Thursday, October 29, 2009

bolton 4-0


The Times

Chelsea show class in easing way past Bolton’s pussycats
Chelsea 4 Bolton 0
Patrick Barclay, Chief Football Commentator

Maybe Bolton Wanderers were trying to lull Carlo Ancelotti, relatively new as he is to English football, into a false sense of security before the Barclays Premier League fixture between these clubs at the Reebok Stadium on Saturday.
If so, they went against the wishes of their manager, Gary Megson, who called their performance “poor from minute one”, acknowledging that they played at too slow a tempo and won too few challenges to disturb such a superior side. With their leonine centre forward, Kevin Davies, whom Megson rested last night, they will surely be less like pussycats.
Ancelotti is certainly prepared for that. “We know it can be a different kind of match,” the Chelsea manager said, “and must be ready for it.” He, too, will be able to strengthen his team. John Terry, Ashley Cole and Nicolas Anelka were among those missing during Chelsea’s smooth progress to the Carling Cup quarterfinals, while Michael Essien and Didier Drogba were used only as substitutes.
The Italian must have been heartened by most of the displays from the replacements, aware as he is that injuries, suspensions and the African Cup of Nations will take their toll on his squad this winter.
The only disappointment for the home support was the contribution of Daniel Sturridge. The 20-year-old was utterly outshone in the first half by Salomon Kalou and lasted 17 more minutes before being replaced by Drogba. Kalou’s third goal in a week had put Chelsea in front and Florent Malouda followed up before a near rout was completed by Deco and Drogba.
Megson, alluding to Drogba’s appearance as his team belatedly strove for respectability, remarked: “When you can put a £28 million substitute on — that’s as much as we’ve spent in two years — you can’t compete on equal terms. But I’m pleased to be playing Chelsea again. This was a bit of a stroll. Our team will be a bit more wholehearted, I hope, at the weekend.”
Last night featured a pre-match ovation for the late Matthew Harding, who died with fellow Chelsea supporters 13 years ago when the helicopter carrying them from a League Cup tie away to Bolton crashed on the way back to London. In his wildest dreams as vice-chairman — or even after a few glasses of red, for he was a convivial fellow — Harding cannot have envisaged that the club would one day have the likes of Essien, Drogba and Frank Lampard. Not on the bench anyway.
Sturridge, the striker signed from Manchester City this summer, was given his first start against a defence featuring Gary Cahill and found the England contender hard to outmuscle or outmanoeuvre.
Kalou, by contrast, kept finding space. Yet when Chelsea took the lead it was all too easy from the Bolton point of view. Malouda found Paulo Ferreira, who crossed right-footed from the left, bisecting the centre backs for Kalou to nod wide of the exposed Ali al-Habsi. Soon, Kalou, who scored twice against Atlético Madrid seven days earlier, showed that he can make them, too.
Collecting Ferreira’s flip, the Ivory Coast forward turned deftly and measured a short cross for Malouda. The France winger’s header was going limply wide when the ball bounced off Zat Knight and obligingly back to him; this time Malouda lashed the ball firmly past al-Habsi.
Bolton made a rare impression when Hilário, in the Chelsea goal, went down to save from Matthew Taylor and rose with a concussion that caused him to be replaced by Ross Turnbull.
The rest was almost a stroll for Chelsea — and how Deco and Michael Ballack enjoyed that pace. For the second half, Essien came on for Kalou, Deco moving to a position just off the front, while Bolton brought on a second striker in Johan Elmander, but the pattern was unchanged.
Only minutes after Sturridge, having miskicked wide, had left, Chelsea contrived a superb goal, the ball being swept from one end to the other. After Ballack had denied Bolton with a block, Essien took up the running and fed Joe Cole, who squared for Drobga to flick on to Deco and a crisp, low shot left al-Habsi flat-footed.
Nor were Cole and Drogba finished there. Cole went down the right and crossed for the centre forward to round matters off with a downward header. For the England midfield player to be ending the match so strongly after all his months out of action only enhanced the pleasure of Ancelotti. He also mentioned the “intelligent” contribution of Ferreira. “It is a good moment for us,” he said.
Chelsea (4-3-2-1): Hilário (sub: R Turnbull, 23min) — J Belletti, Alex, B Ivanovic, P Ferreira — M Ballack, Deco, F Malouda — S Kalou (sub: M Essien, 46), J Cole — D Sturridge (sub: D Drogba, 62). Substitutes not used: F Lampard, N Matic, J Bruma, F Borini.
Bolton Wanderers (4-1-4-1): A al-Habsi — S Ricketts, G Cahill, Z Knight, J Samuel — F Muamba — G Steinsson (sub: J Elmander, 46), M Davies, M Taylor (sub: C Basham, 64), R Gardner — I Klasnic. Substitutes not used: J Jaaskelainen, P Robinson, T Cohen, Lee Chung Yong, A O’Brien.
Referee: A Marriner.

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Telegraph:

Chelsea 4 Bolton Wanderers 0
By John Ley at Stamford Bridge

If Chelsea were to follow the in-vogue trend for seeking stadium naming rights, they should simply change their stadium to Fortress Stamford Bridge after claiming a 10th straight home win and ninth of the season. They also extended their run without conceding a goal at home to an impressive 13 hours and two minutes.
Chelsea left some big hitters out but still moved comfortably into the quarter-finals of the Carling Cup thanks to goals from Salomon Kalou, Florent Malouda, Deco and Didier Drogba to take their recent goal tally to 13 in three games, in three different competitions. This was a warning to the rest; whatever team Chelsea field in whatever competition they are in, they mean business.
Carlo Ancelotti, the Chelsea manager, remained faithful to his promise to give striker Daniel Sturridge his first start since arriving from Manchester City, while Alex was back in defence after recovering from a groin strain in the summer.
Chelsea made a total of seven changes from the side that beat a Blackburn team suffering from an outbreak of swine flu on Saturday and Bolton Wanderers arrived with their manager Gary Megson admitting there had been cases of the illness at his club.
That may have explained the omission of John Terry, the Chelsea captain, who complained back in September that he had been spat at by Ivan Klasnic, playing for Croatia against England at Wembley.
Given the warning from the authorities, to Premier League players, to stop spitting to avoid the spread of the epidemic - and the fact that Klasnic was making only his third start since arriving on loan from Nantes, Terry was well out of the way.
Bolton made four changes from the side that won 3-2 against Everton, with goalkeeper Ali Al Habsi, an Omani international, given a rare opportunity ahead of Jussi Jaaskelainen. It was, in fact, Al Habsi’s first start for Bolton for 17 months, when he featured in the last game of the 2007-08 season - at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea went into the game boasting a run of nine straight home wins, two short of the club record set in 2006, and had not conceded a goal at Stamford Bridge in 11 hours and 32 minutes prior to kick-off. Just one goal had beaten the Chelsea rear-guard all season, and given that Bolton had scored only seven away goals, the portents for an away win were not good.
And that possibility increased after just 15 minutes when they took the lead. With Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka, who have scored 13 goals, rested, it fell to Salomon Kalou to claim his fourth goal of the season .
It was a simple goal: Paulo Ferreira crossed from the left and Kalou rose unchallenged to head into the top right hand corner. The Ivorian scored the winner in the previous round, against Queens Park Rangers, and his latest effort settled the nerves at Stamford Bridge.
Bolton tried to respond within a minute when Gretar Steinsson crossed from the right and the ball fell to Matt Taylor, whose shot was parried by Henrique Hilario but the goalkeeper struck his head on the ground and he needed lengthy treatment before continuing.
But just a few minutes later Hilario went down again, clearly unable to continue, so allowing former Middlesbrough goalkeeper Ross Turnbull – the third choice at Stamford Bridge – to make his debut, after just 23 minutes.
And in the 26th minute Chelsea extended their advantage when Kalou fed Malouda, whose first touch bounced off Bolton defender Zat Knight before presenting the midfielder with the red boots with a simple finish.
Before the interval Al Habsi saved well from Kalou, with Sturridge completely missing the bounce from the rebound.
Both sides made interval changes with Bolton’s Steinsson making way for Johan Elmander, and Chelsea replacing Kalou with Michael Essien.
And Chelsea wasted little time in threatening again, with Joe Cole’s attempt not far off target. Juliano Belletti was allowed another chance that was squandered and Chelsea were given a reality jolt when, from Elmander’s determination, Mark Davies saw a good attempt well blocked by Turnbull.
Then just before the hour mark, Sturridge had two chances to open his Chelsea account but the striker stabbed both efforts wide.
A third goal arrived in the 67th minute when Joe Cole crossed, substitute Drogba missed the ball, but Deco latched onto it before finding the bottom left hand corner. And in the final minute Drogba completed the rout.
Match details
Chelsea (4-1-2-1-2): Hilario; Belletti, Alex, Ivanovic, Ferreira; Deco; Ballack, Malouda; J Cole; Kalou (Essien ht), Sturridge (Drogba 62).Subs: Turnbull, Lampard, Matic, Bruma, Borini.
Bolton Wanderers (4-5-1): Al Habsi; Ricketts, Cahill, Knight, Samuel; Steinsson (Elmander ht), Muamba, M Davies, Taylor (Basham 65), Gardner; Klasnic.
Subs: Jaaskelainen (g), Robinson, Cohen, Lee, A O’Brien.Referee: A Marriner (W Midlands).

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Independent:

Kalou strike kick-starts Blues cruise
Chelsea 4 Bolton Wanderers 0
By Jonathan Wilson

The first of Jose Mourinho's five trophies at Stamford Bridge was the Carling Cup, and Carlo Ancelotti has spoken of the potential benefits to confidence of similarly getting a first trophy in the cabinet at Wembley in February. Chelsea remain well on course for that after another emphatic home performance. There was something almost contemptuous about the way they dismissed Bolton last night, stretching their run without conceding at home to 13 hours, and taking their tally of goals in the past week to 13 in three games.
"The team are working very well," Ancelotti said. "The defence has balance on the pitch during 90 minutes, maintaining good control defensively and offensively. This is the most important thing for the team, to have a balance. For us the first thing is to play well and to win a game. It happens we've won with large results, but that's not so important. Rather, we want to win the games. We played the last three games very well."
Perhaps most encouraging for Chelsea were the performances of two players who have, for different reasons, spent much of the last year in the shadows. Joe Cole, in his third start since returning from a serious knee injury, sparkled, having a hand in three of the goals. "I was surprised because, after eight months, it's not easy to play like Joe has played these two games," said Ancelotti. "This means that he worked very hard to rest his injury and arrived to play in good condition."
Salomon Kalou, meanwhile, still only 24, continues his development from the goal-poacher he was when he arrived from Feyenoord in 2006 to being a more complete forward. Given the glut of central strikers in the Ivory Coast squad, that can only be of benefit to him at international level as well.
It was Kalou, operating as a link between Cole and Daniel Sturridge, who opened the scoring after 15 minutes, offering a reminder of the sniffer he used to be with an accurate downward header from Paulo Ferreira's cross. The second, 11 minutes later, ended up looking scruffy as Florent Malouda fired in after his initial header ricocheted off Zat Knight, but Cole's chip and Kalou's cross were of the highest order.
That goal finished off a Bolton side who had just begun to stir. Ivan Klasnic hit a post late on, but the only really anxious moment for Chelsea came at 1-0, when Henrique Hilario saved at the feet of Matt Taylor. He banged his head on the ground in making the save, a blow that led to his departure a few minutes later. Ross Turnbull came on to make his debut, but barely had to dirty his gloves. "We didn't play as we needed to play," said the Bolton manager Gary Megson. "We didn't play at a tempo that might have upset Chelsea.
"It became about the quality of one team against the other and we haven't got the wherewithal for that. They've beaten us 4-0 and they probably could have had another three or four."
As it was, they settled for just two more, the loss of Kalou to injury at half-time barely affecting their flow. Cole laid on the third for Deco with a low cross and then teed up Didier Drogba, on as a second-half substitute, for a late fourth with a neat chip to the back post. It was all very, very easy. "It was," Megson admitted, "a bit of a stroll." The sides meet again in the Premier League on Saturday. "The venue will be different," he promised. "The teams will be different and our approach will be different."

Chelsea (4-1-2-1-1): Hilario (Turnbull, 23); Belletti, Ivanovic, Alex, Ferreira; Deco; Ballack, Malouda; J Cole; Kalou (Essien, 46), Sturridge (Drogba, 62). Substitutes not used: Lampard, Matic, Bruma, Borini
Bolton (4-1-4-1): Al Habsi; Ricketts, Knight, Cahill, Samuel; Muamba; Steinsson (Elmander, 46), M Davies, Taylor (Basham, 64), Gardner; Klasnic. Substitutes not used: Jaaskelainen (gk), Robinson, Cohen, Lee, O'Brien.
Referee: A Marriner (W Midlands)

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Guardian:

Stylish Chelsea ease past Bolton into Carling Cup quarter-finals
Chelsea 4 Kalou 15, Malouda 26, Deco 67, Drogba 89 Bolton Wanderers 0

Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge

The competition may change, the advertising hoardings spinning to proclaim Champions League or Premier League or Carling Cup, but Chelsea's swashbuckling home form remains a constant. A tenth consecutive win here, achieved gracefully and impressively last night, has propelled Carlo Ancelotti's team into the quarter-finals. This side feels untouchable in these environs.
This was a breeze, a much-changed line-up securing comfortable success against opponents in Bolton who had rested only four players from their league win at the weekend. If Chelsea's attacking caught the eye – they have scored 13 goals in a week – then the fact that they remain stingy at the other end should not be ignored. Ivan Klasnic struck a post late on but it is now 13 hours and two minutes since they last conceded here, back on the opening day against Hull. Opponents must arrive south-west London with a shudder.
This had been an opportunity for Chelsea's fringe players to make their mark and for first-teamers shorn of games in recent times to sharpen their skills ahead of a critical stage in this club's season. The Londoners collide with Manchester United, Arsenal and Manchester City over the next five weeks in the Premier League, fixtures that will test the depth of their squad and shape their title challenge. This selection's eagerness to impress was simply too much for Bolton.
The hosts had established a comfortable advantage by the interval, with their only real concern the loss of their No2 goalkeeper, Henrique Hilário, to a head injury. The Portuguese hit the turf in saving Matthew Taylor's close-range attempt, and though there were six minutes between injury and substitution – in which time Wanderers failed to test his reaction – the goalkeeper departed with his head still swimming.
Bolton had been rendered dizzy more by Chelsea's dazzling approach play. Joe Cole had unfurled his usual range of tricks and flicks, his team-mates a blur of blue movement all around. The initial wave of attacks, sparked after 11 seconds with Cole's shot from distance, blew itself out but Bolton yielded to the second flurry. Paulo Ferreira was granted too much time to flight over his cross from the left and Salomon Kalou nodded in his third goal in a week.
Hilario was injured in the subsequent riposte, but Bolton's threat was sporadic where Chelsea purred with menace and duly gleaned further reward. Florent Malouda's exchange of passes with Kalou culminated in the winger flicking a header which rebounded back off a panicked Zat Knight and, from point-blank range, the France international slammed in a second. Wanderers were merely relieved not to incur further damage by the break, Ali Al Habsi doing well to deny Kalou as Chelsea set about emulating their five-goal mauling of Blackburn on Saturday.
That was the Ivorian's last contribution, Michael Essien adopting the role at the base of midfield at half-time, but the pizazz was still largely all Chelsea's. There is a real swagger to this team at present, particularly at Stamford Bridge where they are unbeaten in almost a year in all competitions. They were irresistible here only for Daniel Sturridge, on full debut but rather anxious where his team-mates were so calm and collected, to twice drag shots wide of the far post when he should have scored.
The youngster needed a goal to make him feel as if he belonged in this company. His departure for Didier Drogba just after the hour was a reminder of how onerous a task it will prove to break into this team. Once he had gone, Deco – gathering Cole's cross which had been flicked on inadvertently by Drogba – fizzed a third into the far corner and Bolton, half-chances to Taylor and Mark Davies aside, had been washed away. Drogba's own reward, nodding in Cole's cross with a minute to play, merely confirmed this as Chelsea's latest rout.

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Mail:

Chelsea 4 Bolton: Blues ease into last eight of Carling Cup with comfortable victory
By Matt Barlow

Those who threaten Stamford Bridge can all expect to be greeted with similar disdain at the moment as Carlo Ancelotti restores a sense of invincibility to Chelsea's home.Visitors from Madrid, Blackburn and Bolton have been crushed under a weight of 13 goals in eight days and Sam Allardyce's threat of an outbreak of swine flu seems to have been repelled for good measure.'We are in good condition,' said Ancelotti. 'This is a good moment for us.'
Too right. His team have not conceded a goal at home in more than 13 hours of action. The last man to put the ball in their net at home was Hull's Stephen Hunt on the opening day of the season.Four were smashed past Atletico last week and five past Blackburn on Saturday. Last night, with senior stars rested and fringe players given a run, Chelsea never looked like missing out on a place in the last eight of the Carling Cup.Salomon Kalou, Florent Malouda, Deco and Didier Drogba scored the goals which sent Gary Megson back north to chew over the dilemma of how to tackle Chelsea's first team on Saturday at the Reebok in the Premier League.'I'm pleased we've got them again,' said Megson. 'We need to put on a performance because that was a bit of a stroll. Our team will be different, not just in personnel but in approach, and I hope we're a lot more wholehearted than we were tonight.'
Ancelotti, in contrast, could reflect on another good night's work. Joe Cole continued his sparkling form and Alex, playing for the first time this season, got through 90 minutes.The fact that back-up goalkeeper Henrique Hilario went off with concussion in the first half and 20-yearold striker Daniel Sturridge failed to impress on his full debut will be of little consequence to the Italian.This was a 10th successive home win for his side. To equal a club record of 11, they will have to beat their closest title rivals, Manchester United, a week on Sunday, although it is hard to back against them.Suddenly the Bridge feels like the fortress it was under Jose Mourinho and Avram Grant, when Chelsea did not lose a home league game for well over four years.United will surely test them more than Atletico, Blackburn or Bolton, who were criticised by Megson for failing to show the strength or speed required to give Chelsea a fright.Without Kevin Davies, who was given a breather, the visitors lacked their usual physical threat and went behind after 15 minutes. Sam Ricketts gave Paulo Ferreira time to cut back on to his right foot and cross, and Bolton's back four watched as Kalou drifted between Jlloyd Samuel and Matthew Taylor to direct a simple header inside the far post.
Megson's team could have pulled level within a minute but were denied by Hilario's bravery. The Portuguese keeper hurled himself at the feet of Taylor, left unattended in the box by Juliano Belletti, and parried the shot but banged his head on the ground as he did. Play went on with Hilario rolling around on the turf before Ricardo Gardner lashed a shot over the open net from 20 yards.Hilario staggered through another seven minutes but was clearly dazed and was sent for a precautionary scan as soon as he was substituted Ross Turnbull went on for his debut, charged with protecting the proud clean-sheet record. Turnbull did his job, smothering Bolton's best chance of the second half, a shot from Mark Davies, soon after the interval. He was beaten in the closing minutes when Ivan Klasnic prodded a low shot past him but the ball hit the foot of a post and bounced safely away. Chelsea were safe by then anyway. Malouda fired them two up, ramming in a shot from close range. He had squandered the initial chance, glancing a header from Kalou's cross into the body of Zat Knight, but the ball rebounded kindly for him and his second finish was more forceful.

ONE TO WATCH DANIEL STURRIDGE (Chelsea)
The 20-year-old striker has talent, no question. It is his attitude which is under scrutiny and last night's display did not dispel the doubts. Slow to get involved on his first start for Chelsea, limited movement and a poor work ethic. Yet, still he threatens the goal. Tested Ali Al Habsi and tried the patience of Carlo Ancelotti in the first half. Ali Al Habsi made a fine onehanded save from Kalou but Cole started to dominate after the break as Bolton risked more in attack.He set up two wonderful chances in quick succession for Sturridge but the youngster missed the target with both. First Cole rolled a short pass into his path but Sturridge snatched at it and put it wide. Then Cole delivered a precision pass over 50 yards. This time Sturridge had time to pick his spot and he turned towards goal but again drilled his effort wide.Ancelotti took off the England Under 21 striker and replaced him with Drogba.Sturridge looked crestfallen as he settled on to the bench in time to see Deco's example of clinical finishing after 67 minutes. Cole picked out Deco and he drove in the third.'I'm disappointed for him,' said Ancelotti. 'I asked him to play for the team, not just to score. He did what I asked of him. For me, it's not important that he didn't score. The others scored. For him it would have been better to score, but he has to stay quiet because I'm happy with his work out on the pitch.'
A volley from Deco dipped just over before Drogba completed the scoring with a simple header at the back post to convert a cross delivered, somewhat inevitably, from the boot of Cole after 89 minutes 'The first thing is to play well and to win a game,' said Ancelotti. 'It so happens we've won with large results but that's not so important.'We played the last three games very well, and Saturday can be another kind of match. We have to be ready to play a different match.'CHELSEA (4-3-2-1): Hilario (Turnbull 23min); Belletti, Ivanovic, Alex, Ferreira; Ballack, Deco, Malouda; J Cole, Kalou (Essien 46); Sturridge (Drogba 61).BOLTON WANDERERS (4-1-4-1): Al Habsi; Ricketts, Cahill, Knight, Samuel; Muamba; Steinsson (Elmander 46), M Davies, Gardner, Taylor (Basham 63); Klasnic.
Man of the match: Joe Cole.
Referee: Andre Marriner.

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Sun:

Chelsea 4 Bolton 0
By MARK IRWIN

THIRTEEN goals in a week, thirteen hours without conceding at home.
Chelsea remain in the rudest of health despite Sam Allardyce's concerns for their well-being.
Blackburn boss Big Sam claimed at the weekend his men could have infected Carlo Ancelotti's superstars with swine flu.
But the Londoners are clearly made of sterner stuff than those northern softies as they rolled up their sleeves and got on with the job of sweeping all before them.
Two points clear at the top of the Premier League, they are now firmly on course for their fourth Carling Cup final in six years.
Ancelotti's rock-solid defence have not let in a goal at Stamford Bridge for 782 MINUTES now.
Hull's Stephen Hunt was the last to break Chelsea's great wall on the opening day of the season.
And galvanised by the manager's patent cold remedy of red wine and hot milk, there was no danger of them catching a cold against Bolton.
While other clubs might treat the Carling Cup with barely disguised disdain, it is clear Chelsea will never pass up any opportunity to win silverware.
One week after annihilating Atletico Madrid and days after battering Blackburn, it was poor Bolton's turn to be beaten and bewildered.
Manchester United are next up at the Bridge on Sunday week.
At least that one should be a bit more competitive than recent processions here.
Gary Megson's team were never at the races as they were swept aside by goals from Salomon Kalou, Florent Malouda, Deco and Didier Drogba.
Only Daniel Sturridge, 20, disappointed as he blew his big chance to make an impression.
The striker has had to wait all season for his first start in the famous blue shirt since his controversial summer move from Manchester City.
But, after finally being given his opportunity to shine, the self-assured youngster left home fans wondering what all the fuss was about.
Twice in the space of a minute Sturridge was teed up for his debut Chelsea goal by Joe Cole but failed to hit the target on both occasions.
And moments later he paid for his lack of a killer instinct when he was hooked by Ancelotti in the 62nd minute. Yet even Sturridge's struggles could not take the gloss off Chelsea's 10th straight win at fortress Stamford Bridge.

The Blues did not have to wait long for their breakthrough goal, with Kalou drifting behind the static Zat Knight to head in Paulo Ferreira's 15th-minute centre.
Yet Bolton could have been level within a minute when Juliano Belletti made a horrible mess of Gretar Steinsson's pass to leave Matt Taylor with a clear sight of goal.
Hilario dashed out to save bravely but took a blow to the head as he hit the deck and eventually had to be replaced suffering from concussion.
Chelsea made it two in the 26th minute - Malouda failed to get a firm head to Kalou's inviting cross but when the ball bounced straight back to him off Knight he did not need a second invitation.
Deco dispatched Cole's 67th-minute cross for the third.
While Ivan Klasnic almost pulled one back when he struck a post late on, the final word belonged to sub Drogba.
Hopefully Sturridge was watching and learning from his place back on the bench.
Bolton will have to learn their lessons quickly ahead of Chelsea's visit on Saturday.
CHELSEA
Hilario 6
Branislav Ivanovic 7
Paulo Ferreira 6
Alex 6
Juliano Belletti 5
Joe Cole 8 - STAR MAN
Michael Ballack 6
Florent Malouda 7
Deco 7
Salomon Kalou 7
Daniel Sturridge 5
Subs: Turnbull (Hilario 23) 6, Essien (Kalou 45) 7, Drogba (Sturridge 62) 6. Not used: Lampard, Matic, Bruma, Borini.













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