Sunday, August 30, 2009

burnley 3-0


Sunday Times
Burnley undone by Chelsea’s fluency
Brian Glanville at Stamford Bridge
PERHAPS the cruel alliteration could be, Burnley’s Bubble Bursts. After that remarkable win over Manchester United, anti-climax was inevitable.
Throughout this one-sided game, in which their Danish goalkeeper Brian Jensen rescued them time and again, Burnley made only a single chance and, alas, they missed it.
How should one describe the Chelsea formation? It was fluid but no mathematical formula could really do it justice. This time, there was no accredited winger. Instead, players popped up in attack in a bewildering kaleidoscope of movement. You had Ashley Cole overlapping on the left and scoring an exceptional goal soon after half-time, Deco, showing up on the right, moving into the middle and Nicolas Anelka often partnering Didier Drogba, then popping up on the right flank. Was it a diamond or a Christmas tree formation?
Frank Lampard, in such impressive form, would often burst dangerously into attack from the midfield and John Terry looked more like an old-fashioned attacking centre-half.
Carlo Ancelotti, Chelsea’s new manager, his English somewhat broken, was explicably “happy, because we show good play on the pitch, we played very well in the first half”. In training, he told us: “I propose an idea, and the players develop this idea and they do this very well now.”
He dismissed rumours that the club were prepared to pay €65m for Bayern Munich’s French winger, Franck Ribery. “I don’t want to take other players.” By contrast the Burnley manager, Owen Coyle, would surely, if only he had the money, enlist more. Yesterday, it was only the brave, resilient goalkeeping of Jensen that kept the score down to three.
“Brian is a very good goalkeeper,” he said. “Our strength is not in individual players, it is the group and Brian is part of that.”
An utterly essential part. Although they surprised United, Burnley yesterday were pedestrian. In the second half, they moved Steven Fletcher, a rare expensive purchase, from the right wing into the centre, where he did his committed best, but support was not in evidence. “There’s positives to take,” insisted Coyle, though Jensen apart, it was hard to see where they came from. He was generous enough to admit: “Chelsea’s play was fantastic.”
Jensen began his catalogue of saves as early as the third minute, pouncing on Anelka’s drive from the right. But even he may have been a little surprised he was able to thwart Anelka three minutes later when the striker was clean through.
Three minutes more and Burnley had missed clumsily their one true chance. Tyrone Mears, the right-back, advanced and neatly found Martin Paterson on his left in abundant space. Paterson ineptly pulled his shot wide.
Then it was Jensen: at the feet of Anelka, in defiance of the dynamic Michael Ballack, stopping a header by Terry, then blocking Lampard’s close-range drive. He followed this with a save from Deco, then another from Lampard.
It was a bitter pill to swallow when Drogba, in irresistible form, crossed from the right and the ball deflected off Clarke Carlisle, then off Anelka and a post for a goal.
Immediately after half time, Chelsea put Burnley out of their misery. Ballack closed in from the right to exploit Lampard’s cross. Four minutes later, Cole’s electric run and narrow angled shot made it 3-0.
Needless to say, Jensen kept on saving. A header from Drogba, a wallop from Michael Essien, a header by Ballack. It was one-way traffic indeed.
Star man: Brian Jensen (Burnley)
Yellow cards: Burnley: Mears
Referee: M Clattenburg Attendance: 40,906
CHELSEA: Cech 6, A Cole 6, Carvalho 6, Bosingwa 6 (Belletti 66min), Terry 8, Essien 8, Lampard 8, Ballack 7 (Mikel 82min), Deco 7, Drogba 8 (Kalou 75min), Anelka 7
BURNLEY: Jensen 8, Alexander 5 (McDonald 73min), Carlisle 6, Mears 6, Bikey 6, Jordan 5, Elliott 6, McCann 5, Fletcher 6, Paterson 5 (Gudjonsson 58min, 5), Blake 5 (Guerrero 78min)
Kiev re-sign Shevchenko
Andriy Shevchenko, Chelsea’s 32-year-old Ukraine striker, inset, has rejoined Dynamo Kiev on a two-year contract. Shevchenko failed to settle in London, scoring just four goals in 30 league games, following a record £30m transfer from AC Milan in May 2006. He spent last season on loan with Milan
DIVE WATCH
Michael Ballack won a free kick for Chelsea on the edge of Burnley’s penalty area early in the game with an elaborate tumble despite not being touched. The kick came to nothing and once Chelsea were in front there were no further theatricals

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Telegraph:
Chelsea 3 Burnley 0
By Oliver Brown at Stamford Bridge

Chelsea staged a rhapsody in blue as the expansive game that Roman Abramovich has coveted for five years finally arrived at the expense of poor, bewildered Burnley.
Carlo Ancelotti's much-vaunted diamond formation proved a precious thing indeed as Nicolas Anelka, Michael Ballack and Ashley Cole weighed in with the goals that extended the Italian's flawless league record to four games.
A return of 12 points in Ancelotti's first month in charge but it is the way in which they have been earned that is more significant. Chelsea outpaced and outwitted Burnley in a peerless seven-minute either side of half-time that would have had even Manchester United and Arsenal's style councils all of a flutter.
Although Chelsea rapidly found their stride, Burnley were more than ready to counter-attack. After Anelka had spurned a clear sight of goal, his touch letting him down with only goalkeeper Brian Jensen to beat, Martin Paterson had one of the gift of the first half courtesy of a rare lapse from John Terry.
Tyrone Mears had the beating of Frank Lampard and raced into the penalty area but, rather than shooting, elected to square the ball to Paterson, who put his shot wide when it looked to far easier to put Burnley ahead. Even the Chelsea fans seemed incredulous but Owen Coyle, the Burnley manager, continued to offer more of his loud encouragement.
It was ultimately to no avail, as Coyle's side found themselves pinned back by waves of blue. The breakthrough was surprisingly long in coming but Anelka, seconds before half-time, achieved it, surging into the penalty area to convert Drogba's inch-perfect cross with a lunging finish.
Chelsea were ruthless in pressing home their advantage, Ballack pouncing for the second in the 47th minute as Anelka espied the overlapping Lampard, whose ball was perfectly judged for the German to angle a diving header beyond Jensen.
If that was a smooth move, it paled into ordinariness compared to Chelsea's third. The build-up was effortless in its simplicity as Cole ran on to a return ball from Lampard, executing a superb volley past Jensen from a tight angle.
Michael Essien was the engine for all Chelsea's surges and almost secured a goal for himself when his shot in the 66th minute forced Jensen to leap low to his left and tip the ball around the post.

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Mail:
Chelsea 3 Burnley 0:Swaggering Blues go top after romp at Stamford Bridge
By Ian Ridley
The modern Premier League has changed much in the English game - a lot of it for the better - with its all-seater stadia and phalanx of overseas players.With Burnley back at Stamford Bridge, it was, though, a day to evoke the past - and, thankfully, not the sort of scenes from a more earthy era involving another side in claret and blue elsewhere in London in midweek. Chelsea even had a brass band playing nostalgically before kick-off.
It is 25 years since Burnley last played in the top flight at The Bridge; on a midweek afternoon during a miner's strike when floodlit games were prohibited, and with just over 8,000 watching. The result then? Three-nil to the home side.This one was certainly a strange 3-0. For 45 minutes, a resilient Burnley, the season's early surprise packets, kept Chelsea at bay and showed up the flaws of the hosts' diamond formation.
They stopped their full-backs rampaging and forced a frustrated Chelsea to try to pick a way through a packed central area. If Burnley could thwart them, what punishment might Manchester United or Arsenal inflict? But Nicolas Anelka's goal in first half added time was swiftly followed early in the second by silky goals from Michael Ballack and Ashley Cole - to embellish his man-of-the-match performance - and, ultimately, Burnley deserved nowt, not even for the performance of Brian 'The Beast' Jensen in their goal, who prevented a monstering, nor for those shirts and hooped socks that evoke their title-winning season of 50 years ago.
It was Chelsea's fourth straight win this season under Carlo Ancelotti and their ninth in all, taking in the end of last season. It is not just that midfield diamond formation that is echoing the Jose Mourinho era. 'I am happy because we showed good play,' said Ancelotti. 'Now we have to maintain this.' The Italian is happy to contemplate the title, too. 'We have a possibility,' he said. 'We have started well. The season is long and it will be difficult but we have the possibility to step up when the chance comes.'
Survival, by contrast, will be the Burnley aim.'It was a lesson at times for us in the way Chelsea passed the ball,' said their manager, Owen Coyle. 'But I've thanked the lads for the start they have given us.'
It is beginning to look already as if it is home form that will save them after two defeats away and six points at home, against Manchester United and Everton. It might have been different had they taken a marvellous chance with the game just 10 minutes old.Frank Lampard was dispossessed, leaving his defence horribly exposed, and Tyrone Mears broke forward before crossing low to an unmarked Martin Paterson. As he tucked the ball past the advancing Petr Cech, you waited for the net to ripple. Instead, the shot drifted wide of a post.
'At 1-0 in front the pressure would have been on Chelsea,' said Coyle. 'At this level you have to take those.'For the rest of the first half, they absorbed Chelsea's pressure valiantly, their enthusiasm and togetherness serving them well. When Chelsea did find a way through, Jensen was towering, saving at Anelka's feet and beating away point-blank shots from John Terry and Lampard. For all their potential potency, cracks appeared in the Chelsea ranks. Robbie Blake and Steven Fletcher tracked the runs of the full-backs, Jose Bosingwa and Cole, leaving Chelsea looking narrow in their approach play.
'We are,' said a Chelsea fan pining for a hero, 'missing Gianfranco Zola.' Life may have long since moved on at The Bridge but you knew what he meant.
Finally, the goal that was harsh on Burnley arrived in the second minute of added time at the end of the first-half.
With the visiting defence advancing for a change, Michael Essien threaded a ball forward to Didier Drogba, who reached the righthand byline before crossing low to the far post, where Anelka arrived to guide the ball in off an upright after a stretching Clarke Carlisle, having a brave and excellent game, had only been able to touch the ball into his path.
'At 0-0 at half-time there would have been everything to play for,' said Coyle.
As it was, Burnley quickly found themselves out of the game at the start of the second half with Chelsea's second goal. Anelka switched the ball out to Lampard on the left and Ballack met his chipped cross to the far post with a downward header past Jensen.It looked to be a result of Ancelotti asking them at the interval for more width in their game and their third goal, arriving within another five minutes, also demonstrated it.Essien found Lampard, again the creator, as his ball inside Alexander found Cole, who guided home a splendid shot into the far corner as Carlisle sought to block.
The defender said: 'It's my aim this year to score as many goals as possible.'
After that, there could have been more - and would have been but for Jensen. Anelka clipped the bar after being put through by Ballack and the goalkeeper twice had to make diving saves from Essien.
Mears also cleared the substitute Salomon Kalou's shot off the line. Thus did Burnley escape with dignity just about intact in the face of a Chelsea onslaught. So, too, did football in London on a day of claret and blue-remembered skills.
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Independent:
Anelka adds finishing touch to Chelsea's finely-tuned machine
Chelsea 3 Burnley 0
By Mark Fleming at Stamford Bridge
The only way Carlo Ancelotti is going to banish the ghost of Jose Mourinho is by matching the Special One's achievements, one by one. So far so good, then, as Chelsea recorded their fourth straight Premier League victory since Ancelotti took charge, matching the golden start made by Mourinho in the summer of 2004.
Chelsea went on that season to win the title with something to spare, and so far this campaign are fully justifying their pre-season billing as favourites for the title. Few teams pass the ball as sweetly as Chelsea. The ball zipped between the feet of Frank Lampard, Deco, Michael Ballack and Didier Drogba as the home side worked the angles to probe the Burnley defence.
Their football was crisp and incisive, and but for the hulking form of Burnley goalkeeper Brian Jensen, they could have scored double figures.
Ancelotti's Chelsea are still very much a work in progress, but they are improving from one game to the next, and the signs are ominous. Drogba's understanding with strike partner Nicolas Anelka is becoming more instinctive; the midfield formation is bedding in well; players like Ballack, Deco and Ricardo Carvalho have a fresh spring in their step.
Ancelotti remained cautiously optimistic. "We have the possibility of the title," he said. "We have started very well but we know that the season is very long. It will be difficult for sure but we have the possibility to step up when we need to. I propose an idea to the players and they develop it. But we can still improve."
Last November Burnley's Carling Cup victory at Chelsea on penalties gave the club the belief that they could live with the very best teams in the country. Yesterday's return here however conveyed a very different message, that despite their shock victory over Manchester United, Burnley still have an uphill struggle to stay in the Premier League.
They held their own against Chelsea for the first half-hour, but when the opportunity came their way to pinch the first goal, they could not capitalise. Frank Lampard, of all people, gave away possession to Tyrone Mears who centred for Martin Paterson unmarked on the edge of the penalty area. Sadly for Owen Coyle's battling side, he pulled his shot wide.
Jensen tried to keep his team in the game single-handedly with countless brilliant saves to deny Chelsea's superstars. His parry to repel Michael Essien's long-range shot, followed by a reaction stop to keep out a header from Ballack, were the pick of the bunch. Jensen is 34 but has yet to win international recognition with Denmark, which can only mean they have some very good goalkeepers indeed.
Chelsea however continued to put their opponents under pressure. The excellent Essien engineered the breakthrough, releasing Drogba down the channel who centred for Anelka to score in first-half stoppage time. There was a hint of offside about the goal, but Chelsea deserved to be ahead.
Two minutes after the break, Ballack scored with a stooping header from Lampard's cross, and Ashley Cole managed his first goal at Stamford Bridge with a flashing half-volley, after a one-two with Lampard.
Anelka hit the bar from close range, and Mears cleared off the line to deny Kalou as Chelsea, who will not be able to call on Andrei Shevchenko this season after his move to Dynamo Kiev yesterday on a two-year deal, sought to boost their goal difference.
Burnley manager Owen Coyle recognised that his team had been brought back down to earth after their surprising victories over Manchester United and Arsenal.
Coyle said: "We are disappointed to lose 3-0 and that shows how far we have come in a very short space of time. They taught us a lesson at times, the way Chelsea passed and moved. But we will take our medicine and pick ourselves up again."
Attendance: 40,906
Referee: Mark Clattenburg
Man of the match: Jensen
Match rating: 7/10

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Observer:
Nicolas Anelka leads Chelsea past Burnley's defiant Brian Jensen
Chelsea 3 Anelka 45, Ballack 47, Cole, A 52 Burnley 0
Paul Doyle at Stamford Bridge
Chelsea helped themselves to their fourth win in four games with this ruthless suppression of Burnley. Nicolas Anelka, Michael Ballack and Ashley Cole all struck telling blows and the margin of victory would have been even more emphatic but for valiant goalkeeping by Brian Jensen and wasteful finishing by the rampant home side.
Chelsea began briskly and Anelka loosened up with a long-range shot in the third minute that brought an elementary save from Jensen. Thirty seconds later the striker was summoned to set a tougher test for the keeper, but narrowly failed to connect with a fizzing Ballack cross. If that was forgivable, Anelka's miss in the sixth minute was the sort managers are loth to excuse. After intercepting a careless pass by André Bikey, Anelka had the whole Burnley half to himself but freedom of choice appeared to befuddle the Frenchman and, as he sped towards goal debating whether to shoot or round the keeper, Jensen surged off his line to snaffle the ball.
Two minutes later it was Burnley's turn to pardon a defensive error. Tyrone Mears dispossessed a dozing Frank Lampard on the edge of the Chelsea area and showed impressive awareness to pick out Martin Paterson in splendid isolation on the far side of the box. The striker placed a low shot past Petr Cech but, unhappily for the visitors, also fractionally past the post.
That was but a blip by Chelsea. With Deco probing at the tip of the diamond and Lampard, Ballack and Anelka flitting hither and thither, they soon regained control. Jensen hurtled off his line to deny Ballack in the 21st minute, then watched gratefully as Drogba curled the ball wide after a bustling run and shot. Then the Dane blocked a John Terry drive after a Deco corner had broken to the England captain. Soon he was beating away a Lampard volley.
After he clasped a long-range Deco stinger some in the crowd seemed to ponder the possibility of Burnley keeping a third successive clean sheet in the Premier League – but there was still an hour to go, and with Chelsea continuing to attack in waves the gallant Burnley defence was beginning to drop so deep they could have done with Scuba gear.
Just before the break, they were finally sunk. Drogba, who moments earlier had teed up Lampard for an opportunity that the England midfielder botched, scampered down the right before serving Anelka with an invitation to score that the Frenchman duly accepted, poking the ball into the net from two yards.
Any hope of a Burnley recovery was scuppered in the 48th minute when Lampard raced on to a clever pass down the left and floated the ball to the back post, where Ballack sent a diving header past Jensen. Four minutes later Lampard and Ashley Cole rent the visitors' still-reeling defence asunder with a snappy one-two and the left-back fired into the top corner.
In between those goals Anelka had spurned another chance, and immediately after the third he struck a shot against the bar after rounding the now forlorn Jensen.
Three mighty Essien shots threatened to compound matters for Burnley but the first, in the 68th minute, flew just wide from 20 yards, the second a minute later was straight at Jensen, while the third, in the 77th minute, elicited Jensen's best save of the game, a flying one-hander that enabled him to tip the ball around the post. Just before full-time the substitute Salomon Kalou had a shot cleared off the line.
When they could actually get the ball Burnley showed their inclination to use it tidily but the closest they came to bothering Cech after Paterson's early miss was in the 74th minute, when a neat move culminated with Chris McCann slashing wide from 20 yards.
Yet to concede at home, Burnley are yet to score away. Neither of those stats will last, but their destiny this season will depend on which pattern is sustained more steadily over the entire campaign.
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NOTW:
Chelsea 3 Burnley 0
CHELSEA brought Burnley back to earth with a bang with a comfortable victory to maintain Carlo Ancelotti's unbeaten start.
The Clarets are favourites for relegation but have been buoyed after beating Everton and Manchester United already this season.
But they were no match for the Blues, who bombarded them from the outset, and goalkeeper Brian Jensen had to be in inspired form to keep the scoreline respectable.
Goals from Nicolas Anelka, Michael Ballack and Ashley Cole ensured Chelsea retained their 100% record.
It was a performance that captured the Londoners at their best under Carlo Ancelotti's attacking system.
Burnley clearly could not cope with it and at times Chelsea's play was fluid, fast, and exciting.
It was, at last, the brand of football that owner Roman Abramovich had been yearning for since he took charge.
Chelsea announced their intentions within three minutes when Anelka tested Jensen with a 20-yard shot in the third minute.
Moments later, a mazy run by Ballack saw him fire a shot across the face of the goal as Burnley struggled to contain the home side.
In the sixth minute, Chelsea wasted a great chance to take the lead when Anelka robbed Andre Bikey on the half-way line and sprinted towards goal.
But the France international's touch let him down and Jensen grabbed the ball at his feet as the Chelsea striker looked to go around him.
However, Chelsea escaped in the ninth minute when Tyrone Mears robbed Frank Lampard and sped into the penalty area.
The Burnley defender squared the ball to the unmarked Martin Paterson, but he shot wide with the goal at his mercy.
It was a real let-off for Chelsea but they responded immediately with Lampard putting Anelka clean through on goal. However, Jensen was alert to the danger and claimed the ball at the Frenchman's feet.
In the 20th minute Ballack was foiled by a fine save from Jensen after Deco's pass had given the German a clear opportunity to put his team ahead.
Jensen then saved from captain John Terry and Drogba, with three goals to his name already this season, curled a 20-yard effort around the post as the Blues increased the pressure.
Jensen pulled off another reflex save on the half-hour when Jose Bosingwa's cross was headed back to Lampard by Terry but the England midfielder's volley was punched clear by the Burnley shot stopper.
Then, a superb run by Drogba down the left ended with Lampard just failing to control the ball enough to fire past Jensen, who collected the ball comfortably at his near post.
But Chelsea finally broke the deadlock when Drogba broke down the right and crossed for Anelka to score from point-blank range.
Chelsea made it two in the 48th minute with a well-worked goal. Anelka supplied the overlapping Lampard, whose cross found Ballack who finished with a diving header.
Chelsea's third goal of the game arrived in the 52nd minute courtesy of defender Ashley Cole.
In a move of elegant simplicity, Chelsea ripped open Burnley's defence when Lampard and Cole exchanged passes.
The accuracy of Lampard's return ball allowed Cole the chance to send an angled volley beyond Jensen.
In the 54th minute Anelka could have made it four but although he rounded Jensen, his shot crashed off the top of the crossbar from just two yards out.
Chelsea continued to flow forward effortlessly and the impressive Michael Essien almost scored in the 66th minute but Jensen dived low to his left to tip the ball around the post.
Jensen denied Essien again in the 76th minute when he punched away a rising drive from the Chelsea midfielder.
Three minutes from time substitute Salomon Kalou was denied a goal when Mears cleared his goalbound effort off the goal-line.
But it had been an electric performance from the Blues who enjoyed a rapturous ovation at the final whistle.
Chelsea: Cech, Bosingwa (Belletti 66), Carvalho, Terry, Ashley Cole, Essien, Ballack (Mikel 83), Deco, Lampard, Anelka, Drogba (Kalou 75). Subs Not Used: Hilario, Ivanovic, Malouda, Sturridge.
Goals: Anelka 45, Ballack 47, Ashley Cole 52.
Burnley: Jensen, Mears, Carlisle, Bikey, Jordan, Alexander (McDonald 74), Blake (Guerrero 78), Elliott, McCann, Paterson (Gudjonsson 58), Steven Fletcher. Subs Not Used: Penny, Kalvenes, Thompson, Eagles. Booked: Mears.
Att: 40,906
Ref: Mark Clattenburg (Tyne & Wear)
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Monday, August 24, 2009

fulham 2-0


The Times
Chelsea maintain 100 per cent start to Premier League season
Fulham 0 Chelsea 2
Oliver Kay, Football Correspondent

In terms of euphoria and intensity, the celebrations could not begin to match those down the Embankment and over the river at the Brit Oval, but, as a glorious afternoon turned to a balmy evening in London, there was a growing feeling in the pubs around Craven Cottage, too, that this might be 2005 all over again.
As news filtered through in the final moments of this one-sided West London derby that England’s cricketers had regained the Ashes, there were quaint, if muted, chants of “Eng-er-lund” and even God Save the Queen, but, by the time the referee blew his whistle and John Terry and his victorious team-mates marched towards the Putney End in celebration, the focus of the Chelsea supporters was firmly on the Barclays Premier League title.
With the league campaign barely a week old, this is no time to be jumping to conclusions about any team’s prospects, good or bad, but there is something about Chelsea’s manner that will inspire confidence among their supporters and at least trepidation among their rivals.
Yes, the same was said in the early stages of last season, when Luiz Felipe Scolari briefly had them playing the kind of football that Roman Abramovich envisaged when he first dreamt of Chelsea as “Barcelona in blue shirts”. However, under Carlo Ancelotti, they look like they mean business, building on the kind of firm foundations that his predecessor, now in charge of Bunyodkor, in Uzbekistan, did not begin to establish.
With every game that goes by, the dire final weeks of the Scolari regime look more like a trick of the imagination. Scolari refused to play Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka in tandem, but Ancelotti, in almost no time, has got them dovetailing beautifully.
Both scored a goal here to earn a deserved victory over an organised but uninspired Fulham, and Ancelotti was left drooling over how they set each other up for two extremely well-worked goals: Anelka doing the spadework for Drogba in the 39th minute before the compliment was returned with 14 minutes remaining.
“I was sure that they [Drogba and Anelka] could play together,” Ancelotti said. “They are fantastic strikers. They have different qualities, but I am happy because with the first goal Anelka made a fantastic pass to Drogba and then for the second goal Drogba made a fantastic pass to Anelka. It depends on the system a coach wants to use on the pitch, but Nicolas is a very complete striker.”
Anelka a complete striker? His former colleagues at Manchester City and Bolton Wanderers might disagree, but, at the age of 30, he has developed an appreciation of his team-mates and of his role. Here it was slightly different, dropping into a deeper position behind Drogba when Chelsea did not have the ball, but he adapted to it superbly — the result, Ancelotti said, adding another feather to his cap, of five days’ intensive work on the training ground.
This was not quite Chelsea at their marauding best, but they had some of the steamroller-like qualities that characterised their best moments when cruising to their first league title under José Mourinho in 2004-05. This team have a different shape — playing almost exclusively through the middle, whereas Mourinho’s team, in that first season at least, relied heavily on the wing play of Damien Duff and Arjen Robben — but, if anything, the modern version have a stronger spine, with Drogba a far more dominant centre forward.
Previous visits to Craven Cottage have brought all kinds of results in recent seasons, but here Chelsea barely gave Roy Hodgson’s team a glimmer of hope. Clinton Dempsey, turning sharply away from Ricardo Carvalho, had a glorious chance to open the scoring in the second minute, but, with more time than perhaps he realised, he shot high and wide. With Terry and — it should be noted — Ashley Cole in dominant form, Fulham did not get a real look-in after that.
The goals were similar in their conception, both coming from Fulham mistakes, after which Chelsea passed methodically but purposefully through the middle of the pitch before the final Anelka-Drogba combination. For the first, the ball was passed between Carvalho and Michael Ballack to Frank Lampard, who slipped away from Dickson Etuhu and played the ball through to Anelka, who in turn sent Drogba clear. Mark Schwarzer came out of his goal, but Drogba finished calmly inside the near post.
For the second, Drogba controlled a high ball into the path of Ballack and sped towards goal in anticipation of the return. Drogba then clipped the ball between Fulham’s central defenders, allowing Anelka to prove that he retains something of the pace that made him such a fearsome proposition in his teens. The France forward skipped around Schwarzer’s challenge and nonchalantly rolled the ball into the net. Job done.
Hodgson was honest enough to concede that Fulham had not come close to threatening Chelsea after falling behind, with Duff fading after making an encouraging start on his debut against his former club, but much of that was because of the way Chelsea defended. This was Chelsea’s first clean sheet under Ancelotti and, while Carvalho had the odd uncomfortable moment against Dempsey, it was ultimately achieved with ease. As an Italian, Ancelotti will of course be happier at that than anything else.
Fulham (4-4-2): M Schwarzer 6 J Paintsil 7 A Hughes 6 B Hangeland 6 P Konchesky 5 Z Gera 5 D Etuhu 6 D Murphy 6 D Duff 5 C Dempsey 6 R Zamora 4 Substitutes: D Kamara 4 (for Gera, 64min), C Baird 4 (for Murphy, 70), E Nevland (for Zamora, 75).Not used: P Zuberbühler, S Kelly, B H Riise, Seol Ki Hyeon. Next: Aston Villa (a).
Chelsea (4-3-1-2): P Cech 6 J Bosingwa 7 R Carvalho 6 J Terry 8 A Cole 8 M Ballack 7 J O Mikel 7 F Malouda 7 F Lampard 7 N Anelka 8 D Drogba 8 Substitutes: Deco (for Lampard, 81min), S Hutchinson (for Bosingwa, 86). Not used: R Turnbull, M Essien, B Ivanovic, S Kalou, D Sturridge. Next: Burnley (h).
Referee: A Marriner Attendance: 25,404

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Telegraph:
Fulham 0 Chelsea 2:

Goals from Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka have moved Chelsea into second place in the Premier League as they enjoyed a comfortable win over neighbours Fulham at Craven Cottage.

Drogba put Chelsea in front when he latched onto an Anelka pass to score in the 38th minute.
The Ivory Coast striker then turned provider in the 76th minute as he put Anelka through for Chelsea's second to preserve their 100 per cent start to the season.
Fulham immediately took the game to their neighbours and Clint Dempsey should have done better when he wriggled free of the Chelsea defence in the opening minute.
However, the American striker, playing in a more forward role in the absence of injured Andrew Johnson, shot high over the bar.
Chelsea wasted a chance to punish Fulham in the 12th minute when Drogba was brought down on the edge of the penalty area by Fulham captain Danny Murphy.
Michael Ballack elected to try his luck with the free-kick from 25-yards out in a central position but put his effort a yard over the bar.
Chelsea continued to press for an opening goal but their final ball was a disappointment on numerous occasions.
Captain John Terry was an example of their growing frustration when he tried his luck from 25 yards - but it soared over the bar.
Chelsea, though, finally broke the deadlock in the 39th minute when a fine three-man move left Fulham floored.
Frank Lampard slipped the ball through to Anelka, who in turn put Drogba in the clear with a clever pass.
The Ivory Coast international made no mistake as he slipped the ball beyond the advancing Mark Schwarzer for his third goal of the season.
It was just reward for Chelsea's first-half domination and a perfect example of how to pass the ball through an opposing defence.
Drogba managed to get clear of the Fulham defence again moments later but he was ruled marginally offside.
Fulham almost fluked an equaliser in the 50th minute when Murphy's deep cross into the penalty area was headed over his own goal by Chelsea defender Ricardo Carvalho.
But Chelsea's domination was soon restored and Drogba almost grabbed a second in the 54th minute when he latched onto a clever lob by Anelka.
This time, however, the Ivory Coast striker was denied at the second attempt by Australian keeper Schwarzer.
Chelsea went two in front in the 76th minute when Drogba turned supplier for Anelka.
The France international rounded Schwarzer and coolly slotted the ball home to give Chelsea all three points.

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Mail:
Fulham 0 Chelsea 2:
Carlo's cruise - another easy ride for Blues' new boss

Not every Chelsea team are having such an easy ride this season, if the events at their Cobham training ground are anything to go by.While the reserves found themselves caught up in a karate kicking scrap in midweek, the first team have so far encountered no meaningful resistance, brushing aside their nearest neighbours here in a Barclays Premier League contest that produced not a single booking.For Carlo Ancelotti, it has been a relatively gentle introduction to English football. He started with Hull, followed that with a trip to Sunderland and has now continued what amounts to a perfect start here at Craven Cottage.By the time Burnley have been to Stamford Bridge and he has sampled the delights of Stoke, the Italian might be wondering what all the fuss is about. The toughest league in the world? Not on the evidence that has been presented to the Italian.But here's the thing: the success Ancelotti has tasted to date is not just down to the obvious flaws in the opposition. It owes as much to the quality of a Chelsea side looking every bit as formidable as they were under Jose Mourinho.
Chelsea have, of course, been here before. Luiz Felipe Scolari started with 20 points from a possible 24 last season before the team began to stutter and Roman Abramovich hit the panic button.But Ancelotti appears to have continued where Scolari's interim successor Guus Hiddink left off and turned Chelsea into a side who look capable of just about anything this season.They are a team boasting that deadly combination of fluency and athleticism which, in the words of Sir Alex Ferguson, made them so impressively consistent when they won consecutive titles under the self-anointed Special One.While we will get a more accurate measure of their ability when they meet Tottenham at Stamford Bridge next month, the echoes of their time under Mourinho were inescapable yesterday.
They were so superior to their hosts. Strong, powerful and fast, they cut through Fulham's defence with terrific one-touch football and scored excellent goals from Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka.Can they play together? Definitely. Asked what Chelsea's secret is this season, John Terry noted the importance of keeping the core of the team together in a transfer window that has seen their main rivals haemorrhaging top players.'Didier has been our best signing of the summer,' said the captain, and convincing Drogba to stay, when it seemed he was intent on leaving, and sign a new contract has been hugely important.As he again demonstrated yesterday, Drogba is still among the finest strikers in the world - an immense athlete and, as Terry knows only too well after encountering him a million times on the training pitch, 'unplayable' when he performs like this.His speed and his finishing ability enabled him to open the scoring six minutes before the interval, timing his run to perfection and beating Fulham's offside trap before guiding his shot past Mark Schwarzer.Anelka had provided the perfectly-weighted pass that allowed Drogba to score and he returned the favour in the 77th minute when Anelka put the points beyond Fulham's reach.
It was a move that was breathtaking in its execution, started at one end of the field by Petr Cech and finished as quickly, seemingly, as it would have taken Usain Bolt to cover the distance.The balled moved from Cech to Ricardo Carvalho, Drogba, Michael Ballack, Drogba and then Anelka, who accelerated past Schwarzer before scoring into an empty net. Again the final ball was terrific, Anelka and Drogba showing Ancelotti just how effective a partnership they could become. Fulham offered little in response.
The absence of Andy Johnson weakened their attack, while an injury to Danny Murphy midway through the second half made it that much more difficult for Roy Hodgson's side to cope with Chelsea's physically-imposing midfield, so dominant even without the rested Michael Essien.If Ancelotti left Craven Cottage with any concerns, they might have centred on his deployment of Frank Lampard. The England midfielder says he is comfortable playing in a more advanced role and he still had a decent game yesterday. But is he as influential as he has been in the deeper position he has occupied in previous seasons? So far it would seem not.The answer might be to play with less rigidity. Ancelotti will not want to make too many changes when his team has started so well. Even Florent Malouda is performing with consistency and emphasising the real strength in depth Chelsea now possess.Yesterday, as well as Essien, they had Deco, Salomon Kalou and Daniel Sturridge on the bench and they still have Yuri Zhirkov and Joe Cole to return from injury. No wonder Ancelotti remains calm about the club's failure to secure so many of their transfer targets.

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Independent:
Drogba puts Chelsea in total control
Fulham 0 Chelsea 2
By Sam Wallace

Sometimes it is the power of Didier Drogba that wins Chelsea games, sometimes it is his pace. Yesterday, Fulham just seemed to capitulate on the basis of his reputation alone. This was the old warhorse at his very best, sweeping aside a defence, winning a game, all on his own.
Drogba scored the first, Nicolas Anelka the second and the pair of them were just too much to handle for a woeful Fulham. The biggest cheer of the day from the home fans was for England's victory in the Ashes, hastily announced at the end of the game. This was a good day to bury bad news and for Fulham there was lots of it.
For Carlo Ancelotti, with three victories in his first three games, this is turning into a dream start, although previous Chelsea managers have seen such dreams become cold-sweat nightmares by January. In the sunshine, with their travelling fans buoyant, Chelsea swept the other club in Fulham away just as aggressively as they did in the glory years under Jose Mourinho.
John Terry said afterwards that Chelsea have the advantage over the rest of the big four. "I'm delighted we kept our squad together unlike the other two," said the Chelsea captain, which was a bit rich coming from the man who did so little to discourage the intense interest from Manchester City this summer. By the "two" he could easily mean any pair from Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool but you get his point.
Ancelotti finds himself in the unusual position of being second place in the Premier League only to Tottenham Hotspur, which is not something any Chelsea manager in recent history has experienced. "It is a great start," he said. "We wanted to do this. It's a good moment for the team. We have trust in our potential. It's a very good moment. The most important thing is that the players have good motivation."
Last season it took Drogba until 26 December to score his first goal in the Premier League. This time round he has three already and has been unplayable at times. Yesterday the striker said that there was "never any doubt" that he and Anelka could play together. "We are intelligent people and we know how to play together. We just need some time."
For now, Ancelotti is happy to look like the genius who has managed to get two of the moodiest strikers around to work together. He said yesterday: "I was sure the two of them could play together. They are fantastic strikers. They have different qualities: Anelka made a fantastic pass to Drogba for the first goal and Drogba made the second for Anelka."
Before anyone gets too carried away, Chelsea under Ancelotti are fundamentally no different in formation to Chelsea under Guus Hiddink, Scolari or Avram Grant: they have all lined up the team in the 4-1-4-1 formation created by Jose Mourinho. There has been the occasional attempt to adapt the system, some with more success than others, but Ancelotti is showing little chance of deviating too radically.
Anelka had started nominally on the right side of midfield yesterday which Ancelotti said he changed at half-time by encouraging Anelka to push on and support Drogba in a variation on 4-1-4-1. It looked good when they went forward but with this system there is the nagging sense that with Anelka pushed forward, Chelsea's right side looks a bit under-clubbed.
Anelka's pass was the one that sent Drogba free of the Fulham back-line in the 39th minute, timing his run beautifully to get away from a home defence that looked ponderous. The Chelsea striker does that so well, and he finished even better, rolling the ball past Mark Schwarzer.
Ancelotti's team were completely dominant save for one period before their first goal when Fulham actually looked confident enough to emerge from their own half and apply some pressure. Otherwise they looked star-struck in the presence of their illustrious neighbours.
The dissatisfaction amid the Fulham support at their team's general lethargy found its focus with Zoltan Gera who was having a dreadful time of it on the right side of midfield. One too many bad touches and the groans turned to outright hostility. The placid folk from down by the Thames have got it in for Gera and there were cheers when he was substituted.
Drogba made the second goal exquisitely, taking the ball on his chest before slipping it through to Anelka. He walked the ball around Schwarzer for the perfect finish and the game was over with time to spare.
Roy Hodgson, the Fulham manager, bemoaned Jonathan Greening's agent Mel Stein taking so long on Friday to negotiate his fee that the midfielder on loan from West Bromwich Albion was not registered in time to play yesterday. Greening cannot come soon enough with Danny Murphy injured yesterday. The boos for Fulham from their fans at full-time showed the ludicrously-inflated expectation that last year's seventh place has encouraged
Fulham (4-4-2): Schwarzer; Pantsil, Hangeland, Hughes, Konchesky; Gera (Kamara, 62), Etuhu, Murphy (Baird, 70), Duff; Zamora (Nevland, 75), Dempsey. Substitutes not used: Zuberbuhler (gk), Kelly, Seol, Riise.
Chelsea (4-1-3-2): Cech; Bosingwa (Hutchinson, 82), Carvalho, Terry, A Cole; Mikel; Ballack, Lampard (Deco, 81), Malouda; Drogba, Anelka. Substitutes not used: Turnbull (gk), Ivanovic, Essien, Kalou, Sturridge.
Referee: A Marriner (West Midlands)
Man of the match: Drogba
Attendance: 25,404
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Guardian:
Drogba makes the difference as Chelsea play it by numbers
Fulham 0 Chelsea 2 Drogba 39, Anelka 76
Kevin McCarra at Craven Cottage

Chelsea's opener will be disputed, but there is no questioning the outcome. If Didier Drogba was offside when he finished off a fine move six minutes from the interval, the margin was too fine for any Fulham player to launch into furious dissent. Not long afterwards, another tight call went against the Ivorian.
The first goal had been smooth. Frank Lampard fed Nicolas Anelka on the right and his pass set up Drogba to shoot low into the far corner of the net. Although Anelka eventually added a second, this was a somewhat dull contest as Chelsea took great care in their work. With a first clean sheet on his record, Carlo Ancelotti will approve.
In the first half there might as well have been some sort of agreement about the respective responsibilities. Fulham were ready to defend at length and the visitors were mostly preoccupied with probing attacks. The contrast was unavoidable. Fulham's means are limited and now they are obliged to do without their striker Andrew Johnson, who will be out for two months with a shoulder injury.
It was no surprise to find the Craven Cottage manager Roy Hodgson, in his programme notes, again decrying the challenge, during Thursday's Europa League qualifier with Amkar Perm, that did the damage. Given Fulham's unhappy record, which now extends to one win in the last 26 meetings with Chelsea, the loss of Johnson may really be more telling against lesser opponents.
Hodgson's side lacked the means to keep the match in the balance. In the 76th minute, Drogba delivered a sharp pass and Anelka rounded the goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer before easing the ball into the net.

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Sun:
Fulham 0 Chelsea 2

CARLO ANCELOTTI insists he will keep on tinkering with his Chelsea squad after watching them despatch west London neighbours Fulham 2-0 with consummate ease. Chelsea made four changes from the side that defeated Sunderland last Tuesday but it made little difference to the cohesion as goals from Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka fired them to a 2-0 victory at Craven Cottage.
Ancelotti left midfielders Deco and Michael Essien on the bench along with centre-half Branislav Ivanovic and striker Salomon Kalou and promised that his rotation policy will continue.
"Deco was out and Essien was out for this game," said Ancelotti. "But it was a good line-up. Essien has played all the games so far, so I wanted to give him a rest.
"He will play the next game. We have to follow this line."
Ancelotti was also left drooling at the Drogba-Anelka combination in attack.
The pair were untouchable against the Cottagers even though Anelka was playing in behind lone striker Drogba instead of alongside him.
They both created goals for each other and Fulham had no answer to their power, pace and trickery.
"I am sure they can play together because they are fantastic strikers and have different qualities," said Ancelotti.
"For the first goal, Nicolas put a fantastic pass through for Didier and for the second goal, Didier put a fantastic pass through for Nicolas. They did a very good job together.
"Nicolas is a very complete striker. He can play in the centre and on the right and left, he can play behind the striker.
"Our idea today for Nicolas was that he would stay a little bit behind Didier.
In the first-half he played a little bit on the right and our play was not so good but it improved in the second half because he took a position more in the centre."
Chelsea are now second in the Barclays Premier League with a 100% record from three games and Ancelotti admitted it had been the perfect start to his reign at Stamford Bridge.
"It is a great start," said Ancelotti. "We wanted to do this. It is a good moment for the team. We have to maintain this now.
"The players have a good motivation and no problems. It is very good.
"It is the first time we have not conceded and that is good. The defensive line played very well. They had very good concentration and movement. They played a fantastic match."
Fulham boss Roy Hodgson accepted that Chelsea had been the better side and revealed how Jonathan Greening's agent prevented him from signing in time to play any part in the game.
Greening has joined the club on a season-long loan from West Bromwich Albion but Hodgson said the deal was held-up for six hours while the player's agent waited for his own fee to be agreed.
Hodgson also hinted that his side looked tired after their midweek Europa League victory over Russian side Amkar Perm.
"We certainly played like we were tired," said Hodgson. "I thought our energy levels were low. We kept Chelsea at bay for long periods by keeping a decent shape but we never got close enough to disturb them as much as we would have liked to have done.
"In the end we lost and deservedly so. Looking at this game over 90 minutes I thought Chelsea deserved to win it. Both their goals came from clearances that bounced back to them.
"We didn't look like conceding a hatful of goals but on the other hand I didn't think we had anything near enough like the possession we would have needed to cause them more problems.
"They have the technique and pace to cause problems for the opposition and they caused problems for us today and we lost the game.
"They didn't pepper our goal with shots but they had control of the game after half-time and we didn't have enough in our locker."
As for Greening's situation, Hodgson added: "His agent took six hours to agree the agency fees so between 12.30 and 6.30pm, the agent was refusing to let him sign because his fee had not been agreed.
"When he eventually signed at 6.30pm it was an hour-and-a-half too late."

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

sunderland 3-1


Guardian:

Deco adds the gloss as Chelsea come from behind at Sunderland
Sunderland 1 Bent 18 Chelsea 3 Ballack 52, Lampard (pen) 61, Deco 70
Louise Taylor at the Stadium of Light

For the second time in four days Chelsea lulled opponents into a false sense of security, cruelly imbuing them with brief optimism before delighting at their eventual undoing. As against Hull City at Stamford Bridge last Saturday, Carlo Ancelotti's side fell behind fairly early on Wearside, huffed and puffed for a bit and then, bewitchingly, reminded everyone why they are so widely tipped to win the Premier League.

Steve Bruce, in charge of his first competitive game at the Stadium of Light, had cautioned that Sunderland faced an "ultimate test" and with Deco renascent in a quasi attacking role he was not wrong.

Bruce, though, should take considerable heart from a resolute first-half display which suggested his side will not be quite the soft touches they have so often proved in the recent past.
"There's no disgrace, no shame in being beaten by a very, very good team," he reflected. "We gave our utmost. In the end we just couldn't cope with the way Chelsea move the ball. We started well and the goal gave us hope but we were always going to run out of juice. They are a really top side and their new system is very difficult to play against."

Ancelotti did not disagree. "I'm very happy, we played very well," he enthused. "Sunderland were good in the first half, very strong defensively but then they got tired and found it more difficult to control our game."

At least the Wearsiders enjoyed a few minutes in the sun as, perhaps aware Fabio Capello was watching from the directors' box, Darren Bent sent Harry Redknapp the sort of message Twitter cannot replicate by scoring his second goal in two games.

Even better, Bent also had a hand in its creation, whipping in a cross which Lorik Cana flicked in Kenwyne Jones's direction. Although boxed in by Branislav Ivanovic and John Terry, the Trinidadian managed to turn and take a swipe at the ball, this effort deflecting off Terry's heel. Alert to the ricochet, Bent surged in front of his marker before directing his shot beneath Petr Cech.

All smiles at kick-off, Ancelotti was, by now, taut-faced. At this stage he was enduring the disturbing sight of seeing his slightly modified midfield diamond sustain a few nasty scratches, invariably inflicted by Bruce's feisty new central midfield combination of Cana and Lee Cattermole.

Soon, though, the tide turned. Chelsea began controlling the tempo and Cattermole performed wonders to clear Michael Ballack's goalbound shot off the line.

Suddenly Sunderland no longer looked so impressive on the counterattack and were now unable to assiduously close down the components of a newly dazzling diamond with Deco now glistening at its apex. Even so, Chelsea were still not fully extending Marton Fulop and Ancelotti presumably coaxed his gradually expanding English vocabulary into ticking-off mode during the interval. It was certainly a newly galvanised Chelsea which emerged for the second period.

Perhaps inspired by chants for Nicolas Anelka – controversially left on the bench all evening – the hitherto subdued Didier Drogba finally started putting himself about and went mighty close with a header shortly after Ivanovic's effort had nearly eluded Fulop from Lampard's cross.

Fully under the cosh, Sunderland had young Jordan Henderson – who initially at least gave Ashley Cole quite a game down Chelsea's left – to thank for bravely nicking the ball away from Cole just as the England full-back looked poised to level. But an equaliser was in the air and it duly arrived when Ivanovic flicked on a Lampard corner and Ballack, swivelling adroitly as the ball dropped, finally beat Fulop with a low shot which passed between the legs of Cattermole, guarding the line.

Sunderland were now struggling to get out of their own half and looking increasingly dizzy and disorientated. George McCartney, a weak link for Bruce at left-back, seemed particularly badly affected and conceded a blatant penalty after fouling Drogba. Lampard made no mistake from 12 yards, the strike putting him level with Jimmy Greaves in fifth place on Chelsea's all-time scorers' list with 132.

Now fully enjoying himself, Drogba headed over from close range before Deco – how did we doubt Ancelotti's selection? – shrugged off the substitute Grant Leadbitter and sent a shot curving in off a post after José Bosingwa's run and pass had cleverly confounded Bruce's back-line. Things were becoming so embarrassingly straightforward that even Andriy Shevchenko was granted a late cameo.

As the Ukrainian trotted on, the departing Deco was given a standing ovation by Sunderland fans. "It was a wonderful performance from Deco," Bruce acknowledged. "We just didn't know how to pick him up. It was as good a Chelsea display as I've seen for a long time. We just couldn't live with them."


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Independent:

Ancelotti's bandwagon cranks up
Sunderland 1 Chelsea 3
By Tim Rich

Carlo Ancelotti is perhaps best remembered on these shores as the manager who allowed a three-goal lead to disappear in a European Cup final. In contrast, his first three games at the helm of Chelsea have seen him engineer victory from losing positions.

This was, however, not quite the last-gasp effort that saw them snatch three points against Hull. Having gone behind to Darren Bent's second goal in as many matches for Sunderland, it was always likely, given their overwhelming level of possession, that Chelsea would recover.
Nevertheless, it required some cool finishing from Michael Ballack and Deco, who excelled in a way he rarely did for Guus Hiddink, plus a Frank Lampard penalty to restore the contest to pre-match expectations.

"You can lose the lead, it happens in football," said Ancelotti. "But it is important not to be afraid. We were behind but we had good control of the match and good possession – not a lot of shots but total control. Sunderland were very professional in defence in the first half. In the second half, they ran a lot."

After an opening-day victory at Bolton, this was a slice of reality for Steve Bruce's new regime. In his programme notes, the Sunderland manager was at pains to play down the importance of his Tyneside upbringing which might seem unnecessary until you realise that last night Ashley Cole was booed not because of the feckless way he has led his private life but the fact that he is married to a Geordie, the saintly Cheryl.

"It is no disgrace to say that sometimes you are beaten by a very good side," Bruce said. "I was never comfortable out there, not even when we were in front. A lot has been talked about the diamond formation that Chelsea play. All I can say is that it is very, very difficult to play against. There were times when it looked like we were down to 10 men. Ancelotti has won that way in Serie A and he has won that way in the Champions League and he is not going to change now. They are the real deal."

This match was turned by men whom Stamford Bridge have been slow to appreciate, Michael Ballack and Deco, the one lingering memento of what will come to be known as the Phil Scolari months. Both scored and while Ballack provided the discipline and reluctance to surrender the ball that saw Chelsea safe, the Portuguese sparkled in an elongated diamond.

Deco is good at beginnings; he excelled in his opening matches for Scolari but by the end of his first season in London he was named by Four Four Two magazine as the player most fans would have liked to have driven to the airport, presumably so he could rejoin Jose Mourinho at Internazionale. Last night, Ancelotti said he was opposed to any sale.

Against Hull, Ancelotti had confessed to feeling the need for a cigarette and the cravings would have returned the moment Bent pounced as Kenwyne Jones's attempt at a shot struck John Terry's boot and rebounded into his path. The striker will never forget the comment made by his former manager at Tottenham that his wife could have finished some of Bent's chances. Sandra Redknapp would have done well to put away that opportunity with such aplomb.

Had Lee Cattermole not blocked a thunderous volley from Ballack on the line, Chelsea would have levelled before the interval. The inevitable was coming, however, and although he had expected an equaliser, Bruce was frustrated that Ballack did so from a corner. Deco's coup-de-grace that rifled in off the post was as unsaveable as they come.

In between, George McCartney had accelerated the collapse by bringing down Didier Drogba, which gave Lampard a chance to draw level with Jimmy Greaves as Chelsea's fifth-highest goalscorer. A decade ago, Chelsea had come to Sunderland and been demolished 4-1 in the finest display the Stadium of Light has seen. In that afterglow of triumph, their then manager, Peter Reid, confessed to feeling like John Wayne.

Last night resembled one of Wayne's films. It was the Alamo out there.

Sunderland (4-4-2): Fulop; Bardsley, Ferdinand, Collins, McCartney; Henderson, Cana, Cattermole (Leadbitter, 59), Richardson (Reid, 84); Bent, Jones (Campbell, 59). Substitutes not used: Gordon (gk), Nosworthy, Edwards, Healy.

Chelsea (4-1-3-1-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, Cole; Essien; Ballack, Deco (Shevchenko, 86), Lampard; Kalou (Malouda, 76); Drogba (Sturridge, 84). Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Carvalho, Obi Mikel, Anelka.

Booked: Sunderland Richardson, Cana; Chelsea Ivanovic.
Referee: S Bennett (Kent).
Man of the match: Ballack.
Attendance: 41,179.

He's on fire
The disciplined Michael Ballack sparkled in the diamond and could have scored three.

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Mail:

Sunderland 1 Chelsea 3: Carlo Ancelotti's men roar back in style
By COLIN YOUNG

Tinkering with a Chelsea line-up is a dangerous occupation and could cost a man his job. Just ask Claudio Ranieri.

But Carlo Ancelotti is far safer at Stamford Bridge than Ranieri could ever be and the former AC Milan coach changed his system and his players at Sunderland to record a second win of the week.

It did not start well for the Chelsea manager, who ditched the diamond and fell behind to Darren Bent’s second goal of the season after just 18 minutes. But a formidablesecond-half fightback from the title hopefuls secured three valuable points against resurgent Sunderland.

Michael Ballack, who returned to the Chelsea starting line-up, cancelled out Bent’s opener seven minutes into the second half before Frank Lampard stepped up to open his account for the season from the penalty spot on 61 minutes after George McCartney had tripped Didier Drogba.
Portugal maestro Deco, who had orchestrated the inventive Chelsea play behind lone striker Drogba, scored the third 20 minutes from time with a wonderful diagonal shot off the inside of keeper Marton Fulop’s post.

It was a cruel defeat on hardworking Sunderland, who appear on early evidence to have made great improvements under Steve Bruce, but the new Sunderland boss will have few complaints.
Ancelotti could only watch in frustration as his side wasted early chances and things got worse when Sunderland took the lead.

The build-up had an element of good fortune to it, with John Terry inadvertently providing the assist when the ball clipped off his heel as he challenged Kenwyne Jones at the edge of the area.
The ricochet fell neatly into the path of former Spurs striker Bent who took one touch to compose himself and a second to sidefoot the ball under Petr Cech’s body.

Chelsea proceeded to miss a host of chances before half-time but Ancelotti remained loyal and patient and was duly rewarded.

He said: ‘I am very happy. We played well throughout. Even when we fell behind, we were in total control. Sunderland were very strong in the first half but they tired and it was more difficultfor them to control our play. ‘I changed the team because I trust my players and I wanted to rest some. I know we have quality in the other players and I want to use them and keep them all fresh.’

Salomon Kalou, Frank Lampard, Didier Drogba, Deco and Michael Ballack wasted chances before the Germany captain, one of four who returned to the starting line-up,cancelled out Bent’s opener after 52 minutes.

George McCartney’s trip on Drogba on the hour allowed Lampard to score the 132nd goal of his Chelsea career, making him the club’s fifth highest goalscorer.

Portugal maestro Deco scored the third 20 minutes from time with a wonderful diagonal shot off the inside of Marton Fulop’s post. He was so good he was applauded by the Sunderland fans when he was substituted near the end.

Bruce said: ‘Sometimes you have to admit you have been beaten by a very, very good team, and there is no shame in that.’

SUNDERLAND (4-4-2): Fulop 6; Bardsley 6, Ferdinand 6 Collins 7, McCartney 7; Henderson 6, Cana 6, Cattermole 7 (Leadbitter 62min, 5), Richardson 6 (Reid 84); Bent 7, Jones 7 (Campbell 62, 5). Booked: Richardson.

CHELSEA (4-1-2-2-1): Cech 6; Bosingwa 6, Ivanovic 6, Terry 7, A Cole 5; Essien 6; Ballack 6, Lampard 7; Kalou 6 (Malouda 76), Deco 8; Drogba 6 (Sturridge 84).

Booked: Ivanovic, Drogba, Kalou.
Man of the match: Deco.
Referee: Steve Bennett.

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Telegraph:

Sunderland 1 Chelsea 3:
By Jason Burt at the Stadium of Light

A personal landmark and a rescue mission for Frank Lampard. The midfielder drove Chelsea back into this encounter and also struck for the 132nd time – a goals tally that drew him level with Jimmy Greaves, the fifth highest scorer of all-time for Chelsea – as Carlo Ancelotti’s side produced a dazzling reversal and, eventually, a dazzling performance.

“In the history of the club he’s a very important player and we hope to help make him even more important,” Ancelotti said afterwards of Lampard. Certainly it was the kind of victory that may trigger something deeper for Chelsea who have, at times, appeared a little disjointed under their new manager, struggling with a new formation that was altered last night. Such are the standards that have previously been set. Out with the diamond; in with the Christmas tree.

There were presents also. Darren Bent’s goal in the first-half – his second in two games since his £10million arrival from Tottenham Hotspur – had resulted from slip-shod, if unfortunate, defending. It was also the third time this season – in three games – that Chelsea had fallen behind and had to rally to claw themselves to a vibrant victory.

“It was arguably as good a Chelsea performance as I have seen for a long time and you have to hold your hands up,” claimed Sunderland manager Steve Bruce who had admitted to trepidation about this fixture, his first home game in charge. “In the past we have played a Chelsea team in a 4-3-3 and they were predictable. He (Ancelotti) has won in Serie A and in the Champions League. Anyone who beats them will win the league.”

It showed the depths of belief they have, the talent and also, in fairness to Ancelotti, how good football can eventually wear down the most dogged of opponents, that Chelsea won so convincingly in the end. Maybe, also, after their impressive opening day win away to Bolton Wanderers it was a reality check for Sunderland.

If Lampard was Chelsea’s best player then Deco was the one who enjoyed the most dramatic turnaround. He was one of four changes made by Ancelotti following the disappointing performance against Hull City that was rescued by Didier Drogba’s late goal – although, as Bruce pointed out Chelsea did have 27 shots on target that afternoon – that also led to a tinkering of formation. Ancelotti said that the quartet who were left out, headed by Nicolas Anelka, were rested to avoid injury during a long season. But it wasn’t just rotation.

By the end Deco had also scored, the pick of the goals with a low, dipping cross-shot from 20 yards, and when he was substituted he was afforded an ovation from the home supporters. Bruce was equally complimentary. “Sometimes you just have to admit that you have been beaten by a very, very good team. There is no disgrace in that. We gave our utmost and in the end we could not cope with the way that Chelsea moved the ball,” he said. “Sometimes you take a beating.”

It didn’t look like that at the start. Lee Cattermole was snapping into tackles, Lorik Cana was running hard and Bent struck. He had set up the opportunity – ferrying the ball to Kenwyne Jones whose shot on the turn, on the edge of the area, cannoned off John Terry’s heel. It was fortunate that the ball ran straight to Bent but he had stayed on-side and unerringly tucked his side-footed shot beyond Petr Cech.

Chelsea were stung. They began to move the ball more crisply and a series of corners were gained. From one Salomon Kalou headed into the air, it dropped to Ballack who struck a full-blooded volley that was scrambled off the goal-line by Cattermole. Sunderland were throwing their bodies at everything - but were also retreating.

Chelsea stepped it up further with Lampard driving them on and Deco finally dictating matters. From one corner Drogba, the lone striker, headed powerfully over after Ballack’s flick-on while Lampard cleverly teed up Ashley Cole whose header was deflected. From that Lampard corner Branislav Ivanovic headed on and, at the far post, Ballack swept the ball low into the net.

Sunderland soon cracked again. Drogba slalomed into the area from the right wing, beyond Cana and then George McCartney who stuck out a leg and foolishly brought the powerful striker down. The penalty was awarded and, as ever, Lampard drove it unerringly to gain Chelsea the lead. Sunderland looked spent and Deco capped the evening by easily ghosting away from Grant Leadbitter to score. “I feel we have a lot of quality,” said Ancelotti. To his relief, it eventually came to the fore.

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The Times

Chelsea hit back to take Premier League summit
Sunderland 1 Chelsea 3
George Caulkin, Stadium of Light

Carlo Ancelotti’s Chelsea are proving to be masters of deflation. For the third match in succession, the title favourites held the door open for their opponents before slamming it brusquely in their faces. First, Manchester United in the Community Shield, then Hull City and now Sunderland have seized the advantage and been brushed away for their impudence.

Ancelotti would doubtless prefer a little more comfort and, while it is too early to draw definitive conclusions about Chelsea’s ability, they have clearly lost none of their old resilience.

In recovering from Darren Bent’s early goal, Chelsea exhibited patience, cunning and, most impressively, sheer force of will. Michael Ballack, Frank Lampard and Deco inflicted the damage. It is the stuff of champions, although in terms of beauty, there is surely more to come. Ancelotti demonstrated some “Tinkerman” tendencies by switching four of his starting XI, but while the opening skirmishes were hesitant, Chelsea grew in confidence.

“It doesn’t concern me, because going behind can happen,” Ancelotti said, with a shrug. “In football, it’s important to get a reaction, to not be afraid, to maintain control of the game. We have done this in three matches now and we have been behind, but we always had good control.”
For the opening 20 minutes, when Lee Cattermole flew into tackles and Bent finished a move he had started with Kenwyne Jones by fending off John Terry and clipping a loose ball beyond Petr Cech, the Italian’s assessment would have been questionable.

Chelsea appeared startled by the raw nature of the challenge confronting them until they began churning relentlessly through the gears. Then Cattermole cleared off the line from Ballack, while Deco, full of probing and prompting, was at the fulcrum of everything positive.

By now permanent residents in their own territory, Sunderland’s desperate defiance could not endure. In the 52nd minute, Chelsea forced parity, with Branislav Ivanovic heading on a corner by Lampard for Ballack to knock the ball past Fulop.

Having broken Sunderland’s resilience, Chelsea proceeded to stamp upon it. Didier Drogba bullied his way into the 18-yard box with the ball clinging to his boots, where George McCartney’s hanging left leg brought an inevitable response: penalty, Lampard, 2-1. Lampard is now the fifth-highest goalscorer in Chelsea’s history, alongside Jimmy Greaves.

Drogba should have added gloss, heading Ashley Cole’s bouncing cross down and over, but it was fitting that Deco provided the coup de grâce. In the 70th minute, he squirmed around Grant Leadbitter, the substitute, and scored with a shot off the left post.

“He is very motivated to stay here,” Ancelotti said of Deco, who has been courted by Inter Milan. “He doesn’t want to go; we don’t want him to go.”

For Sunderland and Steve Bruce, the denouement was disappointing, although their transformation remains a work in progress. They, too, have much to consider if the top half of the table is to be a realistic ambition.

“Sometimes you just have to admit that you’ve been beaten by a very, very good team,” said Bruce, who confirmed that the signing of John Mensah on loan from Lyons was almost complete. “There’s no disgrace in that. We tried our utmost and gave everything, but we couldn’t cope with Chelsea and the way they moved the ball.

“You can see from that performance why Chelsea will be there or thereabouts. At times it seemed as if we’d had a man sent off. That’s how good they were.”

Sunderland (4-4-2): M Fulop — P Bardsley, A Ferdinand, D Collins, G McCartney — J Henderson, L Cana, L Cattermole (sub: G Leadbitter, 62min), K Richardson (sub: A Reid, 84) — D Bent, K Jones (sub: F Campbell, 62). Substitutes not used: C Gordon, N Nosworthy, C Edwards, D Healy. Booked: Richardson, Cana.

Chelsea (4-3-3): P Cech — J Bosingwa, B Ivanovic, J Terry, A Cole — M Ballack, M Essien, F Lampard — Deco (sub: A Shevchenko, 87), D Drogba (sub: D Sturridge, 84), S Kalou (sub: F Malouda, 76). Substitutes not used: Hilário, R Carvalho, J O Mikel, N Anelka. Booked: Ivanovic, Drogba.

Referee: S Bennett.

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Sun:
Sunderland 1 Chelsea 3
By MARTIN BLACKBURN at the Stadium of Light

FRANK LAMPARD wrote his name into the Chelsea record books - but for once the Blues hero
was upstaged.
The England ace joined Jimmy Greaves as the club's joint-fifth leading scorer as he chalked up his 132nd goal for the club.
But it was the performance of his fellow midfielder Deco that had the visiting fans - and indeed the home ones - talking on the journey home.

The Portugal ace looked likely to quit West London this summer with Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan the probable destination.
However, boss Carlo Ancelotti has persuaded him to stay at Chelsea and, on this evidence, he could be set for a big season.
He bossed the middle of the park all night before firing a super 20-yard shot in off the post to put the seal on the Blues' night.
Nobody will be getting carried away - despite a standing ovation from all four corners - because the former Barcelona man began last term in similarly explosive form, then faded badly.

Sunderland boss Steve Bruce - whose Wigan team were beaten by Deco's wonder free-kick this time last year - could only smile ruefully at his "wonderful performance".
If Deco and Co carry on playing like this then Ancelotti's men will take some stopping this season. The Italian said: "Deco is working very hard - he is very motivated to stay here and play well here.
"This is an important season for him with the World Cup coming up in the summer. He is playing well for himself and for the team.
"He is staying here. He doesn't want to change clubs and we don't want him to go either."
It had all begun so brightly for Sunderland as they took an 18th-minute lead through Darren Bent's second in two games for his new club.

Kenwyne Jones saw his shot blocked on the edge of the box and it broke perfectly for Bent, who slotted in below Petr Cech.
Perhaps the £10million signing from Tottenham is better than Mrs Redknapp after all!
If there is one worry for Ancelotti in these promising early days, it would be that his team have gone behind in all three matches so far.

It happened against Manchester United in the Community Shield, against Hull on Saturday and again here - but on each occasion it has not mattered.
The early goal was to be as good as it got for the Black Cats.
Chelsea took control and could well have been level by the interval but Lee Cattermole blocked Michael Ballack's volley on the line.

Yet the Blues stepped up through the gears after the restart. Branislav Ivanovic and Didier Drogba both went close before the equaliser eventually came on 52 minutes.
Ivanovic got up to flick on a corner and Ballack was at the back post to squeeze it into the corner from eight yards. Chelsea were now completely in the ascendancy and they were ahead on 61 minutes after George McCartney sent Drogba tumbling.

There was no doubt it was a penalty and Lampard blasted the spot-kick low past Marton Fulop.
Drogba was left scratching his head as he nodded Ashley Cole's cross into the turf and watched it bounce over the bar soon after.

However, the third goal which gave the Blues breathing space was not long in coming. On 70 minutes, Jose Bosingwa slipped the ball inside to Deco. The schemer still had plenty to do but he jinked past a couple of defenders before blasting an angled 20-yard drive in off Fulop's post.
It capped a super show from the former Barcelona man.

Even the home fans applauded him when he was replaced by Andriy Shevchenko just before the end.
If Ancelotti can get Deco to play like this every week then he has a real player on his hands.
Bruce was glad to see the back of him though. He said: "I don't know what I've done to upset him.

"It was a wonderful performance by him - he just floated around. At least I only have to play them twice a season. Sometimes you have to hold your hands up and accept you were beaten by a better team. I thought Chelsea were terrific.
"When I looked at the fixtures, the last thing I wanted was Chelsea at home. Whoever beats them will win the league."

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Star:

CARLOS A LOTTI TO SMILE AT By John Wardle

CARLO ANCELOTTI was able to raise a smile at the final whistle – but this was far from Chelsea domination.

Two games and two wins means it’s all gone to plan so far for the Chelsea boss.
But the fact that the Premier League favourites had to come back from a goal down again will have been of some concern to the Italian.
This was not as dramatic as ­Chelsea’s season-opener, when Didier Drogba struck in injury time to give the Blues victory over Hull.

But if John Terry and Co remain sleepy at the back for the opening 20 minutes of games the title is unlikely to find it’s way back to Stamford Bridge at the end of the season.
With just 18 minutes played ­Darren Bent made it two in two games to back Steve Bruce’s faith in him.
Bruce splashed £10m in the ­summer and the former Spurs striker has ­already starting paying that back.

But it took until the 52nd minute for Michael Ballack to register ­Chelsea’s equaliser.
Their first-half display raised ­questions over the wisdom of several changes by boss Ancelotti.
The changes indicated he was ­unhappy with the level of ­performance in that last-gasp win over Hull on Saturday.
And he must have been equally ­disturbed by what he saw for the opening 45 minutes.

There had been suggestions he would keep the same side, but ­Nicolas Anelka, Florent Malouda, Ricardo Carvalho and John Obi Mikel were all dumped on to the bench last night.
Much of more this and Ancelotti will start to look like his Tinkerman predecessor Claudio Ranieri.
There were hints of Chelsea ­domination in the early stages when it seemed they may be simply too quick and inventive for Sunderland, whose midfield featured Jordan Henderson, a 19-year-old whose promise has been recognised by Bruce.

With Steed Malbranque failing a test on an ankle injury, the kid was called up ahead of Grant Leadbitter and Andy Reid.
And he was far from overawed as Sunderland, lacking Chelsea’s ­finesse, summoned enough energy and drive to subdue them after those awkward early minutes.
Bent sliced an early chance wide ­after his pace created space on the edge of the area but didn’t have to wait long for his first Stadium of Light goal for his new club.

Kenwyne Jones’ shot on the turn cannoned off a Chelsea defender and straight to Bent, who steered a crisp, low shot past Petr Cech.
Chelsea were clearly rattled by that. Their frustration mounted ­further as Deco fired wide in the 21st minute and Michael Ballack wasted the best of their limited opportunities with a shot high over the bar.
Chelsea, so adept at disposing of teams like Sunderland last season, were finding it just as difficult to ­handle their aggressive approach as they did Hull’s iron-willed attitude in their opening match.
Finally, though, towards the end of first half they managed some sustained pressure and only a goalline clearance by Lee Cattermole prevented Kalou drilling Chelsea level.
It was only one of many crucial contributions to the game by ­Cattermole, whose midfield energy and committed tackling set the ­tempo for Sunderland.

Ancelotti’s gestures illustrated his ­unhappiness at his players’ failure to locate their usual rhythm.
And nobody could doubt what his interval message to them would be – he had made changes before the game and wouldn’t wait long before ­making a few more.
Lampard, anonymous in the first half, soon powered in a long-range shot that was only narrowly wide of Marton Fulop’s post.

Henderson did well to clear ­Lampard’s dangerous cross at the­ ­expense of a corner.
Sunderland allowed Lampard’s ­corner it to reach ­Ballack and the ­German international hooked the ball inside the post from six yards. Now it was a different game. Chelsea were suddenly the team setting the pace and, with Sunderland struggling, even Bent found himself defending back on the edge of his own area.

The pressure told again when Drogba’s footwork tempted George McCartney into a rash tackle.
There were no complaints from ­Sunderland about the penalty awarded and ­Lampard’s finish from the spot was precise and clinical.
Deco’s effort, which appeared to take a deflection off Drogba, sealed the win on 70 minutes.


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Sunday, August 16, 2009

hull city 2-1


Sunday Times
Didier Drogba double gives Carlo Ancelotti dream start
Chelsea 2 Hull City 1
David Walsh at Stamford Bridge
CHELSEA were earnest rather than brilliant, methodical but not fluid, and even if they deserved to win, all you felt at the end was sympathy for Hull, who played with terrific spirit. They deserved the draw that seemed theirs after 90 minutes but when the fourth official, Phil Dowd, held aloft a board that signalled six minutes of stoppage time, he might as well have driven a stake through the underdogs’ heart.
Seeing their team had enough time to rescue the day, the Chelsea faithful broke the early-afternoon quiet and when, three minutes later, Didier Drogba clipped the ball across goal and found the far corner of the net, the home fans descended into the ridiculous. “You’re going down, you’re going down,” they chanted at their unlucky rivals. On this evidence Hull will be fine.
Chelsea won because of Drogba, who was the game’s towering presence and the only one who looked likely to beat Hull’s excellent defence. It might seem a cliche to say the centre-forward is worth his weight in gold but in this team, in this league, that might not be far from the truth. His first goal was a brilliant free kick and though he had the good grace to say the winner was lucky, it was still a delightfully skilful cross that might have made a goal for Salomon Kalou had it not sneaked in.
In sympathy with a humid summer afternoon, the game had more heat than sunshine. Through the ebb and flow of four managers in two seasons, Chelsea’s players have preserved their spirit and loyalty to the club. They matched Hull’s verve and physicality. One expected more from Chelsea but too often they tried to weave intricate patterns through the forest of tall pines that protected the centre of Hull’s defence.
On the touchline the latest Chelsea manager, Carlo Ancelotti, spread his arms outwards, as if by turning himself into an angel he could give his team wings. It didn’t work. Drogba missed an early chance and from very little, Hull scored the opener in the 28th minute. The ball was half-cleared to George Boateng, who likes to loiter just outside the penalty area even if, these days, there isn’t much intent. Boateng’s shot wasn’t well struck and Ashley Cole whipped out a leg to block it, only for the ball to ricochet into Michael Essien and then fall kindly for Stephen Hunt.
After his controversial collision with Petr Cech three seasons ago, Hunt might as well sprout horns when he goes to Stamford Bridge. Satan would have received a less hostile reception, but Hunt found relief in the act of sidefooting a pinball chance into the Chelsea net.
One-nil to Hull, the stadium then witnessed its first Ancelotti chant as the away fans predicted his immediate sacking. Luiz Felipe Scolari didn’t survive his team’s failure to beat Hull at the Bridge last season and it was a quaint little connection.
The lead lasted just nine minutes, an unnecessary free kick conceded on the edge of the penalty area leading to an unstoppable Drogba strike.
Chelsea upped the tempo in the second period but Hull dug in ferociously. Drogba played a neat pass through for Nicolas Anelka but Andy Dawson, on the blind side of referee Alan Wiley, tugged the striker’s jersey to slow him down and then made a fine saving tackle. Boaz Myhill then made a good save from Drogba and on 90 minutes, the striker latched onto Ricardo Carvalho’s mis-hit shot but Michael Turner blocked.
Without Drogba, Chelsea might have taken days to break down Hull’s defence but the six minutes of stoppage time were three more than the Ivorian needed. It was his run through the middle that created the first trouble and after passing to Deco he kept going, received the return pass and then, from the acutest angle, lifted the ball adroitly over Myhill’s head, a cross so good it turned itself into a goal.
The goal sucked the life from Hull and drained all the frustration from Ancelotti’s afternoon. Sitting beside the new man on the bench, Ray Wilkins traded his look of stern inscrutability for something altogether more pleasant.
CHELSEA: Cech 6, Bosingwa 6, Carvalho 7, Terry 6, Cole 5, Essien 6, Mikel 5 (Ballack 46min, 6), Lampard 6, Malouda 6 (Deco 69min), Anelka 6 (Kalou 79min), Drogba 8
HULL: Myhill 7, Mouyokolo 6, Turner 7, Gardner 7, Dawson 7, Mendy 6 (Geovanni 78min), Marney 5 (Barmby 44min, 6), Boateng 6, Olofinjana 7, Hunt 6 (Ghilas 69min), Folan 6.
Star man: Didier Drogba (Chelsea) Yellow cards: Chelsea: Drogba. Hull: Barmby, Mendy.Referee: A Wiley. Attendance: 41,597
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Telegraph:
Chelsea 2 Hull City 1:
By Oliver Brown at Stamford Bridge
Remodelled and rejuvenated, Didier Drogba delivered a stirring exhibition in what he does best. No, not in the practice of deceiving a referee at 10 paces with an anguished dive, or of mouthing obscenities within range of television microphones, but in the more beguiling art of winning a match through the trickery in his boots.
It seems that signing a two-year contract extension can do this to a man. Drogba dispelled all doubts about his suspect loyalties with a mesmeric display against Hull City, full of uncomplicated commitment as he first equalised for Chelsea through a bending free-kick, before scoring the winner in injury time from an improbable angle. Both strikes crystallised his qualities of touch, grace and poise, while his demeanour during the match suggested a refreshing and hitherto unseen lack of artifice.
Not once did Drogba fulminate in the direction of a referee or fall to the ground as if struck by an articulated lorry. Carlo Ancelotti, who grasped his first Premier League win by the most slender margin, maintained that he had not directly told the striker to stay on his feet but said: "Drogba is the same player as he was last season. He has worked very well, he is an important player for us. He has a lot of motivation now."
Drogba's flourishes were all the more gratifying for Ancelotti in the context of a unconvincing first showcase for his diamond formation. Chelsea relied far too heavily on long balls and fussy build-up play and, indeed, at times betrayed a worrying symmetry with the over-ornate style cultivated by the Italian head coach's ill-fated predecessor, Luiz Felipe Scolari. With his side behind after Stephen Hunt's goal for 11 minutes that must have felt like hours, Ancelotti was only too mindful of the fact that Scolari's final game had been a goalless draw with the very same Hull.
"I spoke very clearly to my players before the match," said Ancelotti, while refusing to be drawn on the content of his address. It is safe to surmise, with Roman Abramovich watching from his Stamford Bridge box all glowing and expectant, that it was along the lines of, "Please, boys, don't fail me now." Whatever words he uttered, they returned to haunt him as the Hull fans crowed, for a mercifully short time: "You're getting sacked in the morning."
Scant chance of that, since all the signs are that Ancelotti will be allowed the one luxury that all before him have been denied - namely, the patience of Abramovich. But Chelsea's listlessness raised more questions than it answered, and the club's owner is certain to demand a more emphatic resolution to victories than the one Drogba provided here. "For sure we have to improve, because we did not always play well," Ancelotti acknowledged. "We made some mistakes but this is normal. We went behind, which made the match more difficult. We didn't lose the idea to play and in the end we deserved to win."
There remained, however, the nagging uncertainity of those 11 minutes, when the scoreline read Chelsea 0 Hull 1. Ancelotti reflected that he was "very calm" but the Chelsea supporters appeared not to share his composure, their chagrin at Hull's goal made worse since it was their bete noire, Stephen Hunt, who scored it. Hunt has not been forgiven in SW6 for a challenge in Oct 2006, when still in Reading colours, which left goalkeeper Petr Cech with a fractured skill.
Although Hunt was barracked incessantly, the midfielder was Hull's most tenacious player and his combative style merited a goal when Chelsea failed to deal with a free-kick. The award was controversial enough - Chelsea disputing Alan Riley's opinion that Jose Bosingwa had tugged the shirt of Hunt - and when Andy Dawson's strike sailed into the penalty area it was only half-cleared as far as George Boateng, whose shot cannoned off Ashley Cole and John Obi Mikel to allow Hunt to steer the ball into an unguarded net.
But Chelsea gathered themselves, erasing the perceived injustice with a fine set piece of their own. Seyi Olofinjana was penalised for holding on to Mikel and Drogba, having lined up a 25-yard free-kick, unleashed a drive that dipped comfortably beyond Boaz Myhill and into the far right corner. There were chances, too many of them, for Chelsea to move out of sight in the second half, and until the death they were too toothless to convert. Drogba twiced forced fine saves from Myhill, as Bosingwa also threatened.
As the Ivorian finally found the space, with seconds left, to clip a finish beyond the Hull goalkeeper - a goal remarkable for the acuteness of the angle - Ancelotti could be thankful that Chelsea have held on to Drogba. Here was a performance to counter all the comment that the club needed this summer to bring in more "marquee names."
Save those for weddings.
----------------------------------------------------
Mail:
Chelsea 2 Hull 1:
Didier Drogba gets Carlo Ancelotti era off to the perfect start
By Rob Draper at Stamford Bridge
Didier Drogba was in commendably candid mood after chipping home a spectacular injury-time winner at Stamford Bridge.
'It was a cross, to be honest,' said the Ivorian striker. In truth, you could tell from the celebrations. Drogba, a man not known to under-celebrate his goals, seemed initially embarrassed as he waved his shirt to the crowd.
Carlo Ancelotti, however, felt no such inhibitions. The club's new Italian manager celebrated freely, as well he might, for that injury-time goal was a timely intervention. After a near-perfect pre-season, Ancelotti's Chelsea were in danger of recording a thoroughly unsatisfactory start once the real competition got going.
Hull, a team who had been transformed from everyone's favourite second team to a laughing stock last season, played more like the former than the latter for 90 minutes of this match, earning their unexpected lead and manfully defending their point once Chelsea had equalised.
'For sure, I was worried,' said Ancelotti. 'We have to improve. The match was very difficult after we went 1-0 down. But we didn't lose the idea to keep playing football. We played well but made some mistakes. That is normal, though, and hopefully, within a month, we will have improved.'
Nevertheless, it might have been considerably worse and threatened to be so when Stephen Hunt, on his debut for Hull yet booed here because of his 2006 clash with Petr Cech, gleefully opened the scoring after 26 minutes.
Chelsea had failed to clear Andy Dawson's looping free-kick and George Boateng's shot ricocheted off Michael Essien via Ashley Cole to fall at Hunt's feet. To the consternation of Stamford Bridge, he directed the ball home before sprinting to the small corner of celebrating Hull fans.
'You're getting sacked in the morning,' the visitors sang raucously at Ancelotti - and Hull have some form in this area, their scoreless draw here last season prompting the dismissal of Luiz Felipe Scolari.
Ancelotti may not have understood the precise wording of the jeers but the sentiment was clear. 'I know that Scolari's last game was against Hull City,' he said with a smile. 'But I spoke with the players beforehand and made it very clear that this was not a possibility this time!'
Nevertheless Hull were formidable. Dean Marney and Boateng had gone close prior to the goal and thereafter heroes abounded, notably in goalkeeper Boaz Myhill, Anthony Gardner and Turner as their hands, feet and bodies were employed to block Chelsea's route to goal.
But Drogba proved their undoing and though he is not the easiest player to laud, nothing could diminish the brilliance of the first strike, a beautiful curling free-kick from 25 yards on 37 minutes which evaded Hull's defensive wall and the despairing dive of Myhill.
Hull manager Phil Brown was aggrieved at the award of the free-kick but, in truth, both Boateng and Seyi Olofinjana had a tug at John Obi Mikel's shirt and a kick at his heels. Critics might add that Drogba should have scored a further three, with his sliced shot after just 73 seconds and his close-range strike on 57 minutes which was parried by Myhill, being the worst examples, while Nicolas Anelka recorded even more glaring misses on 46 and 56 minutes.
Yet, Drogba remains talismanic for Chelsea when in this mood and it was his strength in driving on in the final minutes to release Deco which provided the buildup for his late winner.
'I'm bitterly disappointed, of course,' said Brown, who hopes to add Real Madrid striker Alvaro Negredo to his squad tomorrow in a record ?12million signing. 'But I'm pleased with the way the players competed. They did what we asked them to do.
'The biggest plus is that we had a game to frustrate Chelsea and we did so. We had three of four new players on show and they learned today about playing for Phil Brown, for Hull City. We know we have to prove people wrong all over again.
'We might have surprised one or two people with our performance today and we know we have to produce when we're playing the teams in and around us.'
Indeed, for despite the roars of relief which greeted Drogba's winner, there was enough on display here to question Chelsea's status as title favourites. Frank Lampard's prowess was muted in his role at the apex of the diamond midfield and Deco took over after 70 minutes.
Ancelotti claimed the amount of defensive players in Lampard's position limited his performance but that is unlikely to change with future opponents. Without Florent Malouda, Chelsea's midfield lacked any width at all, with Lampard, Michael Ballack and Michael Essien competing for space in the centre.
Ashley Cole and Jose Bosingwa attempted to provide it, with both pushing up at once in those final 15 minutes, as Chelsea searched for their goal. Exciting though it was, it is a vulnerability which will surely be punished by more ambitious sides than Hull.

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Independent:
Drogba's outrageous fortune is cruel blow for brave Tigers
Chelsea 2 Hull City 1
By Steve Tongue at Stamford Bridge
Sometime during the course of his English lessons, Chelsea's new manager Carlo Ancelotti has doubtless come across the cliché that there are no easy games in the Premier League.
It is not true, but here was the evidence that some are far harder than they ought to be. Ancelotti's new charges, tipped to top the table, only defeated Hull City, who are the choice of many to finish bottom of it, because a mis-hit cross by Didier Drogba in added time drifted into the net.
The Tigers may have lost their teeth last autumn and been left hanging on by their claw-nails in May, but they showed sufficient bite here to take the lead through new signing Stephen Hunt (pictured), whose challenge three years ago as a Reading player led to Petr Cech sustaining a fractured skull. Drogba equalised with a stunning free-kick but all Chelsea's second-half dominance was counting for nothing until his fortuitous intervention just before the end.
New boy that he is, Ancelotti could have copied the old Bill Shankly line, "same team as last season". By the end of the game, however, he had been forced to give a run to substitutes Michael Ballack, Deco and Salomon Kalou, the first of them as early as the 46th minute. There is a tactical difference too in that he wants to use a diamond-shaped midfield and push Nicolas Anelka, last season's Golden Boot winner, right up alongside Drogba. Having Frank Lampard just behind them ought to provide a potent attacking triangle, though the worry is that the influential Lampard will not find space to do his best work. That was the case yesterday.
Opposing managers will be quick to copy Hull's Phil Brown in deploying wide players to stop Chelsea's full-backs from breaking forward. "We had a game plan and I'm bitterly disappointed but also pleased with putting down a marker in London yet again."
His team enjoyed their visits to the capital last season, and a gritty goalless draw at Stamford Bridge back in February led to Luiz Felipe Scolari's sacking three days later. "You're getting sacked in the morning," the visiting support chorused at Ancelotti soon after the startling first goal. "I was worried," he admitted later – about the result, not the sack – "but in the end we deserved to win."
It was an outcome that looked in doubt from the 28th minute onwards. Hunt lofted a dangerous cross that Dean Marney headed over the bar and then took advantage of two useful deflections to open the scoring. Following a Hull free-kick, the industrious George Boateng's shot bounced off first Ashley Cole and then John Obi Mikel, falling perfectly for Hunt to tap into an empty net.
Eight minutes later Mikel was trapped in a tiger sandwich and from 25 yards Drogba hit a magnificent free-kick with what might be called the Ronaldo technique, keeping his body low over the ball, which flew just inside Boaz Myhill's left-hand post. There had been other chances but Ancelotti was not satisfied and replaced Mikel at the interval with Ballack for "more quality and more aggression".
There was an extra ration of both from thereon in. Anelka should have scored 25 seconds into the half, Myhill excelled with a save from the rampant Drogba and Kalou's first touch after replacing Florent Malouda was a header over the bar.
Hull were outraged to see six added minutes being signalled, although only one of them had elapsed when Drogba stormed down the middle, took a return pass from Deco out to the left and scored with what he could have pretended was a perfect chip over the stranded goalkeeper.
Relief for Chelsea and hope for Hull, who still hope to sign the Real Madrid striker Alvaro Negredo and possibly Celtic's right-back Andreas Hinkel.
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Observer:
Didier Drogba chips in at the last for Chelsea to deny Hull City
Chelsea 2 Drogba 37, Drogba 90 Hull City 1 Hunt 28
Amy Lawrence at Stamford Bridge
Carlo Ancelotti gave a genteel royal wave when he was introduced at Stamford Bridge before kick-off and a wheeze of relief 91½ minutes later. Didier Drogba's lofted chip came anxiously late, preventing the ignominy of points dropped on the opening day of the season at home to the team who escaped relegation by their heavily bitten fingernails last term.
Not long before Drogba's intervention – so heaven-sent the Ivorian striker was honest enough to admit it was, actually, a cross – Roman Abramovich sat in his box and wore his 1,000-yard stare. Reading between the lines, this was not the stellar impact he was expecting from his prized Italian coach.
"I was worried, for sure," Ancelotti said. "But I am quiet. I am calm. We scored in the last minute. In the last match, Manchester United scored in the last minute. This is the nice part of football. It is good for the team to believe we can score at any time." Indeed.
He is experienced enough to appreciate late goals are not always summoned with a click of the fingers and he acknowledged that the Chelsea system is still a work in progress. As to how long it will take before his players demonstrate his ideas naturally, Ancelotti pondered that it might even take until the very last game of the season.
Having written in his programme notes that it was these games – against teams he knew absolutely zip about – that most excited him about the English challenge, it took seconds to get an inkling of what this element of the Premier League was all about. Inside the first minute, Stephen Hunt launched himself thigh-high at Frank Lampard. It was not the only agricultural tackle of the afternoon. As the Beastie Boys put it, you've got to fight for the right to party.
The former Reading man was inevitably given the treatment by the majority at Stamford Bridge, given the part he played in Petr Cech's fractured skull three years ago, and only served to underline his role as pantomime villain when he opened the scoring in the 28th minute.
George Boateng, enjoying a fine captain's performance, picked up a loose ball on the edge of the area and jinked cleverly into a shooting position. His drive ricocheted off Ashley Cole and John Obi Mikel, and landed invitingly in front of Hunt, who clipped Hull into the lead on his debut. "He's the type who can light up a room," said Phil Brown. "He's tenacious. Some people don't like that, but he's my kind of player."
Following the goal, Brown, as he would, ran on to the field of play for a celebratory jig. Then, from the visiting supporters, came another demonstration of cheek: "You're getting sacked in the morning", they crooned to Ancelotti.
Drogba enabled the coach to shake his fists defiantly eight minutes later. What a classy riposte. From a generously awarded free-kick, 20 yards out, the striker delivered a pearl that dipped viciously. Unsaveable.
That was a pity for Boaz Myhill, whose performance in Hull's goal was, otherwise, exemplary. He weathered a fair few storms during the game and produced a string of saves to repel Drogba, Michael Essien, Nicolas Anelka and José Bosingwa – and that is not to mention the efforts Chelsea whacked off target, too.
Hull were not without breakaway chances of their own and gave Chelsea some anxious moments. They lacked the finesse to carve out clean scoring chances, however. They were, perhaps, closest of all in the last minute, when Caleb Folan's deflected cross was tipped over the crossbar by Cech. Hull's manager mentioned that he was still in the market for a "top-class No9" and hoped to secure one in time for their next match against Tottenham.
Brown managed to be bitterly disappointed, yet smugly pleased, with a gameplan designed to frustrate Chelsea. It worked up to a point, but was ripped up by Drogba and his theatrically timed finale. The Ivorian did not enjoy his happiest season last time around, but looks to be remotivated and revived.
This time, Ancelotti could not resist bounding on to the pitch with fists clenched. He is learning fast about the peculiar passion of the Premier League.
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NOTW:
CHELSEA 2, HULL 1 Didier Drogba strips away the strops
By ANDY DUNN, 16/08/2009
YOU have got to like Chelsea's new striker. Big fella, great touch, strong as an ox.
Gets on with the game, no diving, no backchat, no collapsing when caught by a gentle breeze.
Respects opponents, respects officials.
Unselfish. A dinked pass to a better-positioned team-mate here, a 50-yard track-back there.
Honest. Honest enough even to admit that a cross morphed into a match-winning goal.
And a dead ringer for that Didier Drogba bloke.
That's right, the one who used to stomp around Stamford Bridge in a blaze of play-acting and petulance.
You have got to like Chelsea's new striker. Didier Drogba - the reincarnation.
It's only one game, sure. And there will doubtless be devilish diversions along the winding road ahead.
But the player who put pen to paper during the summer might just be a new one. For his £120,000-a-week contract, the penny might have dropped.
He might - just might - have realised that if he strips away the strops, he can stand as the Premier League's finest all-round striker.
Hell, he might even be liked.
Carlo Ancelotti certainly liked him yesterday.
As the clock ticked past regulation time, Roman Abramovich sat up in his box, looking as glum as a billionaire with a beautiful woman on his arm could possibly look.
Looking every inch the Roman emperor with a twitchy thumb.
Moments later, he was high-fiving everyone bar the bodyguard. You could spot his patented cheesy grin from a pitch-length.
Phil Scolari smiled through a 4-0 victory in his first league game.
Ancelotti knew that people would already be whispering behind cupped hands had Drogba's cross not drifted into three-point territory.
Even Chelsea don't sack managers after one game but deadlock against a team expected to be deadwood doesn't go down well. Indeed, Big Phil bit the dust after drawing against this very opposition.
And deadlock was probably what Hull deserved. If only for their heroic workrate and the epic, old-fashioned central defensive performance of Michael Turner.
Post-match, there was a worrying reference to himself in the third person - it's really not to the liking of Andy Dunn - but Phil Brown was correct in identifying this as an encouraging performance.
They were as organised as they were unfamiliar.
Certainly more organised than a very familiar Chelsea defence when George Boateng's miscued shot pinballed around before giving Stephen Hunt a goal on debut.
"He's my type of player," Brown said. Which puts him in something of a minority. To say the least.
Hunt actually secured a notable double. First foul of the Premier League season, first goal of the Premier League season.
I suspect the tally of the former will greatly outweigh the latter as the campaign evolves.
'We are top of the league', came the refrain from Hull supporters.
And they might have held that position for longer had referee Alan Wiley not harshly penalised Hull when Boateng and Seyi Olofinjana put a pincer movement on John Mikel Obi.
It is a wonder the new-model Drogba (left) didn't wander up to Wiley and say . . . 'Excuse me sir, but I think that's a trifle harsh.'
Instead, he took dead aim from 25 yards and released a strike that dipped like a Federer forehand winner to beat Boaz Myhill. The Hull keeper might reproach himself for not getting to the effort but he was an integral part of a determined Hull defence.
His distribution might be as rank as the Royal Mail's but he produced several red-letter saves to deny Drogba and Nicolas Anelka.
And frustration began to seep through Chelsea ranks. None looked more edgy than Frank Lampard.
He won't be the first or the last person to come back from Amsterdam with his head in the clouds but he had a strangely ineffective game.
Clearly, it will take him some time to become accustomed to Ancelotti's diamond. A rough diamond, on yesterday's evidence.
And the introduction of Michael Ballack and Deco did not significantly increase the goal threat.
Indeed, the reliance on Drogba was almost total.
So it was fitting - if fortunate - that he should spread that smile across Roman's face.
He looks at a physical peak and his stamina took him to a cause that might easily have been lost.
Herded towards safety, he stood up a clever left-foot cross which faded away from defensive and offensive heads and tucked itself in victory-side of the post.
As if to confirm his ripped condition, off came the shirt.
Wiley didn't like it - out came the yellow card - but the TV cameras loved it, following Drogba's every move.
Just as they did when that other bloke went berserk after a beating from Barcelona not that long ago.
When his foul-mouthed rant into the living rooms of the world appeared to signal a certain exit from Stamford Bridge. Maybe, just maybe, he did leave after all.
It could be tempting the most predictable of fates, but maybe it was a different guy - one who respects the game, supporters, team-mates and opponents - who replaced him when signing that summer deal.
Chelsea and football must hope so.
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