Monday, March 21, 2011

man city 2-0





Independent:


Late win lifts Chelsea into third spot

Chelsea 2 Manchester City 0

By Ben Rumsby, PA



Another virtuoso display from David Luiz helped keep Chelsea's faint Barclays Premier League title hopes alive and kill off Manchester City's in today's clash at Stamford Bridge.

Defender Luiz put a clutch of the world's most expensive strikers to shame by breaking the deadlock late on before Ramires wrapped up the points in stoppage-time.

The win lifted Chelsea above City into third place and back within nine points of Manchester United with a game in hand, while City are now 10 adrift having played the same number of matches.

Carlos Tevez's groin injury was a huge blow for the visitors and an even bigger boost for their opponents ahead of kick-off.

The Argentina striker had been the scourge of Chelsea since leaving Manchester United, scoring four times in three successive victories against them.

Mario Balotelli missed out for very different reasons, despite apologising for the moment of madness that saw him sent off against Dynamo Kiev in the Europa League on Thursday night.

Reports of a bust-up with boss Roberto Mancini may not have helped the striker's cause.

One man who had served his time was Chelsea skipper John Terry, who entered the field to chants of, "There's only one England captain!", with Fabio Capello sat in the stands.

The reinstated defender was a bit slow to close down Yaya Toure in the sixth minute, the midfielder given enough space to fire a low 20-yard drive saved well by Petr Cech.

City were on top but Chelsea looked dangerous on the break, wasting a great chance to take a 12th-minute lead when the recalled Salomon Kalou fell over team-mate Ramires as both tried to finish from 12 yards.

That was the cue for the home side to take a grip and they were denied what appeared a clear penalty in the 20th minute when Joleon Lescott handled Kalou's cross.

James Milner, starting for the first time since last month's Manchester derby, earned the game's first yellow card five minutes later after felling Florent Malouda in full flight.

Apart from the early Cech save, neither goalkeeper was being tested, hardly a surprise considering both sides' central strikers had yet to score a Premier League goal for their clubs.

Torres' drought for Chelsea was approaching eight hours and he had not had a sniff on what was his 27th birthday.

That changed in the 34th minute when Kalou presented him with a chance on his left foot from 10 yards, but the Spaniard's lack of confidence was palpable as Nigel de Jong slid in to intercept.

Vincent Kompany then put his body in the way of Frank Lampard's close-range finish.

Kalou almost broke the deadlock three minutes before the break when he brilliantly controlled Malouda's low cross before turning and shooting straight at Joe Hart.

The second half did not start promisingly but when City gifted the ball to Torres in the 51st minute, the striker set up a wonderful, flowing move that Malouda should have finished with a goal instead of sidefooting straight at Hart.

There was concern soon after when Terry stayed down after falling awkwardly.

The reinstated England captain appeared in agony as Capello looked on stony-faced but, following brief treatment, Terry was able to continue.

City came back into the game before De Jong was cautioned for a blatant body check on Essien.

Branislav Ivanovic was unlucky not to give Chelsea a 62nd-minute lead when his point-blank bullet header from Lampard's cross hit Kompany.

Edin Dzeko back-headed Milner's free-kick wide before Ramires was booked for clattering into Aleksander Kolarov.

With 20 minutes, remaining, Torres and Malouda were withdrawn for Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka.

Dzeko was booked for a foul on Luiz before Chelsea brought on Yury Zhirkov for Kalou.

A goal immediately followed as Luiz earned a 77th-minute free-kick wide on the left, Drogba whipped the ball in and the Brazilian glanced a header through the fingertips of Hart.

City sent on Adam Johnson for Milner before Barry saw yellow for a foul on Ramires.

Luiz went close to converting another free-kick from Drogba, who became the latest victim of a bookable offence when brought down by Kolarov.

City threw men forward but they were killed off in the second minute of stoppage time when Ramires danced through their defence before clipping beyond Hart.

There was still time for Luiz to blot his copybook with a late caution but the points were already secure.




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Telegraph:


Chelsea 2 Manchester City 0

By Henry Winter



All good teams boast a back-up strategy and Plan B for Brazilians certainly worked brilliantly for Chelsea at the Bridge on Sunday. Late goals from David Luiz and Ramires kept Chelsea’s title flame flickering after their initial tactical set-up failed to bring the best out of Fernando Torres, the birthday boy denied the gift of a goal he craved.

In leapfrogging City into third, the champions now lie within four points of Arsenal and nine of Manchester United. Chelsea, who have a game in hand over the leaders, must still travel to Old Trafford.

If Sir Alex Ferguson’s famously resilient side rightly remain favourites, nervy Arsenal certainly look vulnerable to a late Chelsea charge, particularly with Luiz and Ramires playing as vibrantly like this.

Luiz has quickly become a darling of the Bridge. The centre-half’s willingness to take risks in possession may haunt the sleep of his manager, Carlo Ancelotti, but the fans love it. The man who seems to use the same hairdresser as Carlos Valderrama certainly makes things happen.

Life’s not boring with Luiz about. At one point in the second half, Luiz tangled for possession with Edin Dzeko and his shorts came down.

It was not the full Sammy Nelson, not even a half-Nelson, but it provided more entertainment. He also scored a vital goal, heading home after City had resisted Chelsea for 78 minutes. His fellow-Brazilian, and former Benfica team-mate, added the second.

Ramires’ goal was a gem, weaving through City’s defence, and a slight surprise as the No 7 shirt had been deemed jinxed here in recent years; previous incumbents included Adrian Mutu, Winston Bogarde, Bernard Lamborde and Andrei Shevchenko. When he arrived for £18m, Ramires resembled a little boy lost in the big, bad playground of English football, a paper aeroplane in the wind-tunnel of the physical, pacy Premier League. Ramires settled in, put in some big tackles, and looks increasingly integral to Chelsea’s future.

As should Carlo Ancelotti be. The day began with Chelsea’s chief executive, Ron Gourlay, making some unnecessary comments on radio about the Italian’s future, saying that judgement would be made this summer. Ancelotti, one of the game’s good guys and an excellent manager, deserves an extension to a contract that expires in 2012, not the lukewarm words of his employer. At least, Roman Abramovich was here on Sunday and appeared to be enjoying it.

While Chelsea should rightly celebrate victory, the Torres conundrum persists. Abramovich’s £50m signing had the starting XI seemingly shaped to his design; Nicolas Anelka and Didier Drogba both began sitting behind Ancelotti, although they arrived midway through the second half and helped turn the game.

On being removed, Torres cut a disconsolate figure sitting, hunched, on the bench but he should look across town for inspiration. At Arsenal, Dennis Bergkamp took eight games to score, and Thierry Henry another game, and they became prolific idols. Torres will come good.

City will hope Edin Dzeko also begins delivering, although he was an isolated figure for much of this game as Chelsea dominated. City were missing Carlos Tévez, suffering with a slight groin problem, so blunting their cutting edge, seeing only a Yaya Touré shot in the first half. but they lacked none of their usual defensive resilience.

Vincent Kompany was terrific again. Defenders are rarely celebrated in the end-of-season individual awards but the Belgian deserves a mention alongside the likes of Nemanja Vidic.

Kompany had to be on his guard as Micah Richards ventured forth frequently, and Ashley Cole was quick to target the area vacated by the marauding City right-back.

Chelsea had their chances and Torres never stopped showing for the ball. He needs to regain that burning acceleration that saw off opponents. In a listless first period, Torres was caught by Nigel de Jong in a sprint over 15 yards.

Alongside Torres in their 4-4-2 was Kalou, getting into good positions but failing to hit the target. He could have earned a penalty, his cross hitting Joleon Lescott’s left arm, but Chris Foy waved play on. When Kompany then slipped, Kalou swivelled and shot straight at Joe Hart.

The game continued to meander through the second half, the song remaining the same, of Chelsea control and City blockade. Torres was working hard but the eye kept being drawn back to Luiz. He linked with Lampard, creating a chance for Branislav Ivanovic, who headed straight at Kompany. Abramovich swung a fist through the air in frustration.

City’s industry was immense, Aleksandar Kolarov and Nigel De Jong both throwing themselves in the way of Michael Essien’s attempted pass. City’s attacks were limited, although Dzeko flicked a header just wide.

Luiz was more and more visible, joining in the widespread sympathetic applause as Torres was substituted in the 70th minute. The Brazilian moved across to shake hands with the departing Spaniard.

Still Chelsea pressed. Still Kompany stood firm, heading away a Lampard free-kick. Luiz was making more frequent visits to Hart’s area, even geeing up the Matthew Harding end to crank up the volume.

He soon sent the noise off the dial. When Drogba swerved in a free-kick from the left, Luiz darted in between Kompany and Kolarov. The header still needed to be directed superbly, angled down past Hart.

As Chelsea celebrated, Mancini was forced to change course. He had planned to park the bus with two more defenders, Dedryck Boyata and Jerome Boateng, but had to release the handbrake. Mario Balotelli and Adam Johnson came on but the most dangerous wave flooding across the pitch was pure royal blue.

Ashley Cole had an effort blocked before Ramires struck an elegant second in stoppage time. Gliding past Lescott and Kolarov, Ramires swept the ball past Hart. Brazil 2, City 0.




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Guardian:


David Luiz's goal helps Chelsea to third in the table above Manchester City

Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge



The persistence of Chelsea was outdone only by the patience of the crowd. This was one of those occasions when expensive sides seem intent on producing shoddy football. The victors can be faulted only slightly. Even when they were caught up in the dreariness, Chelsea still had a desire to attack and deserved the late goals. Manchester City did not change their conservative stance until it was too late. The injured Carlos Tevez was badly missed but a club with City's funds is supposed to have redoubtable alternatives.

In a sense they do. Edin Dzeko cost £27m when bought from Wolfsburg in January but is yet to score in the League. It might be of help to him and any other attacker if there was more freedom and attacking intent from City. It is Chelsea who have at least the potential to dominate. Fernando Torres is still to score since the £50m move from Liverpool but there was enough flair around him to deter the crowd from brooding about his work.

The scorer of the opening goal, for instance, must reinforce the belief that Chelsea can be rejuvenated so that they stay to the fore even during a time of partial reconstruction. David Luiz is an inspired recruit. He cost some £21m from Benfica and the purchasers are right to think they have pulled off a coup even at that substantial price.

The Brazilian looks capable of everything, whether it is trenchant defending, skilful bursts into midfield or, in this case, the scoring of an opening goal. With 79 minutes gone he headed home a free-kick delivered by the substitute Didier Drogba. It will not come easy for the Ivorian to accept that, at 32, he must spend more time on the bench but it may be that he can be an asset even if there is limited time at his disposal. Drogba, of course, might feel he can displace Torres, although there is no indication that the manager, Carlo Ancelotti, has lost even the merest trace of his faith in the striker.

The equanimity comes more readily when results are pleasing. Chelsea may be revitalising themselves and, as if David Luiz's impact did not suffice, the value of Ramires is gradually being disclosed. He has seemed diligent, with a bad habit of collecting yellow cards that gives him seven following the caution here, but there was a dazzling glimpse of other attributes in stoppage time. The midfielder beat both Joleon Lescott and Aleksandr Kolarov before putting a stylish shot past the goalkeeper Joe Hart.

Beyond the outcome itself the atmosphere around Chelsea was bright. Irrespective of who identifies and signs players, recruitment is going well at present. Ancelotti, in any case, looks like a person who had never supposed he would wield absolute power. After all, he used to work for Silvio Berlusconi's Milan. At City, on the other hand, the issue of squad-building is liable to be a topic of recrimination.

The quality of the displays is far from a fair reflection of the sums committed to the project. After the epic fees it is disconcerting to watch what again appeared to be a run-of-the-mill team. Roberto Mancini is probably determined to keep vanity at bay but there is a fear that he has gone too far with this puritanism. City, for instance, mustered one goal in two matches as Dynamo Kyiv eliminated them from the Europa League.

Dashing football is not necessarily a luxury or proof of naivety. City, with their conservative manner, have scored markedly fewer Premier League goals than any of the other sides in the top four. Yaya Touré is an impressive all-round footballer but one has to wonder if City meant to buy a gifted holding player and turn him into an attacking midfielder. At Stamford Bridge the role seemed not to suit the Ivorian and it may be that any impact has come against poorer opponents. Touré was replaced before the end.

Elsewhere it was a conundrum that someone with the ability of David Silva was never a source of deep anxiety for Chelsea. A balance has to be struck but City's owners must have had in mind spectacle and entertainment that would see their team admired, even if a little resentment of their affluence lingered. Although the very idea makes no sense, Mancini looked hell-bent on putting together a diligent line-up that are hard to overcome.

That is a starting point but the tolerance of the owners will be unusual indeed if they do not begin to wonder whether there might be another manager who can go about his business with more dash and personality. In the light of the situation overall it was to be anticipated that José Mourinho would be tipped as a prospective manager of City.

He already has a job, of course, at a club of some standing and, if Real Madrid should part with him, Mourinho is also pictured as a successor to Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United. Even so, Mancini may have to introduce panache if he is not to find himself expendable.




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Mail:


Chelsea 2 Manchester City 0: King David is head boy as Luiz gets jump on negative Mancini

By Matt Lawton



At one stage at Stamford Bridge on Sunday, Carlo Ancelotti actually appeared to be in a rather precarious position.

The day had started with Ron Gourlay, the Chelsea chief executive, seemingly suggesting the Italian’s future would be up for review in the summer and the pressure intensified when Fernando Torres trudged off after another fruitless 70 minutes.

Up in his private box, Roman Abramovich did not look happy. There was a shake of the head, the Russian clearly frustrated by the fact that his £50million striker has now failed to score in seven games.

It was all the more significant because Abramovich has made so few appearances at Stamford Bridge since the turn of the year. Wednesday’s goalless draw with Copenhagen was his first and this was his second. He clearly felt he was not getting his money’s worth.

But then came a more than satisfying consolation prize. Two goals from the two other players Chelsea’s owner has spent a sizeable sum of money on in the last 12 months — first from the wonderful David Luiz and then from the rapidly improving Ramires. The boys from Brazil had served their paymaster well. Their manager, too.

In fairness to Chelsea, and indeed Ancelotti, it was no less than they deserved. The three points that edged them into third place were a reward for their ambition against an ultra-defensive Manchester City.

If Roberto Mancini did throw a suitcase at Mario Balotelli after his red card in the Europa League last Thursday, he did not throw much at Chelsea. Certainly not the kitchen sink.

True, he was hamstrung by the injury that kept Carlos Tevez on the sidelines. But the approach he employed was depressingly negative, not least when it came to the restrictions he imposed on his full-backs.

While Ashley Cole and Branislav Ivanovic were forever attacking down the flanks, Micah Richards and Aleksandar Kolarov too often had to suppress their attacking instincts.

There were some fine performances. Vincent Kompany was superb at centre-half while Nigel de Jong was a destructive force in midfield. The irrepressible James Milner also impressed.

But the most telling moment for City came when Yaya Toure picked up an injury that forced him to come off. Mancini was intending to send on Dedryck Boyata until Luiz scored his 78th-minute goal and forced City’s manager to be a touch more adventurous, unleashing Balotelli and Adam Johnson from the bench instead.

Compare that to Ancelotti. Not content with a goalless draw, he made two bold changes eight minutes before the breakthrough came from Luiz. Off came Torres and Florent Malouda and on went Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka.

While it was Luiz who earned the free-kick, for a foul by Richards, it was Drogba who delivered the ball that the South American met with a quite brilliant glancing header. On Sunday's evidence, Drogba looks a better bet than Torres at the moment. He posed a real threat from the moment he came on, his more physical approach putting City’s back four under far more pressure.

For Torres, it was much more difficult and not just because he too often appeared isolated despite the best efforts of Ancelotti to provide him with the service that has been so lacking. This time Torres partnered Salomon Kalou and while the latter started brightly, they still struggled to click as a partnership.

In defence of all those who have played alongside Torres, the Spaniard’s failure to score in 498 minutes of football for Chelsea is not just down to them. Torres still lacks the explosive acceleration that has been missing since he picked up a nasty knee injury last season.

That said, it was not the principal reason why his best opportunity of the match was denied by a superb interception from De Jong.

It might have looked as though Torres hesitated but the ball from Kalou, a delightful flick, just lacked the weight to get him away from the Dutchman and so enable him to shoot with his left foot.

It was one of a number of chances Chelsea had in the first half. Kalou might have scored had he not been brought down inadvertently by Ramires and a fine challenge from Kompany also prevented Torres from breaking his duck.

There was little in response from City, although that had much to do with the sheer excellence of Luiz and John Terry, who are forming quite a partnership. They presented an impenetrable barrier in front of the dependable Petr Cech.

There was an anxious moment in the 53rd minute when Terry collided with Toure. Anxious, anyway, for the watching Fabio Capello. One can imagine the thoughts that passed through the England manager’s mind. The embarrassment of having to go back to Frank Lampard and dare tell him that, despite the ridiculous events of the last week, he was really rather impressed with his performance as captain against Denmark.

But Terry is nothing if not courageous and what pain there was soon subsided. You got the feeling on Sunday that Ashley Cole could have shot his captain and he still would have played on.

Somebody in the crowd was directing a green laser at Chris Foy, but it did not distract the referee enough to stop him awarding the all important free-kick for Chelsea.

Once Luiz had put Chelsea in front, City had to attack with more urgency and it was when they were chasing the game in second half stoppage time that Ramires doubled the home side’s advantage.

It was a terrific goal, the Brazilian first surging past Joleon Lescott and then Kolarov before driving a right-foot shot beyond the reach of Joe Hart.

Pressure off Chelsea. Pressure off Ancelotti. For now, anyway.



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Mirror:


Chelsea 2-0 Man City

By Martin Lipton



He arrived as the most expensive afterthought in history, the £21million signing who almost slipped under the radar as Fernando Torres landed at Chelsea.

But while the Spaniard is looking like an Iberian Andriy Shevchenko, the latest Roman Abramovich vanity buy, David Luiz has made himself a Stamford Bridge hero.

Torres has now played 498 minutes for Chelsea, across seven games, without ever really threatening to get off the mark, the £50million man experiencing a 27th birthday that he is unlikely to have celebrated.

The former Liverpool man appears increasingly unhappy, his continued presence in the side a signal that Carlo Ancelotti - who could have done without the breakfast intervention of chief executive Ron Gourlay - would rather upset the balance of the team than risk alienating his owner.

Yet last night, Luiz did more than just reinforce his growing status as the latest SW6 pin-up boy, imperious in his own box, assured bringing the ball out, deadly at the other end.

Just after an unimpressed Abramovich was left shaking his head at Torres' latest early exit, after 70 minutes of unfocused and uncomfortable toil, Luiz transformed the mood of the Bridge.

Quite what Luiz was doing playing wide on the left wing with 15 minutes left, to draw the needless foul from Micah Richards, probably only the Brazilian knows.

And when Didier Drogba, on for the labouring Torres, drilled in the ensuing free-kick, it was almost inevitable that Luiz would be the man to get the vital touch, six yards out, and help put Ancelotti's team back above City for the first time since December 11.

The victory, one which will have helped Ancelotti far more than Gourlay's suggestion he would be "judged" at the end of the season, was deserved, too, confirmed as Ramires slalomed his way through a disintegrating City defence to set the seal on it in stoppage time.

Not that Chelsea were impressive. They weren't.

Indeed, for long periods, with Torres running down blind alleys, Chelsea had plenty of the ball but precious little penetration, stymied with relative ease by City's defensive organisation, as Vincent Kompany and Joleon Lescott stood firm.

Too often the ball was transferred ponderously slowly, much to Ancelotti's evident chagrin, with Torres decidedly unimpressive, nothing like the player Abramovich thought he was bringing to the club for that record outlay.

Speculative and unlikely off-target efforts from Florent Malouda, Ashley Cole and an initially subdued Frank Lampard, were signs of a lack of certainty and when there was a real sight of Joe Hart's goal, Ramires and Salomon Kalou - the latest to be handed the hospital pass of trying to make Torres look good - managed to trip each other.

Kalou, spinning smartly on a Malouda cross, did shoot at the England keeper and at the start of the second period, after a rare positive moment from Torres, Malouda wasted a great opportunity with a tame finish.

Luckily for Chelsea, City, so lacking in ambition, so limited in their game-plan, so badly lacking groin victim Carlos Tevez, could not hurt them.

While Yaya Toure brought an early low save out of Petr Cech down to his right, the lumbering Edin Dzeko demonstrated just how damaging was the absence of Tevez - and the effort Mario Balotelli's red card against Kiev had forced them to expend - and John Terry and Luiz were able to dominate their limited forays forward.

Luiz made three vital interceptions as City worked their way into the box while at the other end Kompany got lucky in blocking Branislav Ivanovic's point-blank header.

But Torres' departure, with Nicolas Anelka also entering the fray, saw Roberto Mancini's team forced ever deeper, leading to the key moment as Richards' indiscretion was punished.

City did not have the wherewithal to respond, even though Mancinio sent on bad boy Balotelli and Adam Johnson as desperation measures.

And while they had a late flurry, it never really looked as if it would force an error from Luiz and Terry, shrugging off a knee knock.

Ramires ensured the points when he received from Michael Essien, went past Joleon Lescott and Aleksandr Kolarov and once more gave Hart no chance, a terrific goal worthy of a far better game.

Not that the performance bothered anybody.

Chelsea, despite Torres, are on the up and up. City, suddenly, slipping and vulnerable.

Chelsea (4-4-2): Cech 6; Ivanovic 6, Luiz 8, Terry 8, Cole 6; Ramires 7, Lampard 5, Essien 5, Malouda 6 (Anelka, 70, 6), Torres 5 (Drogba, 70, 6), Kalou 7 (Zhirkov, 77, 6)

Manchester City (4-5-1): Hart 7; Richards 7, Kompany 8, Lescott 7, Kolarov 6; Milner 7 (Johnson, 81, 6) , De Jong 7, Toure 6 (Balotelli, 81, 5), Barry 6, Silva 6; Dzeko 5

Referee: Chris Foy

Hero: Luiz - Commanding at the back, clinical up front

Villain: Dzeko - Offered nothing other than a flick header wide



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Sun:


Chelsea 2 Man City 0

From SHAUN CUSTIS at Stamford Bridge


DAVID LUIZ has a dodgy barnet but he is proving to be a cut above Fernando Torres.

The Chelsea hair-o slipped under the radar when he signed for £23million from Benfica because of all the hullabaloo over Torres' £50m move from Liverpool.

But Brazilian ace Luiz has become a cult figure at The Bridge, while Torres is a forlorn one.

Luiz was outstanding at the back. But, more importantly, it was his header from a free-kick by Torres' replacement Didier Drogba which set Chelsea on the way to victory and put them back in the title race.

The Blues only got going once the misfiring Torres, celebrating his 27th birthday, was hauled off.

He has now notched up seven appearances amounting to 498 minutes without a goal for his new club.

The Spaniard did not look a happy man when his number finally came up but he could not argue with the decision.

Mind you, he was not the only striker who failed to justify his existence.

City have one of their own misfiring in Edin Dzeko, who has still to hit a Premier League goal since his £27m arrival.

Dzeko was not helped by City's tactics, which were about getting a point rather than trying for the three that would have enhanced their own title prospects.

Without Carlos Tevez, who failed a morning fitness test on a groin injury, they simply ooze negativity.

The club spends hundreds of millions of pounds but are hardly the great entertainers.

It is not in Roberto Mancini's nature.

The defensive traditions of Italy's Serie A have stifled the life out of him.

For a long time, they seemed to have had the same effect on Carlo Ancelotti, his former Italy team-mate and one-time arch-rival from the days when Ancelotti was managing AC Milan and Mancini was in charge of Inter.

Chelsea started with £185m of talent on display to City's £179m.

But they cancelled each other out and it was pretty dull stuff.

An early shot from Yaya Toure, which brought an excellent save from Petr Cech, offered promise but it was a false dawn.

Then Salomon Kalou fell over his own player, Ramires, as he shaped to shoot for Chelsea and Nigel De Jong made a brilliant sliding challenge as the hesitant Torres was poised to pull the trigger.

Yet it was heart-in-the-mouth time for John Terry and watching England boss Fabio Capello just after the break.

Terry made a stretching tackle on Toure but, having got the ball, was left crumpled in a heap holding his right knee.

For a moment it seemed Terry was in serious trouble and would not only have to go off but could be out of the England squad for this weekend's Euro 2012 qualifier against Wales in Cardiff.

That would have been a nightmare for Capello, who has made such a pig's ear of the captaincy issue over the past week.

Terry struggled to his feet and was limping around for a good 10 minutes without ever being interested in having the ball.

But he kept on going and the crowd's chant of 'One England captain' spurred him on.

Chelsea went close when Branislav Ivanovic climbed to get in a header but saw the ball strike Vincent Kompany and bounce wide.

Then Dzeko had a rare chance. But his attempted back-flick header from James Milner's free-kick went wide.

With 20 minutes left, the No 9 went up and Torres stared at it for a moment, pondering over whether his Chelsea career could get any worse.

He trotted off chuntering, while up in the stand there was a shake of the head from disgruntled owner Roman Abramovich.

Who knows whether it was the decision to sub him or the thought that he might have blown £50m which was exercising his mind.

With Drogba and Nicolas Anelka now on, Chelsea were a far greater threat.

And with 12 minutes left they won a free-kick on the left, after Luiz was fouled by Micah Richards.

Drogba whipped it over and, despite the fact Luiz was being held by Aleksandar Kolarov, Luiz managed to get his shaggy mop to the ball.

Joe Hart threw himself across his goal in a bid to keep the effort out. He got his left hand to it but could not prevent it fizzing across the line.

It was Luiz's second goal for the Blues and both of them have been hugely significant.

He also scored the equaliser in the 2-1 win over Manchester United at the beginning of the month.

Denied the point he wanted, Mancini had little option but to throw on bad boy Mario Balotelli and winger Adam Johnson to try to salvage the situation.

Yet it was Chelsea who were in the ascendancy. Luiz almost scored again from a second Drogba free-kick, only for the ball this time narrowly to elude him in the six-yard box

Ramires, another Brazilian who cost a princely sum at £22m, had the final word.

He collected Michael Essien's through pass and superbly danced through a tired City defence in true Samba style before finishing emphatically with a right-foot shot that gave Hart no chance.

Chelsea's bid to retain their title was shot three months ago and there were even concerns that they would miss out on a place in the Champions League.

Now they are up to third and closing on the top. The force is with them.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

copenhagen 0-0





Independent:

Ancelotti's men stroll onward after quiet night at the Bridge

Chelsea 0 Copenhagen 0 (Chelsea win 2-0 on aggregate)

By Sam Wallace at Stamford Bridge



Resplendent in their daring pink away shirts at Stamford Bridge last night, the Copenhagen players ended up looking like the guests who turn up for the party in fancy dress only to discover that it is an altogether more sober affair than they had anticipated.

This was not a Champions League tie that will be remembered at Chelsea as a classic, rather it was a slow, often frustrating trudge, into the Champions League quarter-finals for Carlo Ancelotti's team. They got the job done but that was about it and after the renewing effect of their return to form in the Premier League this was not a performance to raise hopes dramatically for the competition's latter stages.

Nevertheless, yesterday was a year to the day since Chelsea were beaten at home by Jose Mourinho's Internazionale in the last 16 of the competition and were forced to contemplate some uncomfortable home truths. At least they are in the draw for the last eight of the competition tomorrow even if it was not pretty last night.

The official statistics said that Chelsea had just 45 per cent of the possession and 25 attempts on the Copenhagen goal. Unfortunately for Ancelotti's side only seven of them were on target. The two Copenhagen central defenders, Mathias Jorgensen and Mikael Antonsson, were much better this time around but for the most part Copenhagen were begging to be put out of their misery.

Chelsea huffed and puffed yet never delivered the knockout blow. Nicolas Anelka, Didier Drogba and John Obi Mikel all froze when presented with good chances and Ancelotti even sent on Fernando Torres as a late substitute who, despite looking sharper, can now chalk up his sixth game at his new club without a goal.

As well as Torres, Florent Malouda and Michael Essien were left on the bench and came on late in the game. All three were being rested with Manchester City on Sunday in mind when Chelsea go for their third straight Premier League win. Last night they fell back on those two Anelka goals in the first leg almost three weeks earlier to see them through.

Afterwards, Ancelotti announced himself to be satisfied with the performance. He will be relieved that he has delivered for Roman Abramovich the prospect of success in this competition again. Mourinho is in that quarter-final draw, too, but that is a problem that can wait for another day.

If he can avoid Barcelona and Real Madrid, the two remaining English sides and possibly the defending champions Internazionale in the next round then Ancelotti can consider himself a lucky manager. After the season he has had he probably deserves a bit of good fortune tomorrow.

Last night, the opposition were not up to much at all and the 36,454 crowd meant that Stamford Bridge was far from full. Aside from a glorious free-kick by Copenhagen's Senegalese striker Dame N'Doye, which hit Petr Cech's post in the first half, it was hard to remember a single notable attack from the Danes who had just two shots on target all match.

In Torres' absence, Drogba did pretty much everything but score before the break. He has not scored for Chelsea since 24 January and the anxiety is starting to show. In the first half, he was much more assertive in the Copenhagen half but was not presented with the chances to score himself.

He played a smart ball behind the Copenhagen right-back Oscar Wendt for Ashley Cole to run on to in the eighth minute and, with few options in the penalty area, Cole only put his shot into the side netting. Before the break, with Yuri Zhirkov on the left and Ramires on the right, Chelsea put the occasional good move together.

The best of them started with a searching low cross-field ball from Ramires on the right to Zhirkov on the left who played in Anelka with a first-time pass. His shot was saved by Johan Wiland in the Copenhagen goal. In two passes, Chelsea had gone from back to front and cut all the way through their opposition.

By the second half it seemed like just a matter of time until Chelsea scored. Instead they discovered new and varied ways to miss the chances that came their way. Drogba misjudged the ball at the back post from Jose Bosingwa's cross. Anelka lost his nerve when through on goal and doubled back. Mikel struck the bar with a header from just a yard out.

They were a good deal less ruthless than they had been two weeks before in Copenhagen. The Danish champions hung on grimly waiting for the moment when they were put out of their misery.

With little more than 20 minutes left to play, Ancelotti sent on Torres for Anelka to try to liven up what was becoming a non-event. In Anelka's long, grumpy walk to the bench you could tell exactly what he thought about the decision. Torres saw little of the ball at first but a burst down the left side and a shot clipped with his right foot had a glimmer of promise about it.

The Danish fans in the Shed celebrated this draw like a victory and well they might given how far off the pace their team had looked in the first leg. As for Chelsea, the last eight of the Champions League has become a basic requirement over recent years and they must pray that the draw is kind to them. Ancelotti will also have to hope that his players respond when the stakes are higher.


Man of the match: Ivanovic.

Match rating: 4/10.

Referee: S O Moen (Nor).

Attendance: 36,454.



====================================================



Guardian:



Unconvincing Chelsea ease into last eight against FC Copenhagen

Chelsea 0 FC Copenhagen 0


Chelsea's progress to the quarter-finals of the Champions League had so low a profile that it verged on invisibility. With the tie beyond Copenhagen after the 2-0 defeat at home, the Danish side came to Stamford Bridge determined to make off with whatever credit was still attainable from the tie. In the latter part of the second half they were even striving to win the match.

In truth they lacked the means to do that but Chelsea's finishing was so vague that it took the introduction of Fernando Torres from the bench to call upon Johan Wiland for a save of note. Most of the crowd of 36,454 had to be tolerant at least, with only the visiting supporters discovering any kind of pleasure in the fixture.

It may gnaw at Chelsea that it took Torres to raise hopes but the other forwards also showed quality, even when it vanished once they were in sight of the posts. There was effort despite the fact that a place in the last eight was, to all intents and purposes, Chelsea's before the sides even emerged from the dressing room.

It was typical of Copenhagen's attitude that, for instance, Oscar Wendt should pull off a tackle on Nicolas Anelka when the Frenchman seemed to have gone clear moments from half-time. The French striker differed from his team-mates by being a little sharper but Wiland saved a mediocre shot when he went through in the 21st minute.

The visitors had to retreat eventually but are to be saluted for opening as if all their hopes were intact. Even their manager, Stale Solbakken, looked frantic throughout. Without such spirit Copenhagen would not have got this far in the tournament. It must have been galling, too, that they had gone into the first game with Chelsea while lacking competitive match practice because of a mid-season break. Their more recent exertions enlivened them here.

Carlo Ancelotti's side, for their part, have begun to feel better about themselves, with improvement witnessed in the Premier League. While reconstruction is in progress, Torres was marginalised and David Luiz is ineligible. The old guard were therefore presented with an opportunity to illustrate their continuing relevance.

Copenhagen had a keen appetite of their own and came close to a goal in the first half when Dame N'Doye hit the post with a free-kick after 26 minutes. There had, all the same, been gusto from Chelsea and Didier Drogba, perhaps eager to emphasise his status as a centre-forward while Torres sat on the bench, was keen to link with Anelka.

It was Drogba who released Ashley Cole in the eighth minute, only for the left-back to fire into the side netting. The Ivorian then adopted a more direct approach with a 30-yarder that called for a save by Wiland. Yuri Zhirkov, starting a second consecutive match while Florent Malouda pays the price for a loss of form, might have put Chelsea ahead but missed the target after being set up by Drogba and Cole.

Copenhagen's desire to compete was laudable and accusations of complacency were not to be levelled against Ancelotti's side. If anything, they were enlivened by the keenness of the visitors. Chelsea's fault was leniency. Mikel John Obi hit the bar with a header following an Anelka flick. The trait was almost wilful at times, with Anelka appearing to go through on the right only to double back and invite a challenge in the 50th minute. Before that Drogba had not been able to convert José Bosingwa's low cross at the far post.

Copenhagen, for their part, were as determined at the least to leave this stadium feeling proud of themselves. Indeed, the desire to score had increased as the second half developed. That wish to attack should, in principle, have offered scope to their opponents but Chelsea's reaction was largely one of exasperation.

The crowd was tetchy. If Copenhagen's adventurousness was not irritating enough they had to study a move between Ramires and Frank Lampard that came to no more than an aimless ball from the Englishman that ran off-target. The introduction of Torres for Anelka at least awakened enthusiasm in an exasperating game.

The outcome did not matter in itself while Copenhagen were failing to score but it would have been happier for the crowd and the players if there had been a further demonstration that Chelsea are on the rise. Even so, a berth in the quarter-finals does carry status.

There is also the pragmatic consideration that Manchester City, one of their rivals for a top-four place in the Premier League, arrive at this stadium on Sunday. Torres was being allowed some rest for that fixture and the match will also have weighed on the starting XI against Copenhagen.





====================================================




Telegraph:


Chelsea 0 FC Copenhagen 0


By Henry Winter



Chelsea were so in charge of this tie, so enjoying the comfort blanket of their two goals from the away leg, that by the end their main aim seemed to be to set up Fernando Torres for a nerve-dispelling debut goal. Cries of “shoot” arose whenever Torres entered the final third.

The Spaniard began on the bench, keeping him fresh to start against Manchester City on Sunday, allowing Nicolas Anelka (for 68 minutes) and particularly Didier Drogba (for 90) to catch the eye here. Drogba, barring a wretched shot late on that almost decapitated a linesman, slightly more resembled the heavyweight force of old.

Drogba’s malaria appears to have lost its inhibiting effect while Torres’ arrival seems a challenge the Ivorian is keen to face. Whether they can forge a potent partnership remains to be seen.

Far more understanding seemed to exist between Torres and Frank Lampard, the attacking midfielder who selflessly eschewed a good chance himself to pass to the £50 million man.

Torres failed to exploit his team-mate’s largesse. He was not alone. Chelsea had 25 attempts on goal, seven of them on target. They would have broken through but for the excellence of Johan Wiland, Copenhagen’s goalkeeper.

For all the focus on Torres’ travails, there were glimpses of the old class, a sudden burst of pace to take him clear of Copenhagen’s defence and then, moments later, a wonderful threaded pass to release Lampard. Torres will come good. In whose company is unclear. Probably not Drogba’s. Torres is likely to be paired with Anelka against City.

Before then, Chelsea have the intrigue of tomorrow’s Champions League draw. The hard work having been done in the Parken Stadium, Chelsea progressed with the minimum of fuss to the quarters.

They can meet the Premier League’s other representatives, Manchester United or Tottenham Hotspur, or any of Barcelona, Shakhtar Donetsk, Inter Milan, Schalke and Real Madrid. Jose Mourinho back at Stamford Bridge again? That would be special.

Particularly for a former Atlético Madrid player like Torres, taking on Mourinho’s Real. Torres will hope to regain his sharpness quickly, beginning on Sunday. He will start, manager Carlo Ancelotti confirmed. Unlike last night when the cameras inevitably panned towards the dugout where Torres was sitting, hardly filled with the joys of spring.

Michael Essien and Florent Malouda sat nearby, exuding bonhomie but Torres was subdued. Chelsea’s £50million man became animated only when told to warm up early in the second half, when he was greeted with a standing ovation from the Matthew Harding Stand.

Until midway through the second half, Torres had a watching brief.

Although there were no goals, there was much to enjoy. Chelsea’s first attack set the tone. After Ashley Cole and Yuri Zhirkov combined well, Drogba back-heeled the ball back to Cole. The England full-back promptly teed up Zhirkov, who dragged his shot wide.

Chelsea kept venturing upfield, often with Zhirkov prominent. The Russian soon collected a fine cross-field pass from Ramires, such an improved figure of late.

Zhirkov delayed the release of the ball until Anelka was gliding behind the Danes’ defence. The timing was perfect all round. Anelka continued down the inside-left channel and flicked out his right foot, attempting to steer the ball around Wiland.

Copenhagen’s excellent goalkeeper saved well. Not for the last time.

Yet it was Petr Cech who had the biggest alarm of the first half.

When John Terry caught Dame N’Doye 25 yards out, the Senegalese striker took the free-kick himself, wrong-footing Cech but failing to avoid the post.

Copenhagen fans loved it, chorusing, “can you hear the Chelsea sing, no-o, no-o”.

The visitors were in good voice, having greeted their bald coach with a chant in perfect English of “he’s got no hair but we don’t care, Stale Solbakken”.

Little was going to quieten the visitors, even their team’s slightly cautious approach. The Danish champions, resplendent in their pink garb, enjoyed 54 per cent of the possession overall, yet Chelsea had most of the better chances. The half finished with Drogba demanding a good save from Wiland.

Chelsea continued to be profligate as the second period unfolded.

Drogba side-footed wide from a superb Jose Bosingwa cross. Then a game of head tennis saw the ball carry from Terry to Anelka to John Obi Mikel, whose effort clipped the top of the bar.

Drogba then played a magnificent pass, releasing Anelka down the inside-right channel. The Frenchman decided against shooting early, allowing Mikael Antonsson to make an excellent sliding block. A few sighs of frustration rolled around the Bridge.

Drogba was then cautioned for a challenge on Martin Vingaard. All the while, Torres was warming up vigorously, his stretching exercises royally followed by the Chelsea fans.

And then came the £50 million man. Torres was given 22 minutes against a tiring defence as Anelka trooped off. Torres was clearly desperate to score.

When poor control from Mathias Zanka Jorgensen gifted the ball to Torres, the substitute had only one intention and that was shooting, despite the massed pink ranks in front of him. His shot eventually deflected wide.

To the delight of the hugely supportive Chelsea fans, Torres was beginning to find his stride, playing slightly deeper than Drogba but suddenly showing all that old pace to destroy Copenhagen’s back-line.

His shot failed to beat Wiland, the sub-plot of the night, although the main theme was Chelsea qualifying for the quarters.




======================================================




Mail:


Chelsea 0 FC Copenhagen 0 (agg 2-0): Blues keep the dream alive and book their place in another Champions League quarter-final

By Matt Barlow



Chelsea negotiated the first anniversary of Jose's Revenge with their European dream in one piece and for that Carlo Ancelotti will be thankful.

On this day last year, Ancelotti was dealing with the debris of a premature Champions League exit at the hands of Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan.

It was a painful defeat for the Italian, a man of AC Milan stock against one of his bitterest rivals and it sparked crisis meetings at Chelsea.

This year the first knock-out round proved a more enjoyable experience for Ancelotti, even if his team did make a meal of last night's second leg against Copenhagen.

They wasted chances galore but became the third Barclays Premier League team through to tomorrow's draw for the quarter finals.

'Last year we were crying at this moment and today we are happy,' said Ancelotti. 'We have to go for a fantastic party.'

Aside from the mediocre display of finishing, Ancelotti can be satisfied, as can Fabio Capello, who was at Stamford Bridge to check on John Terry, the man he plans to reinstate as England captain for next Saturday's game against Wales and beyond.

Terry gave Capello no reason to doubt his decision and left the pitch thumping his chest in pride as Chelsea fans sang: 'One England captain'. His task was to keep complacency at bay and he completed it, even if there were a couple of jittery moments.

Dame N'Doye curled a free-kick over the defensive wall and hit a post in the first half. But for a turn of the head, Petr Cech did not move. The Danes also had decent opportunities late on but failed to transform them into shots. The rest of the game was a procession of Chelsea chances, easily created and then readily wasted.

With Sunday's Dame N'Doye curled a free-kick over the defensive wall and hit a post in the first half. But for a turn of the head, Petr Cech did not move. The Danes also had decent opportunities late on but failed to transform them into shots.

The rest of the game was a procession of Chelsea chances, easily created and then readily wasted. With Sunday's game against Manchester City in mind, Ancelotti started with Fernando Torres on the bench and sent him on for the last 22 minutes to replace Nicolas Anelka. It was a switch cheered by the crowd but it did not impress Anelka, who scowled his way off and could barely bring himself to accept his manager's hand on the touchline.

Torres almost struck within seconds with a deflected effort, which drifted just wide, and went close again but the £50million striker could not break his Chelsea duck. Ancelotti will not complain if the Spaniard saves his goals for later in the competition. Perhaps against Mourinho's Real Madrid who also progressed last night. Carlo's Revenge?

'Our squad is strong enough to win it,' said the Chelsea manager.

'The players are fit and fresh because they have been asleep for two months. The feeling is good. We have to wait for the draw. Barcelona is the most dangerous team but we are calm and we are quiet.'

Copenhagen's charismatic boss Stale Solbakken believes Chelsea are one of the few teams with the muscle to overpower Barca, although they will have to address their shooting if they are to win the European Cup for the first time.

One positive for Ancelotti was Didier Drogba, who looked more mobile and energetic than he has in weeks since contracting malaria.

The Ivory Coast striker threaded an intricate pass inside right back Oscar Wendt to find Ashley Cole, early in the game, only for the England left back to set the tone by crashing the ball into the sidenetting from an impossible angle.

In front of goal, Drogba misfired like his team-mates, sweeping his best chance wide early in the second half and he was booked as his irritation boiled over. The caution may return to haunt him. Anelka had supplied the clinical touch in the first leg in Denmark, scoring both in the 2-0 win, and thought he had killed the tie midway through the first half. Moving on to a pass from Zhirkov, he took his shot early, trying to poke it low past the goalkeeper but Johan Wiland dropped a left-hand on to the ball and jammed it into the ground.

John Mikel Obi went closest, with a header against the bar after a corner by Frank Lampard.

As frustration increased, Ancelotti's patience frayed. He snatched the ball as it bounced into touch, tucked it under an arm and argued with the fourth official about the award of a throw-in.

By the end, he was more relaxed and able to joke about a pre-match bust-up with Torres. 'He was very upset because he wanted to play,' said Ancelotti. 'We had a big argument before the game. He took his shirt and put it on the peg where the team sits. It was an unbelievable situation.' He laughed as he added: 'You can believe it if you want.'


MATCH FACTS

Chelsea (4-4-2): Cech 6; Bosingwa 6, Ivanovic 6, Terry 7, Cole 7; Ramires 8, Lampard 6, Mikel 6 (Essien 84min), Zhirkov 7 (Malouda 76); Drogba 6, Anelka 5 (Torres 68, 6). Subs not used: Turnbull, Ferreira, Kalou, McEachran.
Booked: Drogba.

Copenhagen (4-4-2): Wiland 7; Wendt 6, Jorgensen 6, Antonsson 7, Bengtsson 6 (Zohore 61, 6); Bolanos 6 (Kristensen 90), Claudemir 6, Kvist 6, Vingaard 7 (Santin 74, 6); N'Doye 6, Gronkjaer 6. Subs not used: Christensen, Bergvold, Hooiveld, Delaney.
Booked: Claudemir, Kvist, Bolanos.

Man of the match: Ramires. Referee: Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway) 7.



======================================================




Sun:


Chelsea 0 Copenhagen 0

By ANDREW DILLON

Chelsea win 2-0 on aggregate


IF only the rest of the Chelsea team could shoot as well as Ashley Cole.

Safe passage into the quarter-finals of the Champions League but a rare night of firing blanks for Carlo Ancelotti's Blues.

Chelsea seemed more than happy to stroll through by missing chance after chance in front of goal and in front of their lowest crowd of the season - just 36,454.

It was hardly the stuff to send shivers of fear through the rest of Europe - unlike the club's work experience lads who quake in their boots when Chelsea's gun-toting left-back Cole swaggers into the training ground each day.

Of all the Champions League second-leg games facing English clubs, last night's at Stamford Bridge looked the most routine of all.

Cruising two goals to the good from the first leg, with the return at home against an unfancied team from Denmark, in some ways you can understand Ancelotti's men taking their foot off the gas.

After the adrenalin rush of Arsenal's collapse against Barcelona's superstars, Tottenham's memorable two-legged triumph over AC Milan and Manchester United finally seeing off a spirited Marseille, perhaps we were due a quiet night.

It certainly panned out that way.

Copenhagen trotted out in pink shirts - but that was the best way for the Danes to be noticed on the pitch, such was Chelsea's domination.

But although the Blues dictated the tempo, they missed out on an opportunity to shine and send a clear message that they mean business this season - after all, this is the club's last realistic hope of a trophy.

Chelsea scuffed a series of chances to break the deadlock early on and secure an unassailable lead.

Yuri Zhirkov was chief culprit, with two great opportunities going to waste when he was put through in the danger area.

The Russian certainly did not look £18million-worth of talent when he slashed a shot wide after 18 minutes of one-way traffic.

Cole teed him up in the box following good work by Didier Drogba. And after half-an-hour he chucked away another decent chance when Nicolas Anelka squared the ball to him.

But Frank Lampard and Drogba were also off target on a night when the Blues played as though merely turning up to rubber-stamp a place in the hat for the last eight.

Copenhagen did not look the part in their garish strip and were largely outclassed in most departments, rarely threatening Chelsea.

Their only serious attempt at goal came with a free-kick on the edge of Petr Cech's area.

Dame N'Doye delivered an impressive curling shot which bent over the Chelsea wall. But with Cech heading the wrong way, the ball crashed against the post and was hacked away for a corner.

Even the sight of £50million sub Fernando Torres warming up could not trigger an instant reaction from Blues frontmen Drogba and Anelka.

Anelka was drafted in to replace the Spaniard - who was being, ahem, 'rested' by his manager as he searches for his first Chelsea goal since that huge January move from Liverpool.

But shaven-headed Frenchman Anelka looked a shadow of the striker who scored both goals in Denmark three weeks ago.

Having had a close-range shot saved by keeper Johan Wiland's legs earlier, he made the mistake of trying to be over-elaborate when sent clean through in the 50th minute . . . and yet another chance went begging.

John Obi Mikel also headed against the bar from inside the six-yard box.

Anelka paid the price for his wastefulness when he was substituted with 22 minutes left for Torres.

And Britain's most expensive footballer made his by now customary impact on the match with one hugely deflected shot and another saved easily by the keeper.

Drogba and skipper John Terry were among the other culprits to miss the target before the game was thankfully brought to a close without too much lingering by bored Norwegian referee Svein Oddvar Moen.

It could have been a bit more hairy but, luckily for shot-shy Chelsea, Copenhagen were just as hopeless in front of goal.

After N'Doye's first-half curler, they had to wait until sub Cesar Santin tried a long-range shot with eight minutes to go.

The fact Chelsea had SEVENTEEN efforts off target said it all.



==================================================



Mirror:


Chelsea 0-0 Copenhagen:

By Martin Lipton


Job Done, without the merest hint it would not be.

Mission accomplished, with tomorrow's draw in Nyon what it is all about.

But not exactly the spectacle Roman Abramovich was looking for when he sanctioned spending £50million on Fernando Torres, a night that would have been forgotten the moment the home fans walked back onto the Fulham Road.

And while cold-blooded professionalism has its place in football, sometimes you'd like to come to Stamford Bridge and have your spirits lifted.

The fact that the Copenhagen players were still standing in front of the Shed End, basking in the applause of their travelling fans, long after John Terry finished thanking his own supporters and disappeared down the tunnel, told its own story.

Celebrating a goalless draw which only confirmed the inevitable is indicative of a side which came with damage limitation at the forefront of their minds, a task they accomplished by only rarely venturing over the half-way line, although only the woodwork denied Dame N'Doye in the first half.

Everybody, including the Danes, knew this one had been finished, done and dusted, by Nicolas Anelka's double in the Danish capital three weeks ago.

That was why Anceotti left Torres on the bench for nearly 70 minutes, content to save the Spaniard for more important tests to come.

But if Ancelotti was hoping for Anelka or Didier Drogba to stake an unchallengeable case for starting alongside the Spaniard, for John Obi Mikel to prove his slump is over, or Yuri Zhirkov to make himself a left-sided option, the Italian was as let down as any of the fans who splashed out their hard-earned readies to watch this.

Of course, Jose Mourinho created a Chelsea team that knew all about doing the minimum required and Ancelotti was educated in the cynical school of Serie A.

No matter what moans he might hear from Roman Abramovich over the next few days, Ancelotti can remind the Chelsea owner that you only win the Champions League if you fist reach the quarter-finals, and he has at least gone one round further than last year already.

Yet if Chelsea are to harbour realistic hopes of conquering Barcelona or Mourinho's Real Madrid, both of whom are possible last eight opponents, they will have to find a gear they simply did not have in front of a subdued, at times slumbering Bridge.

This was a night in which the only thing that was eye-catching was Copenhagen's lurid magenta shirts.

Yes, Chelsea carved out the chances. A staggering 28 shots, although only 12 of them on target.

Bad misses from Zhirkov, Drogba and Mikel, openings wasted by Anelka and Ashley Cole too, Ancelotti slapping his hands together in annoyance far too many times.

But in the final analysis, no goals meant no drama, job done and a Blues cruise into the business end of the competition.

They will, as Ancelotti accepted, need to find far more but maybe the Italian should have known what was to come after the opening quarter of the game.

Frank Lampard's third minute miss, wide of the near post from six yards after Cole burst forward, was the trail-blazer and his colleagues proceeded to follow the example.

Perhaps it was too easy. Certainly there was little or no intensity as the Danes seemed to accept the inevitable from a long way out and while Chelsea pressed, they did it with very little conviction.

Cole smashed into the side-netting, Drogba - who was trying to do too much - fired at keeper Johan Wiland, Zhirkov squeezed wide from 12 yards and then, after Ramires began the move of the match with a glorious crossfield ball to release Zhirkov, Anelka tried to be too cute with his first-time finish.

Odd as it sounds, it might have been better for Chelsea, certainly for the game, had N'Doye's beautifully-wrapped free-kick from 25 yards bounced into the net off Petr Cech's right-hand upright rather than back into play.

But that was Copenhagen's only moment of threat and from then to the end it was a story of more missed opportunities, Drogba volleying wide from eight yards, Mikel nodding against the top of the bar as Terry and Anelka played head-tennis from a Lampard corner.

Torres, on for an unimpressed Anelka, might twice have broken his duck but nobody was complaining when the final whistle cut short the tedium. It can only get better.



===================================================



Star:


CHELSEA 0 COPENHAGEN 0: BLANK JOB IS OK BY CARLO ANCELOTTI

17th March 2011
By David Woods



COPENHAGEN played in pink shirts but it was Chelsea who were off colour last night.

Carlo Ancelotti’s men spurned chance after chance to put down the Champ-ions League underdogs.

Thankfully for the Chelsea boss his men had all but guaranteed qualif- ication for the last eight by winning 2-0 in the Danish capital 23 days ago.

But Ancelotti, with all his European experience, will know the Blues cannot afford to be so wasteful at the business end of the competition.

Copenhagen are no Barcelona – they had never reached the knockout stages before – or Shakhtar Donestk for that matter.

It would have been interesting to see how the Blues would have reacted if Dame N’Doye’s free-kick in the 26th minute had gone in instead of smacking against a post.

There was a sub-plot to this game last night with England manager Fabio Capello at the game following all the talk this week about whether Manchester United’s Rio Ferdinand or John Terry of Chelsea is his international skipper.

“One England captain, there’s only one England captain,” came the roar from the Chelsea faithful.

Some of whom had draped a banner proclaiming ‘JT, Captain, Leader, Legend’ just before kick-off.

The Blues skipper turned to applaud them. It is not known whether Capello, had joined in the singing!

Terry’s fellow England star Frank Lampard had a great chance to hit the target in the third minute.

John Obi Mikel’s intelligent pass sent Ashley Cole to the by-line.

His cross was a shade behind Lampard, who could only stub a left-foot shot wide.

Didier Drogba outdid Mikel with an even better pass to Cole with the outside of his right boot.

This time Cole opted to shoot, into the side-netting, rather than try to pick out Nicolas Anelka.

Drogba was on target from 25 yards with a left-footer than did not test Johan Wiland too much.

Copenhagen, sporting those neon pink shirts that would not have looked out of place in a nightclub, tried their best to take the game to Chelsea.

Sadly they rarely looked pretty in pink.

In the 18th minute Drogba continued his lively start with a superb backheel to Cole in the box.

The left-back teed up Yuri Zhrikov, who had started the move, but the Russian skewed his shot wide.

Drogba, who has been left out of three starting line-up since the arrival of Fernando Torres, was certainly lively, with the Spaniard watching from the bench.

So too was strike partner Anelka – two-goal hero in the victory in Denmark – and he came so close to giving Chelsea the lead again in the 20th minute.

Zhirkov’s ball sent Anelka through on goal and his flicked shot was kept out well by Wiland, using his left hand.

But it was Copenhagen who came closest to taking the lead in the 26th minute.

A superb free-kick from N’Doye, who had been the victim of a poor challenge from Terry, had Petr Cech beaten, but smacked against the keeper’s right post. Terry cleared the immediate danger.

Drogba sent Anelka racing clear and he did well to wait for Zhirkov to dash into the six-yard box.

Again the Chelsea fringe player was wasteful, sidefooting wide with his left foot.

Drogba was at fault in the 42nd minute. With Lampard and Anelka bursting into the box, he sent his cross flying high over both their heads.

Drogba then curled a weak shot far too close to Wiland after being set up by Lampard.

The wastefulness continued two minutes after the break when Drogba’s sidefoot volley, following a cross from Jose Bosingwa, went a couple of feet wide even though the Ivorian was only seven yards out.

Anelka tried one turn too many after racing on to Drogba’s through ball.

From a Lampard corner, three successive headers from Terry, Anelka and Mikel saw the Nigerian nod against the bar.

Anelka was not having a great night. Another defence-splitting pass from Drogba sent him away down the right channel again.

Once more he opted not to shoot and Mikael Antonsson was able to leap in with a slide tackle.

Then Ramires could not get a clean contact on a cross from Drogba.

When Anelka did get off a strike on goal, in the 60th minute, it went straight at Wiland.

Seven minutes later the Frenchman made his exit, allowing Torres to come on to try to break his Chelsea goal drought.

He shook Ancelotti’s hand, but did not look his boss in the eye, not raising his lowered head a fraction.

Torres, almost immediately, had a shot deflected for a corner.

Chelsea came no nearer to scoring as the game wore on.

Bosingwa lashed wide late on and there was still time for Drogba to sky the ball high over the bar.

He was so off target that he put his head under his shirt to hide his embarrassment. It just about summed up the game.

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

blackpool 3-1






Independent:


We can win title, insists Lampard after his double sinks Blackpool

Blackpool 1 Chelsea 3

By Tim Rich at Bloomfield Road



Chelsea this morning resemble a politician who has conceded electoral defeat while wondering if they should have asked for a recount. Few teams have won more comfortably at Blackpool and the gap between themselves and Manchester United is now nine points with a game in hand. Were it closer you might just back Chelsea's remorselessness to win through.

On the final whistle, John Terry threw his shirt into the travelling fans amid cries of "We'll never play you again". Chelsea's strength has always been scoring goals from midfield and the combination of Salomon Kalou and Frank Lampard proved far better than the more obvious one between Didier Drogba and Fernando Torres, and for Blackpool it was too much.

"You have to believe," said Lampard when asked whether this result meant Chelsea could still retain their title. "It is a long shot; we have given ourselves a lot to do. The teams at the top have a gap but, if we win all our games, we can do it."

When Chelsea arrived at Bloomfield Road, where they had last been beaten in 1965, a vast sun the colour of a tangerine shirt had sunk into the Irish Sea, which seemed an omen of sorts. Lampard thought the fixture "a banana skin; a Monday night, late in the season," and well though Blackpool fought, Kalou's intervention once Drogba had limped theatrically off, was decisive.

As Ian Holloway mulled over the match, Ian Evatt's challenge on Kalou that led to the critical penalty that gave Chelsea their second goal was being replayed in Bloomfield Road's modest press room. "He could not wait to go down and the referee could not wait to give it," said the Blackpool manager. "But we recognise what we are up against. When David is swinging his sling at Goliath, you need to hit him square in the forehead and we missed."

As he had done at Stamford Bridge against Manchester United last Tuesday night, Lampard finished the penalty emphatically with his father looking down from the stands. Then Kalou promptly slipped through Lampard, who anticipated the move instinctively and almost passed the ball surgically into the corner of Richard Kingson's net.

The result will be given in evidence that Blackpool are in irredeemable freefall and will probably join Wigan in a Lancastrian exodus from the Premier League. Yet the fact that they kept attacking even when the match appeared hopelessly lost is a reason why they might survive. In the last 10 minutes, they carved out four opportunities and took one when Jason Puncheon's run was finished off with a drilled shot past Petr Cech.

His goal did ensure that Blackpool's achievement of scoring in every home fixture since August 2009 was maintained, although so was their failure to keep a clean sheet in their previous 17 matches at Bloomfield Road.

Perhaps it was significant that all the goals came from Chelsea's old firm, the men who will most resolutely stick to the script that the title should not be surrendered just yet. For the first, Lampard delivered the corner and Terry ran through a dual carriageway created by the Blackpool defence to drive his header past Kingson.

This was a contest that delivered a mass of bruises to its participants. Kingson, Michael Essien and David Luiz, all required attention and so too did Jose Bosingwa, although for what nobody was very sure.

Drogba, however, seemed mentally and physically bruised. Being dropped for the seismic victory over Manchester United would have stung. Even though he began this game alongside Torres, he looked thoroughly fed up with events, bemoaning Mike Dean's failure to stop play when Essien was injured and then making it very obvious he wanted to come off.

Just before the interval, as Chelsea counter-attacked, Drogba attempted one of his muscular runs through the centre of defence. The great athlete's body, though, simply failed to respond and no sooner had he been hauled off than Kalou and Lampard put the match to bed. Perhaps the night's real significance was not Chelsea's three points but that this little ground was witnessing the twilight of a champion.


Blackpool (4-5-1): Kingson (Halstead, 66); Eardley, Baptiste, Evatt, Crainey; Puncheon, Southern, Vaughan, Reid (Ormerod 72), Carney (Phillips, 73); Beattie. Substitutes not used Taylor-Fletcher, Grandin, Varney, Kornilenko.

Chelsea (4-4-2): Cech; Bosingwa, Luiz, Terry, Cole; Ramires (McEachran, 74), Essien, Lampard, Zhirkov (Malouda, 72); Drogba (Kalou, 55), Torres. Substitutes not used Turnbull (gk), Ivanovic, Ferreira, Anelka.


Possession Blackpool 42 Chelsea 58.

Attempts on target Blackpool 5 Chelsea 11.

Man of the match Lampard. Match rating 6/10.

Referee M Dean (Wirral). Attendance 15,584.




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Telegraph:


Blackpool 1 Chelsea 3:

By Rory Smith



Some couples just click. Others need to work at their relationship.

That Chelsea now stand nine points behind Manchester United, boasting a game in hand, their Premier League title not yet wholly relinquished, owes rather more to the natural partnership of John Terry and Frank Lampard than the forced union of Fernando Torres and Didier Drogba.

It was from Lampard’s corner that Terry headed Chelsea ahead against a typically spirited Blackpool, and it was the midfielder’s determination to match his captain’s impressive valour that led to the two strikes in four minutes which settled the game. Almost a decade on from their first date, Lampard and Terry are going strong and steady.

Chelsea’s supporters treasure such fidelity: it was their two old stalwarts who left the pitch last, applauded, serenaded, Terry having thrown his shirt into the crowd. It was grandstanding, but it contrasted sharply with the hasty exit made by the men whose flaws he had done much to disguise.

For Torres and Drogba, the sort of longevity the England pair have enjoyed together seems fanciful. It is too soon, after just a month, to suggest they will not last, but the signs are ominous.

The pairing which was supposed to spearhead a new dawn of dominance for Stamford Bridge’s fading empire is yet to ignite.

“They played well together, with good combinations, especially in the first half,” said Carlo Ancelotti of his totems, old and new. “Torres showed good movement with Drogba. We wanted them to spread Blackpool’s defence, and they did that.”

It was a commendable, but flawed, attempt to disguise the fact that the £50  million signing and the man it increasingly seems he was bought to supplant, rather than to complement, continue to look like the most distant of strangers.

Whether Ancelotti can forge a functioning understanding between the two is likely to define whether the Italian remains in his post beyond the summer.

Here, he dropped Nicolas Anelka to the bench and played the Spaniard and the Ivorian together, on their own, for the first time. It was not a resounding success.

One vignette, half an hour in, summed up their evening: Drogba storming forward, ball at his feet, full of grace and menace.

Torres, to his right, burst through, awaiting the through ball; he checked, and burst again. Once more, he checked. The ball never came, Drogba’s tunnel vision leading him down a blind alley.

The two spoke after the incident, Torres explaining what he had required, Drogba seemingly offering profuse apologies, acknowledging that he had erred. There is no evidence as yet that they have found a language in common.

By that stage, their blushes had been partly spared by Terry’s emphatic conversion of Lampard’s corner, the only chance of note the champions fashioned in a first half in which they scarcely deserved the lead.

Indeed, Ancelotti’s side went in counting their lucky stars, even though Ian Holloway was cursing the absence of his.

Without Charlie Adam, DJ Campbell and Craig Cathcart, Blackpool still managed to rattle their opponents.

Jason Puncheon hit the post, David Carney saw Lampard block his shot – both after defender David Luiz had highlighted that he is as much liability as lynchpin – and even Ian Evatt troubled Petr Cech.

“We needed one of those to go in to give us a bit of belief,” said Holloway. “When David is swinging his sling, you need one to hit Goliath right on the forehead, and we just missed with that one. We will keep swinging.” For now, so do Chelsea.

They sealed victory with two goals from Lampard in quick succession, the first a confidently-struck penalty after Evatt was adjudged to have felled Salomon Kalou – “he couldn’t wait to go down, and the referee couldn’t wait to give it”, according to Holloway – and the second a calm conversion from the Ivorian’s through ball.

That it was Kalou who played such a central role was telling: he had replaced Drogba, victim of a hip injury the 32 year-old treated with the dramatic severity of an air gun wound. Chelsea’s menace duly increased.

This is not an imperious Chelsea, even now. Puncheon scored a fine consolation, while Evatt and Brett Ormerod both went close to ensuring a nervous finish.

But the champions held on. Lampard could even suggest afterwards that they may yet win the title: “You have to believe. It is a long shot, but if we win all of our games, we can do it.”

The midfielder is evidently an old romantic. The love affair with the league may not yet be over, but the flame is flickering.



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Guardian:


Chelsea cruise after John Terry hits Blackpool with sucker punch

Paul Wilson at Bloomfield Road


Chelsea won where Tottenham had lost to move three points ahead of their London rivals and strengthen their claim on a Champions League place, though Fernando Torres is still waiting for his first goal in five appearances for his new side.

The visitors tried the dream team here for the first time, Torres paired up front with Drogba, and found the option underwhelming. Drogba was ineffective in the first half and came off early in the second, and it was only when Salomon Kalou took his place that Chelsea began to pull away.

Ian Holloway conceded in advance that Blackpool were not the same team without Charlie Adam and DJ Campbell, both suspended, but promised to do his best with the options available and send out a team to attack.

Having noted that his side conceded a goal every 10 minutes in the fixture at Stamford Bridge the Blackpool manager perhaps ought to have been more worried about his defence, although that has not been the Seasiders' style this season.

"I reckon we still need at least two more wins to stay up but I would have settled for this situation before a ball was kicked," Holloway said. "We're still buoyant."

Chelsea are in a good moment, according to Carlo Ancelotti but they too had some adjustments to make, Drogba starting in place of Nicolas Anelka as they stuck with the two-pronged attack who brought success against Manchester United.

Blackpool began as their manager had promised. David Carney brought the first save of the game from Petr Cech, albeit a fairly routine one, before the same player was presented with a shooting chance by a misjudgment from David Luiz, only to wait a fraction too long and allow José Bosingwa to tidy up.

Chelsea were rather more circumspect about getting players forward, as if hampered by their new 4-4-2 system. With Drogba and Torres permanently in advanced positions Chelsea passed the ball fluently enough across midfield but had difficulty releasing it to the strikers, perhaps missing the greater flexibility of their old system.

Just as Blackpool were congratulating themselves on going almost 20 minutes without conceding a goal, they fell for the sucker punch of allowing their visitors to score from a set piece. Worse than that, it was the well-worn John Terry header from a corner routine. The Chelsea captain timed his run well and once he met Frank Lampard's cross with a free header on the six-yard line there was predictably little Richard Kingson could do to keep the ball out.

Chelsea were able to relax a little after that and play mostly in Blackpool's half of the pitch. Torres saw a shot saved just after the goal, then Bosingwa cut in from the right to release a dipping shot that Kingson had to stretch to tip round his post.

Blackpool found themselves playing on the break, although they also found David Luiz is uncomfortable when ball-carriers take him on. The £20m defender was embarrassed when Jason Puncheon swept easily past him and Cech's attempt at a save was not much better, the goalkeeper touching the shot on to his upright and being relieved to see the ball bounce back out. Cech also had to be alert to deal with a cross from Evatt that threatened to catch him out at his far post.

By half time there was no real sign of the Torres-Drogba partnership developing into anything close to an understanding. On one occasion Drogba was so busy lecturing Torres about the space he should have run into that he neglected to notice the ball was still in play and Blackpool were bringing it out of defence. This is a work in progress, though the pair do not seem quite ready to terrorise Champions League defences.

Drogba was hurt in a collision with James Beattie while helping out his defence in the 50th minute, and spent the next five minutes letting the Chelsea bench know he was in far too much pain to continue. To jeers from the crowd Drogba variously clutched his back, wandered towards the tunnel and pulled out of a challenge with Alex Baptiste so that an initially reluctant Ancelotti had no choice but to allow him to come off, sending on Kalou as a replacement.

Ironically, Torres and Kalou combined almost immediately for Chelsea's second goal. It was only a penalty, and a softish one at that, yet it was more than Drogba and Torres had achieved together in the entire first half. Taking the ball from Ashley Cole on the left, Torres showed instant control to turn and play the ball forward into Kalou's path, only for Ian Evatt to stretch out a leg and invite a tumble.

Lampard beat Kingson from the spot and then again from open play three minutes later, this time Kalou turning provider with a measured diagonal pass. Torres did bring a save from Mark Halstead before the end, Blackpool having switched goalkeeper after the third goal, but Chelsea were unable to match the four goals they scored in September. Adam and Campbell played in that match, yet still Blackpool will feel better once they return.



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Mail:



Blackpool 1 Chelsea 3: Frank Lampard double keeps Blues' title hopes alive

By Chris Wheeler



When Roman Abramovich paid out £50million for Fernando Torres in January he had every reason to expect a little bang for his buck, both in the Spaniard's goals output and his ability to bring the best out of Didier Drogba.

The Chelsea owner has been disappointed on both counts.

Less than a week after David Luiz's volley set up a vital win over Manchester United, Carlo Ancelotti's side relied on goals from another defender, John Terry, and two more from Frank Lampard for a victory that cut the gap on the leaders to nine points. Chelsea also have a game in hand.

It would appear the title race is still alive for them even if the partnership between their star strikers is not. Torres and Drogba looked like a pair of reluctant strangers thrown together at Bloomfield Road.

It was the first time they have started together without Nicolas Anelka in tow, and how they played like it. After five games, Torres is no nearer his first goal since arriving for that record fee from Liverpool, despite facing a team with the worst defensive record in the Barclays Premier League.

At times last night he cut the kind of isolated figure so often evident during his final few months at Anfield. Drogba, who has not scored since January himself, was no better.

He even frustrated Chelsea fans with his histrionics after a bang on the hip from James Beattie early in the second half before making a sullen exit after 55 minutes.

While he sat forlornly on the bench wearing Ancelotti's overcoat, his replacement Salomon Kalou had a hand in Lampard's two goals.

Even then a Chelsea side that looked far from comfortable at the back - David Luiz particularly vulnerable - were fortunate to concede only one late goal, from Jason Puncheon.

Afterwards Ancelotti defended Torres, saying: 'He will score and I'm very happy with him. He was showing good movement with Drogba in the first half and he's working for the team. Game by game, he will improve.'

The Chelsea boss insisted the title is still beyond his side, but Lampard said: 'You have to believe. It's a long shot and we've given ourselves a lot to do, but if we win all our games we can do it.

'I don't know if we've been given a second chance in the title race. It's too early to say. But it's nice to be looking upwards rather than fighting to be top four.'

Blackpool may have beaten Liverpool and Tottenham at Bloomfield Road this season, while pushing both Manchester clubs all the way in 3-2 defeats, but the prospect of a first home win over Chelsea in 46 years was always remote without the suspended Charlie Adam and DJ Campbell, who have scored more than a third of Blackpool's goals in the top flight.

Blackpool made a bright start last night, David Carney worrying Jose Bosingwa down the Chelsea right, but fell behind to Terry's 20thminute header.

Roger Kingson had made a fine double save to deny Torres and Bosingwa but had no chance when the Chelsea skipper stole in unmarked to meet Lampard's corner with a firm close-range header.

It was the eighth goal by a Chelsea defender this season, and very welcome on a night when their attackers were hardly flying.

Ancelotti's side were four up against Blackpool by half-time at Stamford Bridge in September and at this stage you would have backed them to grab another before the interval. In fact they were lucky not to be behind.

On 33 minutes, Puncheon seized on Yury Zhirkov's careless flick in midfield and surged past Luiz before rifling in a low rightfoot effort that Peter Cech pushed unconvincingly against a post.

Lampard then got back well to block Carney's goalbound shot and Cech clawed away Ian Evatt's cross as it looked to be drifting in.

The introduction of Kalou proved decisive, however, as the Ivory Coast striker linked up with Torres in the 62nd minute, racing on to the Spaniard's clever pass before going down under Evatt's lunge.

Blackpool boss Ian Holloway was unhappy referee Mike Dean's penalty award, which enabled Lampard to despatch a rightfooted kick wide of Kingson. 'The penalty was the key moment,' said Holloway.

'We were a bit naïve but the referee couldn't wait to give it and the bloke couldn't wait to fall over.'

Four minutes later it was game over as Kalou slipped the ball through for Lampard to stroke home the third.

Puncheon drilled a shot past Cech from the edge of the area in the 86th minute, and substitute Brett Ormerod and Evatt went close to another in the dying moments.

Puncheon's goal means both teams have scored in every game at Bloomfield Road this season and kept Blackpool above West Bromwich Albion on goals scored.

Holloway said: 'We didn't think we deserved that but when David's swinging his sling at Goliath you have to hit him in the forehead.

'Everything will be a factor in the fight for survival - confidence, team spirit, courage, attitude. If people stay up with that, we have a hell of a chance.'


Blackpool v Chelsea - match facts

BLACKPOOL (4-3-3): Kingson 7
(Halstead 66min, 6); Crainey 6, Evatt 6,
Baptiste 6, Eardley 6; Carney 7
(Phillips 73, 6), Vaughan 7, Southern 6;
Puncheon 7, Reid 6 (Ormerod 73, 6),
Beattie 5. Subs not used: Taylor-Fletcher,
Grandin, Varney, Kornilenko.

CHELSEA (4-4-2): Cech 6; Bosingwa 5,
Terry 7, Luiz 5, Cole 6; Lampard 8,
Essien 6, Ramires 6 (McEachran 75),
Zhirkov 6 (Malouda 72, 6); Torres 5,
Drogba 5 (Kalou 55, 6). Subs not used:
Turnbull, Ivanovic, Ferreira, Anelka.

Man of the match: Frank Lampard.

Referee: Mike Dean 6.




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Sun:


Blackpool 1 Chelsea 3

By DAVID FACEY


FRANK LAMPARD and John Terry showed Fernando Torres how to do it as Chelsea proved they are not ready to surrender the title just yet.

Terry headed the opener and Lampard struck twice as Blues cashed in on Manchester United and Arsenal dropping points at the weekend.

They are still nine points adrift of leaders United with a game in hand - but this time last week that gap was 15

And after beating United a week ago then seeing Alex Ferguson's side crash to Liverpool, Carlo Ancelotti's side are entitled to wonder whether the title race could yet have a dramatic twist.

Their cause will certainly be helped if they get a few more dodgy decisions like the one that saw ref Mike Dean give a 62nd-minute penalty when Ian Evatt won the ball but upended Salomon Kalou in the process.

Even Chelsea's players seemed surprised. But with Torres looking on longingly as he stumbled towards a fifth successive blank, Lamps coolly slotted the ball home for the killer second goal.

Blackpool boss Ian Holloway went crazy on the touchline - but he was also furious with his defence when Lamps timed his run superbly to drill Kalou's pass home for the clincher.

Jason Puncheon maintained the Seasiders' record of scoring in every home match this term, drilling low past Petr Cech in the dying minutes.

But that was scant consolation as they crashed to their eighth defeat in nine games and slipped even closer to the drop zone.

Chelsea skipper Terry was left criminally unmarked to meet Lampard's corner with a bullet header and put his side ahead on 20 minutes.

It was the first time either side had looked threatening, although David Carney should have tried his luck after a blunder by David Luiz let in the Blackpool man.

At the other end, Richard Kingson threw himself bravely at Didier Drogba's feet, although the keeper was lucky to trap the ball between his outstretched leg while the Chelsea striker shook his head in disbelief.

Torres was enduring another frustrating match, constantly straying offside. And when the £50million striker finally managed to fire off a shot, it was charged down by the impressive Alex Baptiste.

Jose Bosingwa then forced an acrobatic save from Kingson and Torres' header across the face of goal caused further alarm as the home fans started to question why their side appeared to be inviting Chelsea on to them.

They seemed almost over-awed by the prospect of taking on the champions without skipper Charlie Adam and star striker DJ Campbell - both ruled out by bans - and the Seasiders gave their fans nothing to cheer in the first half hour.

But that changed dramatically when Puncheon cleverly skipped around Luiz and charged through on goal. His shot lacked power but Cech allowed it to slip through his grasp, and the Czech keeper breathed a huge sigh of relief when the ball cannoned back off the post.

That seemed to give Blackpool the confidence they had lacked and the crowd came to life as Bosingwa had to throw himself in front of Carney's drive, before Cech clawed Evatt's lobbed effort away from under his crossbar.

Andy Reid had suddenly established himself as the dominant figure in a midfield previously ruled by Lampard, and Puncheon almost got on the end of a cross from James Beattie as the home team continued to push up.

But Blackpool never look entirely secure at the back and, just before the break Ramires unleashed a shot that was destined for the far corner until Kingson saved acrobatically.

Blackpool also started the second half on top but Ancelotti's decision to replace the ineffective Drogba with Kalou proved a masterstroke.

As well as winning that penalty and setting up Lampard's second goal, he even managed to make Torres look good.

That should certainly earn him a starting spot in the very near future.




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Star:


BLACKPOOL 1 CHELSEA 3: FRANK LAMPARD AND JOHN TERRY LIVE IT UP ON SEASIDE JOLLY

By Kevin Francis


FRANK LAMPARD and John Terry combined to fire Chelsea to a seaside romp last night.

Lampard took a right-wing corner that should, in all honesty, have been comfortably cleared by the Blackpool defence.

But nobody in the crowded goalmouth seemed to want the responsibility and the Seasiders paid a heavy prize.

Terry just couldn’t believe his luck as he was allowed to jump to it and power home a free header for his fourth goal of the season.

However, Lampard wasn’t about to be outshined by his skipper, wrapping up the three points with two goals in three
second-half minutes.

Substitute Salomon Kalou was integral in both goals, with the Ivory Coast star brought down in the box by defender Ian Evatt in the 63rd minute.

Having scored from the spot to see off Manchester United in Chelsea’s last match, Lampard coolly fired home from 12 yards once again.

And the Three Lions midfielder claimed his brace in the 66th minute when he collected Kalou’s neat pass and slotted the ball into the bottom corner.

Having broken the deadlock midway through the first half, Chelsea looked certain to go further ahead just three minutes later, but keeper Richard Kingson came to Blackpool’s rescue.

Jose Boswinga cut in from the right before sending in a curling left-foot shot that Kingson turned away one-handed.

Boswinga’s effort was excellent, but his play-acting just a few minutes later was completely out of order.

He was pushed off the ball by Stephen Crainey, but despite the contact being minimal, he rolled on the deck in agony until realising it was a pointless exercise.

Blackpool came desperately close to equalising in the 33rd minute after Jason Puncheon easily picked up a bad Yuri Zhirkov back pass.

Chelsea keeper Petr Cech seemed to see his low shot late and could only fumble it on to a post.

Then it was the turn of Kingson to once again come to Blackpool’s aid, palming away an effort from Ramires.

It was a game in which Chelsea, looking to keep their title hopes alive, were determined to attack at every conceivable opportunity.

They had given Blackpool an early taste of their intentions with a close call after just three minutes.

Lampard took a free-kick from 27 yards out and flighted the ball right into the danger zone.

Michael Essien produced a magical flick on, but £50m man Fernando Torres just couldn’t get his head to the ball.

Torres, partnering Didier Drogba – Nicolas Anelka was on the bench – always looked a threat.

The Spaniard was quick to let the Blackpool rearguard know he was around and was always pushing into dangerous positions.

Chelsea’s early dominance was proof of what most people expected – that Blackpool, despite their adventurous ways, would always be up against it.

After all, they did have the massive handicap of being without their leading scorers DJ Campbell and Charlie Adam,
who were both suspended.

However, they weren’t afraid to attack whenever the opportunity arose, with David Carney always looking particularly lively.

He had one fiercely struck right-foot effort well taken by Cech early on and was generally a real thorn in the side of the visitors.

And as their confidence grew, despite the almost non-stop pressure, they frequently caused havoc at the back for Chelsea.

While gulf in class between the Seasiders and Chelsea is clear, Ian Holloway’s men can certainly match any opposition when it comes to grit and determination.

Anyone who doubts that need only look at the way in which Cech frequently came to Chelsea’s aid in a game where he hardly expected to be as busy as he was.

Blackpool carried on plugging away after the interval, with James Beattie regularly in the thick of things up front.

But the Seasiders’ search for an equaliser went unrewarded as Lampard’s double-quick blast sealed the points for the resurgent Blues.

However, the hosts never threw in the towel, with Puncheon grabbing a fine consolation effort four minutes from time.




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