them up’, I wasn’t about to labour the point.

Watching it back again later though, I’d have needed more than tinted shades to miss his lack of confidence. The Reds must have been expecting the inevitable when the golden opportunity presented itself to our Spanish striker. I mean, he ‘loves’ scoring against them right? Enough of them said it before the game – except, that was then and this is now – because, as we know to our cost, he let the opportunity go begging.

So, what’s the difference between then and now – apart from a shitload of goals? Well, similarly to Shevchenko, Fernando Torres came to us at a time when he wasn’t in the best of form anyway. An injury before the end of a decent 2009/10 season for Liverpool meant he needed a spell out – but like too many players, he returned from that prematurely for international duty and has never returned to his best since.

Having come to us under those circumstances and then failed to set the world alight immediately, the pressure in the press inevitably started – but was it just from the press?

If he has major concerns, Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas hides it well in the press, insisting he is happy enough with the rest of Nando’s game. Like the Jose Mourinho situation with Sheva though, Torres was not a major signing of choice for AVB – he was inherited (albeit before his arrival on this occasion), so not the ideal way to feel wanted.

Then there’s the rest of the squad. Yesterday, TheChelseaBlog looked at the impact ‘player power’ could be having at the club and you’d have to think this sort of thing could come into play with new signings. Our ‘senior’ players have been at the club a fair while and it wouldn’t be unheard of for these ‘old-timers’ to have an opinion on such a significant signing. Certainly 6 months or more ago, there was the odd whisper about a ‘bust-up’ in training – I don’t recall reading it in the press at the time – although rumour had it there was an alleged row between Nando and another senior player who may, or may not have felt his place under threat. Surely if this sort of thing is more than a rumour, it has to unsettle a player like Nando? Similar to Shevchenko, feeling almost the outsider trying to play your way in has to have an impact – even worse if you’re made to feel as isolated on the pitch as you feel off it? How often have we questioned the lack of service he gets for example?

Maybe all this hearsay is just clutching at that ‘denial’ straw again though and maybe the bust-up was a one-off borne out of the frustration of his barren spell rather than being its route cause? Well, whichever it is, at the time, the rumour was that the Spanish striker was more than capable of standing up for himself off the pitch…………..now its just a question of whether he’ll ever start doing that on it?

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

AVB: Torres taking his time

Might Andre Villas-Boas be losing patience with Fernando Torres?

Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas has admitted Fernando Torres is "taking his time" to find his form for the Blues.


Torres has gone 1,074 minutes without a goal for Chelsea after he again failed to hit the back of the net in his side's 1-1 draw at Swansea City on Tuesday night.

The Spain international has now scored just three goals in 32 Premier League appearances since signing at Stamford Bridge from Liverpool for £50 million in January 2011.

When asked about his attacking options, Villas-Boas chose to talk up Didier Drogba's quality, with the Ivorian due to return from African Nations Cup duty this month.

The Portuguese said in The Sun: "The two players are competing for the striking position and we all know the significance of Didier to this team and his record.

"We will have to see how tired he is when he comes back to us but no one can doubt his ambition to win trophies for us this season. With Torres, the situation does not change. We still believe in the player but he is taking his time."

De Bruyne completes Chelsea switch

Kevin De Bruyne is capped at international level for Belgium

Genk's Belgium international Kevin De Bruyne has signed a five-and-a-half-year contract with Chelsea.


As anticipated as part of the agreement, De Bruyne, 20, will spend the remainder of the season at Genk before joining up with Chelsea in the summer.

The attacking midfielder underwent a medical with the Blues on Monday after a reported fee in the region of £7 million was agreed between the two clubs.

A statement on Genk's website read: "The transfer of Kevin De Bruyne to Chelsea has been completed. He has signed for five and a half seasons and will continue (playing with) Genk until June.

"His signature was confirmed at 0.30 last night. De Bruyne and his agent will return back today from London, along with general director Dirk Degraen.

"Genk will hold a press conference with (director) Jacob Gunther and Dirk Degraen in which they will clarify the transfer policy.

"Afterwards, Kevin De Bruyne will also give an explanation about his transfer to the English club.''

De Bruyne told Chelsea's official website: "It's a little bit of a dream come true. I've worked very hard and am still very young but have already played a lot of games. To come to a team like Chelsea is a dream but now it's a reality and I have to work hard to achieve the level that's necessary."

De Bruyne becomes the third Belgian to join Chelsea in the last six months, following the arrivals of Romelu Lukaku and Thibaut Courtois last summer.

Meanwhile, Chelsea also confirmed this morning that 18-year-old Austrian youth international Philipp Prosenik has joined AC Milan on a permanent deal.

The midfielder arrived at the Blues from Rapid Vienna in 2009 but did not make a first-team appearance at the London club.

Swansea City 1 - 1 Chelsea

Blues Struggle to draw with Swans

Swansea's Scott Sinclair scored a memorable goal against his former employers, but it was not to prove the winner

An own goal from Neil Taylor deep into injury-time saw Chelsea deny Swansea another famous win at the Liberty Stadium after salvaging a 1-1 draw.

Former Chelsea winger Scott Sinclair had given Swansea a 39th-minute lead when his left-footed volley looped over Petr Cech and into the net, putting the hosts on course for a repeat of their stunning win over Arsenal.

Chelsea dominated the second half but they looked set to suffer a sixth defeat of the season when Ashley Cole picked up a second booking late on.

However, with time running out, Jose Bosingwa's driven ball across the box from the right struck the unfortunate Taylor and beat Michel Vorm.

Chelsea, without captain John Terry due to a knee injury and with new signing Gary Cahill on the bench, had Branislav Ivanovic and David Luiz in central defence and they were thankful to the former for saving them twice during a sluggish opening from Andre Villas-Boas' side.

Ivanovic firstly denied Danny Graham a simple finish after a Steven Caulker header had rebounded to the striker before Chelsea threatened when Luiz ventured forward, with his low cross resulting in Daniel Sturridge firing narrowly past Vorm's near post.

Ivanovic was involved again when a long ball pumped towards Graham caused chaos in the visiting defence.

Cech could only clear the ball to Gylfi Sigurdsson, who skipped past the goalkeeper but saw Ivanovic block his goal-bound effort. Graham's follow-up attempt was kept out by Luiz and Joe Allen was denied by the recovering goalkeeper.

Having survived that scare Chelsea began to take a stranglehold on the game, dominating possession and pinning Swansea deep in their own half.

Ashley Williams made a terrific interception to cut out Fernando Torres' intended pass to an unmarked Sturridge, while Juan Mata fired wastefully wide of either post after more patient build-up.

Vorm was uncharacteristically hesitant in tipping a Oriol Romeu drive around his post, before Luiz failed to make the most of a free header from a Raul Meireles corner.

But after absorbing the pressure Swansea took the lead against the run of play as Sinclair netted against his former club.

Sigurdsson's free-kick was weakly headed away by Bosingwa, and a swing of Sinclair's left foot saw the ball float over Cech into the far corner, although the winger was restrained in his celebrations in front of the travelling support.

Stung by the concession of the goal so late in the first half, Chelsea completely dominated the opening exchanges of the second period.

Mata and Meireles prompted in midfield as Swansea defended ever deeper.

The visitors initially created little in the way of clear-cut chances, although they would have levelled had any blue-shirted attackers made the effort to follow in Cole's astute ball across the Swansea six-yard box.

Villas-Boas brought Michael Essien on for Romeu, and the move almost paid instant dividends as the Ghanaian blasted a fierce drive narrowly over Vorm's bar.

Bosingwa then teased his way to the byline but his hanging cross was headed clear by Angel Rangel, before another surge from the right-back saw Sturridge turn and poke wide.

Swansea were by now struggling to find their way out of their own half as their efforts to keep ball were stymied by Chelsea's pressing high up the pitch.

They summoned a rare attacking foray with seven minutes to go as substitutes Kemy Agustien and Luke Moore combined to give Nathan Dyer a sight of goal, but he dragged his shot across the face of goal.

Normal service was soon resumed as Bosingwa cut in and fired narrowly over, but Swansea were just about managing to handle everything Chelsea could throw at them.

Chelsea's frustrations were then compounded as Cole, who had been cautioned just before the interval, picked up a second booking for a rash tackle on Dyer and was dismissed.

But their pressure finally told as Bosingwa again tricked his way into the box and saw his driven effort strike Taylor to deceive Vorm and rescue a point.

Match Stat

Swansea City--------------Chelsea
8(5) Shots (on Goal) 19(4)
10 Fouls 22
1 Corner Kicks 11
3 Offsides 0
46% Time of Possession 54%
2 Yellow Cards 2
0 Red Cards 1
4 Saves 4

Scoring Summary

Swansea City Chelsea
Scott Sinclair (39')Neil Taylor (og 90')

Team Selection







Swansea City














Chelsea






1 Michel Vorm














1 Petr Cech






2 Ashley Williams














4 David Luiz






4 Steven Caulker














2 Branislav Ivanovic






3 Neil Taylor














3 Ashley Cole






22 Angel Rangel














17 José Bosingwa






24 Joe Allen














16 Raul Meireles






7 Leon Britton














6 Oriol Romeu






10 Danny Graham














9 Fernando Torres






42 Gylfi Sigurdsson














10 Juan Mata






11 Scott Sinclair














15 Florent Malouda






12 Nathan Dyer














23 Daniel Sturridge






Substitutes






15 Wayne Routledge














Michael Essien 5






16 Garry Monk














Paulo Ferreira 19






19 Luke Moore














Ross Turnbull 22






26 Kemy Agustien














Gary Cahill 24






25 Gerhard Tremmel














Ryan Bertrand 34






18 Leroy Lita














Romelu Lukaku 18






29 Ashley Richards














Lucas Piazon 35






Substitutions






Kemy Agustien for Gylfi Sigurdsson (67)















Michael Essien for Oriol Romeu (65)






Luke Moore for Scott Sinclair (78)















Romelu Lukaku for Florent Malouda (80)






Yellow Cards






Neil Taylor (14)















Ashley Cole (45)






Angel Rangel (48)















Florent Malouda (45)






















Raul Meireles (87)






Red Cards






















Ashley Cole (86)








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Match Overview

Newcastle Utd Against Chelsea (PPEM)

Latest Player Transfer season 2011/2012

Player In
Date Player in Team Fee
31 August 2011 Raul Meireles Liverpool Undisclosed
1 January 2012 Gary Cahill Bolton Undisclosed
31 January 2012 Kevin De Bruyne Genk Undisclosed
Player Out
Date Player out Team Fee
24 December Chris Chantler Carlisle United Loan
03 December Andreas Mancini Oldham Athletic Loan
03 December Luca Scapuzzi Oldham Athletic Loan
28 October Abdul Razak Portsmouth Loan
25 October Greg Cunningham Nottingham Forest Loan
13 October Jeremy Helan Carlisle United Loan
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