Sunday, October 30, 2011

arsenal 3-5








Independent:


Chelsea 3 Arsenal 5:

Dutchman lifts Arsenal after England captain's week goes from bad to worse


Rory Smith

Another slip, another big misunderstanding, another set of desperate consequences. John Terry picked himself up from the floor, looked away from the scene of Arsenal's delirium, and mouthed a few choice words. To himself, at himself. His captaincy and his character under scrutiny, and now this. A dreadful end to a dreadful week.
True, the loss of balance which allowed Robin van Persie to score his second and Arsène Wenger's team's fourth will not prompt inquiries from the Football Association or police. Combined with the shambolic defensive chaos which surrounded the Chelsea captain's mistake though, it will force Terry to take a long, hard look at himself.
"All that matters is that it is an important defeat for the team," said the 30-year-old's staunchly supportive manager, Andre Villas-Boas, when asked how his defender had coped with the error. "It is the sort of thing that can happen to any player."
How typical that it should happen to Terry, a man who appears to have a gift for ensuring he always takes centre stage. At half-time, the narrative had looked very different. This seemed to be a story of redemption. Terry, roaring his fealty and his fire, sidefooted home Frank Lampard's corner to send the hosts into the lead. His old cohort had opened the scoring and, though Van Persie had levelled, Chelsea seemed set fair.
This is not that sort of season, though. So, in the space of six minutes, Andre Santos and Theo Walcott struck for the visitors. Another twist: Juan Mata produced a wonderful goal, struck from 25 yards. Terry just had to wrestle the limelight back.
Florent Malouda's backpass was, in truth, a little overhit. Terry, just inside his own half, turned to retrieve it. He lost his footing. Van Persie raced through and rounded Petr Cech to score. It was the Dutchman's 27th goal in as many games in the League this year, and the eighth in his last five. Arsenal's captain is not a man who needs a second invitation.
Van Persie added a fifth in injury time, his hat-trick, but it was Terry's mistake that was the turning point. "It was an unlucky situation," said Villas-Boas. There are those, of course, who would see it as karma, but Villas-Boas's interpretation is correct. This was not divine retribution. It was the sort of moment that cannot be anticipated. But it was also a moment that summed up Chelsea's kamikaze approach, an attitude matched by Arsenal for vast swathes of a game that, at times, boasted the subtlety and the intelligence of a particularly irresponsible playground. If defending is a lost art, then the Premier League is in danger of entering a dark age.
In the first 15 minutes alone, Chelsea might have scored twice – Laurent Koscielny and Per Mertesacker intervening only at the last to deny Fernando Torres – and Arsenal three times, as the excellent Aaron Ramsey, Gervinho and Van Persie all missed chances, the latter two glaring.
Lampard, crouching to head home as Mertesacker misjudged the flight of Mata's cross, was never likely to be the only goalscorer. Daniel Sturridge should have doubled the lead before Van Persie erased it, tapping home after Ramsey slipped Gervinhoin and the Ivorian drew Cech before squaring for his captain.
Then came Terry's moment in the sun. Again Mertesacker lost the flight of a relatively straightforward ball and then there was JT to tap home. Chest-beating catharsis.
Not for long. Chelsea's style assured that. "We will stick to this philosophy," said Villas-Boas. "We are proud of the way we play." It preceded the fall: Van Persie and Ramsey went close before Santos raced into the green expanse left unguardedby Jose Bosingwa, collected Alex Song's ball and slotted under Cech.
Worse was to come. Walcott seemed to lose his footing under a challenge from Ashley Cole, but retained possession. A burst took him free, and his finish arrowed past the goalkeeper at his near post.
It was to be their day. Wojciech Szczesny should have been dismissed – "I don't know why I stayed on the pitch," he tweeted – for felling Cole, and even Mata's Exocet could not save the hosts. Terry slipped, Arsenal soared. First Van Persie beat Cech with skill and, in injury time, power. With his team-mates, the 28-year-old danced with his exultant fans, the scars of Old Trafford beginning to fade. Perhaps that will provide Terry with some solace. Perhaps not.

Chelsea (4-3-3): Cech; Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, Cole; Ramires (Lukaku, 72), Mikel (Meireles, 76), Lampard; Sturridge (Malouda, 62), Torres, Mata
Arsenal (4-3-3): Szczesny; Djourou (Jenkinson, 75), Mertesacker, Koscielny, Santos; Arteta, Song, Ramsey; Walcott (Rosicky, 79), Van Persie, Gervinho (Vermaelen, 88).

Referee Andre Marriner.
Man of the match Ramsey (Arsenal).
Match rating 9/10.

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Observer:


Robin van Persie hat-trick stuns Chelsea in goal frenzy at the Bridge
Amy Lawrence at Stamford Bridge

For a man whose obsession with attacking football knows no bounds, it was a strange sight to see Arsène Wenger urging his players to put the brakes on when a red mass swarmed towards Petr Cech's goal. The Arsenal manager did his best Basil Fawlty impression as his team's instinctive way of protecting a 4-3 lead was to bomb forward in a buccaneering search for more.
"You know how it is on the bench when you are 4-3 up with two minutes to go," he said with a wry smile. "You do not necessarily encourage your team to become crazy. But that's the brand of our team, of our club. Sometimes you get rewarded, sometimes you pay for it."
Indeed. An outlandish bout, that veered theatrically between blue and red, brought enormous rewards for Arsenal, whose team demonstrated unbridled joy at the end of it all. None more so than the extraordinary Robin van Persie, the most influential figure in his club's renaissance, who celebrated a hat-trick of considerable refinement.
The price paid by Chelsea feels heavy and raw. Although André Villas-Boas would not reveal the sentiments shown by John Terry in the dressing room, the captain in the spotlight endured an afternoon that threatened to be heroic but left him brutally exposed.
The differing emotions of the two captains was highlighted in the 85th minute with a moment to provoke 41,801 jaws to drop. There was still all to play for as Florent Malouda's routine pass made its way towards Terry, but he tumbled inexplicably. Nobody was within five yards of him, the pitch was true and the day was bright and with no rhyme of reason the England captain's legs went from under him. There could be no worse sight from his position, prone on the pitch, than that of Van Persie accelerating away. The Premier League's current master of scoring dispatched the chance with aplomb, skipping around Cech to put Arsenal back in front and en route to a precious victory. Some might say Terry had bad luck, others might say it was karma.
That is two defeats in a row for Chelsea. Two derbies, as well. Arsenal, conversely, relished a triumph that demonstrated they are over their early season slump. Eight wins out of nine tells its own story, and this one was the most meaningful of them all. The handbrake was well and truly ripped off here.
It took courage as well as quality, as Chelsea began full of intent and purpose. Villas-Boas was left cursing the opportunities missed. Still, in the 14th minute they went in front. The move emanated from an excellent, searching crossfield pass that came from Terry's left foot. Juan Mata created space with customary trickery, and sent in a cross for Frank Lampard to nod past the goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.
Where a month ago this might have been the signal for an Arsenal collapse, they were not cowed. They kept going, and equalised in the 36th minute, when the excellent Aaron Ramsey threaded the ball to Gervinho, who squared for Van Persie to sidefoot past Cech. On the stroke of half-time Terry made the most of a corner to poke a shot into the bottom corner. The story was on his side at that point.
Arsenal rallied again. They emerged from the half-time break and immediately went on the attack, with Ramsey hooking a chance over the bar. In the 49th minute Alex Song picked a gaping hole in Chelsea's back line, and André Santos ran on to it and aimed his shot straight between Cech's legs.
A minute later and the pendulum swung back to the Blues, but things did not go their way. Ashley Cole advanced all alone in the inside-left position and Szczesny careered out of his area to meet him, performing a star jump in attempt to put the full-back off. The Pole collided into Cole, but the referee, Andre Marriner, deemed the infringement worthy of only a yellow card. To add to Chelsea's irritation, Szczesny tipped away Lampard's free-kick. "It's the ref's decision and it's done. That's all there is to say," was Villas-Boas's verdict.
Another sharp swing: Walcott ambled towards the thin blue line that now passed for Chelsea's defence. Four players were around the England winger, who skidded down to the turf then stumbled up, and sped away towards goal. He curled the ball ferociously past Cech at the near post.
Mata seized back the initiative with an emphatic strike from distance, and such are the stereotypes about these two teams it was odds-on a Chelsea winner. It speaks volumes for both these sides that there was never a question of anyone settling for a draw.
Van Persie rode to the rescue, as he has with such stunning regularity for Arsenal, and once he had made the most of Terry's misfortune, he supplied the coup de grâce with a thumping drive that swerved past Cech. He took home the match ball as well as the three points. That made for one happy captain.



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Telegraph:

Chelsea 3 Arsenal 5

By Duncan White, at Stamford Bridge

To the gleeful away end it was convincing evidence of an interventionist god. Chelsea had just scored a controversial equaliser in this chaotic, compelling game and there were only five minutes left. Then Florent Malouda rolled a pass back towards John Terry and, to his mortification, the Chelsea captain slipped. Robin van Persie loped after the loose ball, danced around Petr Cech and won the game. For those in red, and you suspect a few more beyond, it was pure schadenfreude.
It was a remarkable turnaround. Andre Villas-Boas had had no hesitation in playing Terry, despite the FA opening an investigation into the allegation of racism against him, and in the first half his decision appeared vindicated. Terry played a brilliant crossfield pass in the build-up to Chelsea’s opening goal and then headed in Frank Lampard’s corner to regain the lead in first-half stoppage time. After the break, though, it all fell to pieces. Chelsea have not conceded as many goals at Stamford Bridge in the league since Dec 16, 1989, when they lost 5-2 against Liverpool.
After the melodrama at Loftus Road last week, Chelsea's calm start to the season has been disturbed. A team that over the past five years has created a sense of invulnerability at this stadium suddenly look fragile.
Villas-Boas is trying to change the football philosophy of his team - and on this evidence it is clearly going to come at a cost. After the 3-1 defeat to Manchester United at Old Trafford, many critics described the Portuguese as naïve. That is a little patronising but he is certainly prepared to take risks as he tries to fast-track this team towards a stylish, high-tempo, front-foot approach. And those risks did not pay off.
The opening goal came after 14 minutes but by then it could well have been 2-2. Fernando Torres shot wide when Ashley Cole played the ball square to him, Aaron Ramsey got in behind the Chelsea defence but did not have the support, Theo Walcott killed Cole for pace and watched aghast as Gervinho hooked what should have been a simple side-foot finish wide. Johan Djourou, at right-back, was drowning in wave after wave of Chelsea attacks and his team-mates appeared to have little interest in saving him.
When Chelsea switched to the right, they got the breakthrough, Frank Lampard crouching to head in Juan Mata’s inswinging cross. Lampard was enjoying himself: with half an hour played he hit the pass of the game: first time, on the turn, in behind the Arsenal defence. Daniel Sturridge, with plenty of time, sliced his finish.
While Chelsea were cutting through Arsenal’s feeble backline with pretty much every attack, there was hardly any more resistance at the other end.
Seven minutes after conceding, Arsenal were level. Ramsey was superb all game, his touch and passing suffused with confidence. The Welshman spun on to Andre Santos’s pass and slid the ball precisely into the stride of Gervinho who, faced only with Cech, cleverly squared the ball for Van Persie to finish into the empty net.
Chelsea kept coming. Sturridge thought he had retaken the lead but was offside. Arsenal’s back four were struggling and Per Mertesacker was far too soft in letting Terry ahead of him to score from a corner just before the break. The half-time whistle might have spoilt the fun but it did provide a welcome opportunity to actually breathe.
If either manager had encouraged his players to take a more conservative approach to the second half there was no evidence of it: it was frantic.
Four minutes in Arsenal equalised again, Santos coolly finishing from Alex Song’s astute pass. No sooner were they back in it than Arsenal did their best to try to throw it away.
Cole once again found himself threatening the Arsenal goal. Wojciech Szczesny came flying from his goal and took out the Chelsea left-back. Roars of outrage greeted the resulting yellow card and even Szczesny said after the game that he could not understand how he stayed on the field. To make it worse for the home support, he then saved well from Lampard’s free-kick.
Cole then fouled Walcott near the touchline and chased his England colleague from the quick free-kick. Walcott went down - more of a slip than any contact - and so concerned was Cole with proving his innocence that he let his opponent scurry away. With the rest of the Chelsea defence watching, Walcott smashed the ball in at the near post.
Cole might also have conceded a penalty after missing a tackle on Ramsey in the box - the Welshman stayed on his feet as he tried to score - but at least he was trying to stem the flow, unlike the rather hapless Jose Bosingwa.
Chelsea just could not get to grips with the movement of Van Persie and the distribution of Ramsey. Branislav Ivanovic went over the top in his efforts, planting his elbow in the back of Van Persie’s neck in one aerial challenge, and when the Dutchman confronted him he reacted with a bit of amateur dramatics. Both were booked but Van Persie later had his revenge.
Not that it looked to be going Arsenal’s way with 10 minutes left. Mata’s shot from outside the box deflected off Song and dipped into the net past a flailing Szczesny but Romelu Lukaku had clearly blocked Santos in the build-up as the Brazilian full-back tried to tackle Raul Meireles.
Wenger was still stalking around his technical area, furious at the injustice of it all when Terry’s tumble swung the game back into his favour.
His own side continued to torment him as he pleaded for a bit of calm as they went hurtling forward at every opportunity. You could see why: Mata had had a great chance to score another equaliser.
His team were not interested in moderation. In stoppage time Tomas Rosicky carried the ball forward on the counter, passing inside to Mikel Arteta who in turn fed the ball to Van Persie, the weight of the pass a clear temptation to the Dutchman’s left boot. He struck across the ball, sending it swerving viciously past a rooted Cech for his hat-trick.


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Mail:

Chelsea 3 Arsenal 5: Terry the fall-guy as sloppy Blues hit skid row
By MALCOLM FOLLEY

John Terry's slip and fall face-first into the turf as Robin van Persie stole Arsenal's fourth goal at Stamford Bridge on Saturday symbolised the misery of a traumatic week in the life of the England captain.
Only the FA have the power to decide if Terry will ever stand tall again, as they investigate an accusation - denied by Terry - that he racially abused Queens Park Rangers' Anton Ferdinand seven days ago.
But another investigation, if less demanding in its remit, will involve Terry. After their skipper - who else? - had given Chelsea a 2-1 lead moments before half-time, a pall of gloom descended over the corner of the ground accommodating Arsenal's travelling supporters.
Having been humiliated at Old Trafford by Manchester United and beaten at home by Liverpool, there was a suspicion that another afternoon in the company of one of the country's most consistent football clubs would pass without reward.
Instead, Chelsea's defence developed a fragility that would never have been countenanced by the Portuguese manager who ran this club before the appointment of Andre Villas-Boas. Jose Mourinho took umbrage at losing one goal at Stamford Bridge … in a month of Sundays.
Even if we eliminate blame for Arsenal's fifth, when Van Persie completed a memorable hat-trick deep into injury-time, Terry had long since looked bewildered as all sense of organisation crumbled around him.
Of course, there is a nobility in Villas-Boas's determination to allow Chelsea to play with freedom, to attack on instinct, yet there is also a recklessness to this policy that could stop them mounting a serious challenge for the Premier League title.
Worse, it could leave them excessively vulnerable once the Champions League reaches the knockout stages. Chelsea's Russian oligarch proprietor, Roman Abramovich, takes unkindly to such failure.
Arsenal's win was deserved even if they had some fortune during an unconvincing opening period.
Inevitably, Terry's reaction to a week of questioning, and stern-faced meetings with lawyers and advisers as he has dealt with the most serious of all the controversies that have punctuated his career, would command attention at Stamford Bridge.
Villas-Boas had wrapped a fraternal arm around Terry, a man only four years younger than him, all week. The manager even went as Terry the fall-guy as Van Persie so ruthless as Arsenal turn more heat on Blues captain far as dedicating Chelsea's Carling Cup win at Everton to his 30-yea-rold captain as the furore around Terry's language at Loftus Road refused to die down.
When Terry led Chelsea out yesterday, he held the hand of a young, white mascot, while being flanked on his other side by another youthful mascot of mixed race. In case there was any ambiguity in Chelsea's defence of their beleaguered captain, Terry's portrait, in his best statesman-like pose, was on the cover of the match programme. And in the corner of the Matthew Harding Stand a hand-crafted flag was unfurled, briefly. It read: 'JT is not a racist'.
Against this backdrop of support, no one could have guessed the way Chelsea and Terry's afternoon would deteriorate after Frank Lampard headed them in front in the 14th minute. His astute finish, from a smartly delivered cross by Juan Mata, will pass into the annals of club history as Chelsea's 6,000th League goal.
But Arsenal's fleet-footed football brought them a worthy equaliser in the 36th minute. A pass from Aaron Ramsey invited Gervinho to place a square ball for Van Persie to stroke into an empty net as Petr Cech advanced from his line.
Then came the moment for which Terry might have prayed all week. When Lampard drove a 45th-minute corner into the area, Terry brushed aside Per Mertesacker to score with a low shot inside Wojciech Szczesny's right-hand post.
In front of Arsenal's fans, Terry vanished from sight as Chelsea's players rushed to his side, as though hurtling to a scene of an accident, to shower him with affection.
He trotted back in front of Chelsea fans in the East Stand thumping a fist against the badge on his shirt. For this short, sharp interlude he was again a prince of all he surveyed. But the fates were not smiling on him.
Four minutes after the interval a clever turn from Alex Song released Andre Santos down the left. The Brazilian full-back equalised without a defender in sight.
Perhaps Arsenal's one moment of luck occurred a minute later. Szczesny careered outside his penalty area and clattered into Ashley Cole. Nervously, Arsenal's goalkeeper waited to see the colour of the card referee Andre Marriner would brandish: yellow, as it transpired. Later, Szczesny admitted: 'I don't know why I stayed on the pitch.'

Chelsea: Cech, Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, Cole, Ramires (Lukaku 72), Mikel (Meireles 76), Lampard, Mata,Sturridge (Malouda 62), Torres. Subs Not Used: Blackman, Luiz, Romeu, Bertrand.Booked: Ivanovic,Meireles. Goals: Lampard 14,Terry 45,Mata 80.


Arsenal: Szczesny, Djourou (Jenkinson 75), Mertesacker, Koscielny, Santos, Ramsey, Song, Arteta, Walcott (Rosicky 79), Van Persie, Gervinho (Vermaelen 88).Subs Not Used: Fabianski, Park, Arshavin, Frimpong. Booked: Szczesny, Van Persie, Song.Goals: Van Persie 36,Andre Santos 49,Walcott 55, Van Persie 85,90.


Ref: Andre Marriner (W Midlands).


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Mirror:

Chelsea 3-5 Arsenal
By Paul Smith

Only Arsene Wenger could have claimed Arsenal were still capable of winning the title after a diabolical start to the campaign and a few narrow wins.
As one observant Arsenal fan pointed out on a radio phone-in prior to their stunning win at Chelsea: “He’s been saying that for the past six years!”
Well yesterday we witnessed Arsenal at their imperious best as they moved into the upper reaches of the Premier League and brought Chelsea crashing down to Earth in their own backyard.
The inspiration for this astonishing victory was ­skipper Robin van Persie, who scored a hat-trick to take his tally to nine goals in his last five Premier League appearances, and an astonishing 28 goals in 27 league appearances in the calendar year.
No wonder Wenger was singing the Dutchman’s praises in the post-match press conference.
“He is on fire, and takes advantage through his class and the fact we create so many chances. His intelligence around the box, and his accuracy in front of goal is unbelievable.
“He’s a difficult player to pick up and his performance against Chelsea was nothing short of breathtaking.”
Not surprisingly Wenger’s praise didn’t just extend to the lethal finishing of the prolific Dutchman.
“I can only praise my team,” he said. “We needed a win and we kept going to achieve it despite falling ­behind twice.
“Throughout the game we looked very dangerous going forward.
“And when you consider prior to this game Chelsea looked very secure defensively, maybe it was our quality going forward that secured this result.
“I accept we have had a difficult start to the ­campaign and some bad results – but we have ­regrouped... and as everyone knows winning games gives you more confidence.” In complete contrast Andre Villas-Boas rued his own team’s luck, but insisted he would not compromise his attacking style of play.
“They were two decisive moments when we couldn’t find the net with the chances we created,” he said.
“First, in the opening period, and then at 4-3 when we failed to take further chances and were punished by Arsenal on the break.
“But we will not compromise on our offensive style of play. The attacking philosophy is a personal value and a club value and I won’t sell it cheaply.
“It’s something that makes us proud. It’s our way of playing and that won’t change.”
In a blistering start it was Chelsea who threatened to rip their London neighbours apart.
Daniel Sturridge and Fernando Torres should have taken advantage of dreadful Arsenal defending, but let the visitors off the hook with some woeful finishing.
The Gunners also missed early openings. Gervinho and Van Persie failed to convert inviting crosses from Theo Walcott. Gervinho’s may yet prove a nomination for miss of the season.
The home side went ahead on 14 minutes when Juan Mata crossed from the right and Frank Lampard stooped low to head home.
Sturridge should have increased Chelsea’s lead but was guilty of an unbelievable miss when he went clean through on goal.
Arsenal drew level nine minutes from the break. Aaron Ramsey played Gervinho through and the latter squared the ball for Van Persie to tap in his first of the day.
The fragility of the visitors’ defence was again exposed when John Terry brushed aside Per Mertesacker as the pair challenged for Lampard’s ­corner to scramble Chelsea ahead again just before the break.
The second half was thrilling and packed with defensive clangers. Andre Santos latched on to Alex Song’s through ball and swept the ball home to level at 2-2 on 49 minutes.
Chelsea’s defence was looking increasingly vulnerable and in the 55th minute they fell behind as Walcott ran straight at the defence, riding challenges, before slamming a shot past Cech.
Mata put Chelsea back on terms on 80 minutes with a swerving 25-yard shot, although Wenger believed ­substitute Romelu Lukaku fouled Santos in the build-up.
Yet this was merely a cue for Van Persie to display his scintillating best form. He capitalised on Terry’s slip to race through, dribble around Petr Cech and make it 3-4 with five minutes to go.
And deep in stoppage time, with Chelsea pouring ­forward in search of an equaliser, Van Persie rounded off a breakaway with a strike that threatened to break Cech’s net.
VERDICT: It ended with eight goals on the scoresheet - there could have been many more. Whatever spin the rival managers want to put on this encounter, they both know they have some major defensive issues to sort out.
***
THE BIG ISSUE: With Chelsea quietly creeping up behind both Manchester clubs, are they title contenders?
The Blues’ second defeat inside six days – and against London rivals again – suggests that they are likely to come up short, and it’s widely accepted that manager Andre Villas-Boas is in a period of transition at Stamford Bridge.
Nonetheless, he will not be impressed by the ­defensive frailties that allowed Arsenal’s potent strike force to tear his side to pieces.
Going forward, Chelsea have plenty of options but at the back they look fragile. While you can’t completely rule them out as title challengers, unless they show signs of radical improvement and venture into the transfer market in January, finishing third in the Premier League looks more of a realistic target than any ambitions of troubling the two Manchester clubs who are in the driving seat.


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People:


Chelsea 3-5 Arsenal: RvP treble inspires Gunners in derby thriller
by Dave Kidd

THERE was no mistaking what he said this time.
After John Terry had fallen flat on his backside and gifted Robin van Persie the decisive goal in an astonishing derby, you did not need to be a lip-reader to deduce the England captain had mouthed the words “for f***’s sake”.
There will be no FA inquiry into that particular outburst. Although a furious Andre Villas-Boas will surely hold an inquest into the defensive apocalypse which left Arsenal frolicking around the Bridge as if they – and not the Chelsea Pitch Owners – owned the place.
And for a second or two, Terry was subjected to a sound worse than the abuse of Arsenal fans or the questions of the FA and the media. Just a deathly silence.
It may have been borne out of sheer disbelief. Or pity. It may have been the feeling of 44,000 rubberneckers witnessing the car crash of one man’s career.
JT’s future as England captain is in the balance as the FA probe allegations that he racially abused Anton Ferdinand during last Sunday’s defeat at QPR.
It had been widely expected Terry would do what he always does in these circumstances – stick out his chest, win every header, bawl at every team-mate and walk off triumphant.
And when he scored to give Chelsea a 2-1 half-time lead, it looked like being a familiar story of JT defiance.
Yet Arsenal, widely written off as relegation fighters just a month or so ago, produced a rampant second-half display which confirmed Arsene Wenger’s boys have their swagger back.
Van Persie netted a hat-trick, taking his tally to a staggering 28 goals in 27 Premier League fixtures in 2011.
And remarkably, the four meetings so far between England’s quartet of Champions League sides have yielded 29 goals.
Vibrant
When asked afterwards, Gunners boss Wenger could not come up with a clear explanation for this avalanche – but he did suggest defensive ineptitude might have played its part.
And while this was a breathless spectacle, it should not be the job of multi-millionaire defenders to serve up light entertainment for the masses.
Not least Terry himself, who began in typically commanding form yet ended up static against a vibrant team which attacked with velocity and virtuosity.
Should Terry lose the England captaincy again – and perhaps even see the end of his international career – he will begin to look vulnerable even at the club he has led so bullishly to three titles. Blues boss Villas-Boas is not afraid to rattle the cages of his senior pros.
This was Arsenal’s fifth straight win and an eighth victory in nine. Some crisis.
Right from the word ‘go’, it was clear we were going to be treated to some lock-up-your-daughters football – and some trouserless defending.
Chelsea seized the lead on 14 minutes, in a move started by their embattled captain. Terry’s crossfield ball picked out Juan Mata, who swung in a centre which Frank Lampard stooped to head in with Per Mertesacker nowhere. While Van Persie will accept most of the plaudits, Aaron Ramsey was every bit as influential and the young Welshman’s cutting through-ball created Arsenal’s equaliser, with Gervinho squaring to the Gunners skipper for a simple finish.
JT enjoyed his moment of glory just before the interval. Lamps delivered a corner and Terry got in front of Mertesacker to shin the ball home.
Arsenal bounced back after the break and Alex Song’s pass released left-back Andre Santos to drill under Petr Cech.
Gunners keeper Wojciech Szczesny should have had a red card when he tripped Ashley Cole but escaped with a yellow from ref Andre Marriner.
Poke
The Gunners took advantage of their let-off and were ahead on 55 minutes – Theo Walcott embarking on a solo run, which saw him slip over, regain his footing and still have time to beat Cech at his near post with a thumping shot.
Mata netted with a 20-yard scorcher to make it 3-3. But five minutes from time came the moment all fans of schadenfreude had come to see.
Florent Malouda delivered a routine backwards pass towards Terry, just inside his own half – only for the skipper to slip in cartoon style and allow Van Persie to round Cech and poke home.
When Arsenal broke again, Van Persie netted his hat-trick goal with the force of a sledgehammer.
And it felt for all the world as if John Terry’s world was crashing down around his ears.


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Sun:


Chelsea 3 Arsenal 5


ROBIN VAN PERSIE smashed a stunning hat-trick as Arsenal triumphed in a thriller at Stamford Bridge.
The Gunners striker cancelled out Frank Lampard's opener before John Terry gave Chelsea the half-time lead.
But Arsenal flew out of the blocks after the break with Andre Santos levelling and Theo Walcott firing them ahead.
Juan Mata pegged them back with a brilliant long-range effort before Van Persie struck twice in the last five minutes to secure the victory.
It handed the visitors their first Premier League away win since April and left Chelsea trailing behind leaders Manchester City.
That piled on the misery for the Blues, who have been under siege in the past week.
They have suffered a humiliating defeat at QPR, three red cards, the Terry racism storm, two FA fines and a fan revolt over their stadium plans.
Fan reaction to Terry - who denies racially abusing Anton Ferdinand - was predictably vocal in support of the skipper.
There were cheers from the Chelsea faithful and posters with messages like 'JT is not racist' and 'Captain, Leader, Legend'.
But both sets of supporters were soon transfixed by a feast of attacking football.
After Ashley Cole twice got in behind the visitors' defence, Chelsea really should have scored.
Three of their players beat the Gunners' offside trap but Daniel Sturridge somehow sent his cross straight at Wojciech Szczesny.
The home side also looked vulnerable and Gervinho somehow scuffed a tap-in wide after Walcott surged past Cole.
The Arsenal winger also picked out captain Van Persie, who volleyed over.
It was the Arsenal defence which buckled first after 14 minutes.
Mata teased Van Persie and fired in a right-wing cross which the unmarked Lampard stooped to head home.
Van Persie again went close before the goalmouth action finally relented until the 29th minute.
Then Lampard's flighted ball put Sturridge clean through but the forward got his left-footed finish all wrong.
Arsenal made him pay seven minutes later when they equalised with a trademark goal.
Ramsey picked out Gervinho's brilliant run and the Ivory Coast striker drew Petr Cech and squared for Van Persie to slot into an empty net.
Sturridge thought he had put Chelsea back in front four minutes before the break but was rightly ruled offside poking home Ramires' cross.
However, they were gifted the lead on the stroke of half-time through Terry, who got in front of Per Mertesacker to cushion Lampard's corner in.
Incredibly, the tables turned within 10 minutes of the restart as Arsenal scored twice to take the lead.
Van Persie and Ramsey both missed chances to level inside a minute but Santos did three minutes later.
His superb first touch on to Gervinho's ball gave him time to send a strike through Cech's legs and into the net.
Chelsea immediately went on the attack and Szczesny appeared lucky not to be sent off when he came rushing out of goal and tripped Cole.
Referee Andre Marriner showed only a yellow card and Szczesny rubbed salt into the wound by tipping Lampard's resulting free-kick wide.
Arsenal then scored again with Walcott bundling his way through the home defence and lashing the ball past Cech at the near post.
Both sides made a raft of changes as the end-to-end action continued.
Ramsey missed another good chance for the visitors who were looking the more dangerous.
Terry was forced to act as peacemaker after a clash between Van Persie and Branislav Ivanovic, both of whom were booked.
And there was a grandstand finish thanks to a wonderful strike from Mata, who let fly from 25 yards to beat the despairing Szczesny.
But like the first half, the second ended up being decided by Terry, who slipped chasing subs Florent Malouda's backpass.
That left Van Persie to race clear, round Cech and make it 4-3.
Mata twice saw efforts blocked as Chelsea tried to level before Van Persie hit them on the break again by blasting left-footed past Cech.

Chelsea: Cech,Bosingwa,Ivanovic,Terry,Cole,Ramires (Lukaku 72), Mikel (Meireles 76),Lampard,Mata,Sturridge (Malouda 62),Torres. Subs Not Used: Blackman,Luiz,Romeu,Bertrand.
Booked: Ivanovic,Meireles.
Goals: Lampard 14,Terry 45,Mata 80.


Arsenal: Szczesny,Djourou (Jenkinson 75),Mertesacker,Koscielny, Andre Santos,Ramsey,Song,Arteta,Walcott (Rosicky 79),van Persie, Gervinho (Vermaelen 88). Subs Not Used:Fabianski,Park,Arshavin,Frimpong.
Booked: Szczesny,van Persie,Song.
Goals: van Persie 36,Andre Santos 49,Walcott 55, van Persie 85,90.


Att: 41,801
Ref: Andre Marriner (W Midlands).


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

Star:

CHELSEA 3 ARSENAL 5: JOHN TERRY AGONY
By Tony Stenson

JOHN TERRY’S nightmare week continued yesterday.
His horror slip with the scores at 3-3 allowed Dutch hot-shot Robin van Persie to score his second before adding a third in one minute of added time.
But Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas refused to accept Terry was suffering from a week of pressure after being accused of a racist outburst against QPR’s Anton Ferdinand last week.
Villas-Boas said: “John has not been affected by events. We lost because we did not take advantage of our first 15 minutes of domination.
“But I will not change the way I believe, or what this club believes. I believe in attack and we were punished because Van Persie did his job. We will return stronger.”
Now what price Van Persie’s shirt on eBay today? Arsenal’s inspirational Dutchman grabbed an unforgettable hat-trick to inflict further pain on Chelsea.
As the final whistle went, Arsenal players dance and jigged as if they had won the league, Champions League and any trophy up for grabs.
Van Persie was at the forefront of the celebrations and immediately took off his sweat-stained and collectors’ piece shirt and handed it over to a delirious, bandana- wearing fan.
His final 92nd-minute goal put an end to a match that could have finished 10-each as defences crumbled to attackers hungry for glory.
It means he has now scored NINE goals in FIVE previous league matches to hep inflict the heaviest home defeat Chelsea have suffered since being hit by Liverpool by a similar score in 1989.
It is also a year and 33 games since Chelsea last lost consecutive league games.
Arsenal twice came from behind to show football does have a happy face when two juggernauts throw caution to the wind.
No race rows, three silly bookings and endless helpings of fun to neutrals. Both teams hit the ground running and never stopped.
But it was also a day when defences went AWOL and both teams could have hit a score that would have made England’s cricketers in India envious.
Chelsea began as if they wanted to card a mountain of goals, with Frank Lampard scoring the 6,000th in their 104-year history.
Terry, inevitably booed by Arsenal fans after his first touch of the ball, hit a wonderful 14th-minute 45-yard crossfield pass to Juan Mata, who turned Andre Santos to cross and there was Lampard to bow low and head in.
Arsenal’s travel sickness seemed to haunt them again until Van Persie equalised in the 36th minute, tapping home after Mikel Arteta, Aaron Ramsey and, finally, Gervinho created a marvellous opening.
But Chelsea had done their homework, hitting Arsenal’s Achilles heel, their weakness down the flanks, hard.
Their opening spell was mesmerising and it would have been no surprise if they had been three goals up before Arsenal drew breath.
Despite Ramsey, they were also out-fought in midfield, where they couldn’t even use Yossi Benayoun, who was not available under the terms of his loan to Arsenal.
Daniel Sturridge should have added a Chelsea second in the 29th minute when he raced on to another of Lampard’s defence-splitting passes but struck with the outside of his left foot, when the law of logic saw it was a right-footed blast.
Terry, who else, had no such misfortune.
He did the simple thing, side-footing home Lampard’s 45th-minute corner when Arsenal’s defence was again asleep.
Then it was Arsenal’s turn.
Alex Song danced and pranced through Chelsea’s midfield then found Santos to strike home another equaliser in the 49th minute.
Walcott, always a menace, decided he was fed up supplying others with passes to fail and took it upon himself to score.
He went on a 56th-minute run, was blocked, stumbled but still got to feet first and squared his before squirming a shot under Petr Cech.
Chelsea were not finished and Mata fired a 25-yard shot home in the 80th minute.
Then came the breath-taking finale as Van Persie smacked home in the 84th minute after Terry slipped trying to get to Florent Malouda’s pass and then added an unstoppable fifth in added time.
Gunners boss Arsene Wenger said: “This was a great team performance and Robin would agree with that. He scored because others helped.”
Arsenal were lucky not to have goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny sent off for his last-ditch tackle on Ashley Cole.
The Pole was booked for his collision two yards from goal, and posted on Twitter: “I don’t know why I stayed on the pitch (under the rules), but what a game!”


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

Express :

CHELSEA 3 ARSENAL 5: BLUES RUN DOWN BY A VAN

By Jim Holden


ANOTHER day, another stunning match in the Premier League – this spellbinding contest won by a hat-trick from Arsenal captain Robin Van Persie, but aided and abetted by a horrendous mistake by Chelsea skipper John Terry.
For Arsenal it was confirmation they have fought back from the nightmare of autumn, a magnificent victory their players celebrated wildly in front of their supporters.
The Gunners played with style throughout, but complimented that with resilience and ambition. It was a triumphant cocktail, and they deserved the sunshine celebration.
For Terry it was a desperate end to a week in which he has been the subject of both police and FA investigations into allegations of racial abuse towards an opponent.
The Chelsea captain had scored in the first half to put his team 2-1 ahead at the interval, and for a few heady moments while drinking a half-time cup of tea he could have savoured the prospect of being a hero on the field again.
Instead, he was the hapless architect of Chelsea’s downfall. The score was 3-3 in the 85th minute when Florent Malouda played a routine pass towards his skipper just behind the halfway line.
There was little danger, little threat. But Terry slipped on the Stamford Bridge turf, and the ball ran free. Van Persie, alert and alive, pounced like a hawk. The Dutchman flew forward, rounded goalkeeper Petr Cech, and slotted home the goal.
He struck again in stoppage time when Arsenal conjured a swift counter-attack as Chelsea sought redemption. From the corner of the penalty area Van Persie struck a thunderbolt drive that burst through Cech’s hands into the net.
It delivered another amazing score-line in this season so full of them. There have been five meetings so far between the four English clubs in the Champions League. They have provided 34 goals, an average of 6.8 per game.
This encounter was compelling – a tribute to the attacking intent and class of both sides. If you have an adventurous attacking philosophy, as both managers Andre Villas-Boas and Arsene Wenger do, then defences will be stretched and vulnerable.
Never mind the cascade of goals – we also had football of high technical quality, with classy passing of clever angles, and intelligent running off the ball. It was a joy to watch.
Chelsea made the brighter start, squandering three early chances as they sliced behind the Arsenal defence but on each occasion failing to deliver the final pass to Fernando Torres.
Manager Villas-Boas rued those misses afterwards, believing they were the decisive moments of the game.
Perhaps so, but Gervinho and Van Persie also fluffed inviting early opportunities for the Gunners.
Eight goals were eventually scored, but it would have been 18 had the teams’ finishing been more clinical. It sounds crazy, but it’s true.
Chelsea went 1-0 up in the 14th minute when a superb cross-field pass from Terry gave Juan Mata time to centre from the right and Frank Lampard to head home.
The response from Arsenal was impressive. They controlled possession and a series of probing attacks delivered a 36th minute equaliser.
A wondrous pass from Aaron Ramsey put Gervinho free in the box and his sideways pass foxed Cech, allowing Van Persie to tap home into an empty net. On the stroke of half-time Chelsea were back in the lead – a simple goal; Lampard’s corner stabbed in from close range by Terry.
This lead didn’t last too long either. Arsenal roared forward after the interval and left-back Andre Santos scored with a low shot.
Moments later Chelsea full-back Ashley Cole was brought down by Arsenal goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny just outside the box. Some referees might have shown a red card; this time it was only yellow.
Arsenal were 3-2 up in the 56th minute, when Theo Walcott, a lively presence all game, ran through a tackle and scored with a fierce drive that beat Cech at the near post.
Chelsea equalised for 3-3 in the 80th minute. Substitute Romelu Lukaku seemed to foul Santos, but play was waved on and Mata unleashed an unstoppable swerving long-range shot that flew into goal.
Then Van Persie struck. His late double, and a personal hat-trick, brought untold joy to the Gunners and humiliating agony to John Terry.


MAN of the MATCH: AARON RAMSEY – Skilful and dominant performance in midfield, full of excellent passing

CHELSEA: Cech; Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, Cole; Ramires (Lukaku 72), Mikel (Mereiles 76), Lampard; Sturridge (Malouda 62), Torres, Mata.


ARSENAL: Szczesny; Djourou (Jenkinson 75), Mertesacker, Koscielny, Santos; Walcott (Rosicky 79), Arteta, Ramsey, Song; Gervinho (Vermaelen 88), Van Persie.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

everton 2-1 aet






Sturridge is late hero for Chelsea

Everton 1 Chelsea 2 (aet)
Tim Rich

It was not quite Jose Mourinho's dash down the Old Trafford touchline but Andre Villas-Boas's celebrations at the final whistle were expansive. He punched the air, a few feet from where his counterpart David Moyes was standing, and then dashed on to the Goodison turf. You never imagined a place in the quarter-finals of the Carling Cup meant so much at Stamford Bridge.
It was a hard-fought night and not much of an evening for goalkeepers or penalty-takers. Chelsea's Ross Turnbull was dismissed while Everton's Jan Mucha was responsible for the kind of error that made you realise why Fabien Barthez would reach for a pack of Gitanes while playing for France or Manchester United.
Both sides squandered a penalty and when Royston Drenthe was shown a second yellow card for a late tackle on Ryan Bertrand in extra time, it turned the tie.
Until then Moyes had thought the very worst Everton might take from the night was a penalty shoot-out but Chelsea, reinvigorated, snatched their advantage. Nicolas Anelka struck the post and when Mucha parried Florent Malouda's shot, Daniel Sturridge drove it home.
Turnbull was playing in a jersey whose colour was officially given as "slime". The colour the Teessider would remember from this night is red. Louis Saha had worked Turnbull hard in the first half and early in the second, he wriggled through Chelsea's defensive screen and was brought down by the man in slime. It was a nakedly obvious penalty and Chelsea's third red card in four days. In contrast to Sunday's debacle at Queen's Park Rangers, Villas-Boas smiled that "this time" he had no complaints about the refereeing.
Most would argue that the forced introduction of Petr Cech strengthened Chelsea and although Leighton Baines – in contrast to Anelka's vacuous effort in the first half – struck his spot-kick hard, Cech saved it. He also blocked Baines's second attempt from the rebound but he could do little about Saha's low stooping header six minutes from the scheduled end, which sent the contest into extra time. Had Drenthe aimed a vicious free-kick fractionally lower, that would not have been required.
John Terry and nine others were absent from the Chelsea side that began Sunday's disastrous and ultimately poisonous game at Loftus Road. Terry was spared the journey to Merseyside, not because he was attempting to avoid the fall-out from the alleged racist abuse directed at Anton Ferdinand but, more prosaically, because he is one booking away from suspension and Chelsea face Arsenal on Saturday.
Aside from their goalkeeper, Everton were pretty much at full strength, although given what happened seven minutes from the interval, Moyes might have wished he had not given Tim Howard the night off. The shot from Malouda was a relatively harmless-looking chip which Mucha got both gloves to. Somehow, the ball squirmed through his hands and into the net. Goodison was tense with the sound of suppressed laughter and desperate embarrassment for the Slovak, whose last run in the Carling Cup had ended with defeat at Brentford.

Everton (4-4-1-1): Mucha; Neville (Hibbert, 46), Heitinga, Distin, Baines; Drenthe, Rodwell (Stracqualursi, 78), Fellaini, Bilyaletdinov (Coleman, 81); Cahill; Saha. Substitutes not used Hahnemann (gk), Barkley, Osman, Vellios.

Chelsea (4-3-1-2): Turnbull; Ivanovic, Alex, Luiz, Betrand; Romeu McEachran (Mikel, 64), Kalou (Sturridge, 85); Malouda; Anelka, Lukaku (Cech, 60).Substitutes not used Lampard, Torres, Mata, Ferreira.
Referee L Mason (Northamptonshire).
Carling Cup last eight
Arsenal, Blackburn Rovers, Cardiff City, Chelsea, Crystal Palace, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United.
Draw to be made on Saturday; Ties to take place 29/30 November

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

Guardian:


Ross Turnbull sent off before Chelsea overcome Everton in extra time
• Everton 1-2 Chelsea (after extra time)• Saha 84; Kalou 38, Sturridge 116

Andy Hunter at Goodison Park

The garish camouflage kit worn by Everton's goalkeepers does not disguise their embarrassment. Jan Mucha, their Slovakian stand-in, was at fault for both Chelsea goals as André Villas-Boas's team survived a third red card in two matches to advance into the quarter-finals. The Chelsea manager reacted in a Mourinho-esque manner to the final whistle, leaping into the air and leading his players on a shirt-throwing, chest-thumping celebration before the away hordes. Here the Carling Cup became a test of inner resources.
Ross Turnbull was dismissed from the Chelsea goal for a 58th minute-foul on Louis Saha, enabling Petr Cech to enter from the bench and save the resulting spot-kick from Leighton Baines. The penalty misses and red cards were ultimately shared, Nicolas Anelka also failing for the visitors and Royston Drenthe collecting a late red card that prompted Chelsea to seize control of extra time.
Everton had the chances to have won against 10 men in normal time but there was no denying Chelsea's superiority on a level playing field. When Mucha could only parry Florent Malouda's shot straight to Daniel Sturridge, having earlier handed Chelsea the lead with an amateurish mistake, the substitute finished expertly and a draining victory was secured.
"We were very committed, we showed strength of character and resolve once again," said Villas-Boas who, unlike at Queens Park Rangers on Sunday, had no complaints over the red card. "Having 10 men unfortunately made it difficult for us again but to survive in difficult circumstances is an extremely good sign for us. It shows the squad is committed to all the trophies. It was important to win after a defeat that happens like it did at Queens Park Rangers. To do it in this fashion is more gratifying. The emotional victory you get from a result like this is immense."
There was no place in the Chelsea squad for John Terry and no questions allowed about the England captain either as a consequence of the Football Association's investigation into allegations of racist abuse against Anton Ferdinand, which he denies. Villas-Boas made 10 changes in all but there was minimal disruption to the visitors' play and they should have established an early lead from the spot.
John Heitinga, recalled to the heart of the home defence but rusty on his first start in five matches, ploughed through Josh McEachran as the young Chelsea midfielder gathered the rebound from his own shot against Sylvain Distin. Heitinga still had the nerve to plead innocence but was spared when Anelka ambled forward, sent Mucha the wrong way but paid for his casual approach as the ball drifted well wide.
Moments later Anelka was bundled off the ball inside the area by Distin only for the referee Lee Mason to wave away appeals for a second spot-kick. Just as Everton began to settle, however, with Drenthe increasingly influential, they threw it away – literally. There appeared little danger when Salomon Kalou floated a first-time chip towards the Everton goal from the edge of the area. The Slovakia international Mucha, given a rare outing in place of the rested Tim Howard, came to collect with both hands but made a complete hash of the catch and let it slip through his grasp and over the line. Moyes turned towards his own bench open-mouthed. Even Kalou had the decency to look embarrassed.
"I don't think it had an effect on the players after that," said Everton's manager, David Moyes. "The boys played really well, especially in the second half and we were unlucky not to win in 90 minutes but we've only got ourselves to blame for not winning it."
The introduction of Seamus Coleman gave Everton much-needed speed and width and with seven minutes remaining he delivered an inviting cross on to the head of Saha, whose glancing finish broke Cech's impressive resistance. Saha almost struck again in the final seconds of normal time but his low shot flashed narrowly wide. Chelsea, despite their disadvantage, also continued to press for a winner with Sturridge introduced and David Luiz testinge Mucha with a dipping free-kick.
Drenthe received the second red card of the game when he collected a second booking for a foul on Ryan Bertrand in extra time and a suspension that rules him out of Manchester United's visit to Goodison on Saturday. Anelka then struck a post following a fine run and cross from Bertrand and Mucha produced a fine save to deny Branislav Ivanovic from distance. His next stop merely proved the assist for Chelsea's winner.


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

Telegraph:

Everton 1 Chelsea 2; aet:
By Chris Bascombe at Goodison Park

Substitute Daniel Sturridge ensured Chelseamanager Andre Villas-Boas can look forward to visiting Wembley for all the right reasons. The Portuguese coach may find he is already pencilled in for a trip for disciplinary purposes, but after brushing off the latest red card controversy he now finds himself on course to follow the path of his former mentor, Jose Mourinho.
If the Carling Cup is not top of Villas-Boas’ wanted list, it should be after he savoured victory here. As the first trophy he can win it would settle nerves and signal an arrival in English football — the platform, just as it was for Jose, to more delectable riches later this season. Besides, if Chelsea do not win it is most likely one of their top four rivals will.
Any lingering sense of injustice from last weekend’s defeat to QPR, coupled with what could have been a pivotal dismissal of goalkeeper Ross Turnbull here, was plainly not evident. Turnbull, deputising for Petr Cech, was dismissed on 58 minutes for a professional foul on Louis Saha.
It temporarily shifted the balance of power, granting Everton an opportunity they squandered after equalising by stupidly restoring the numerical balance in extra-time when Royston Drenthe collected a second booking.
“I have no complaints about the sending off,” said Villas-Boas, granting himself a smile which was not evident when Louis Saha headed the game into extra time seven minutes from the end.
“We showed our strength, our character and our resilience. This is a good sign for us and we showed we are committed to winning the trophy.”
Prior to the dismissal of Turnbull it was a strangely dispassionate Goodison Park. Chelsea, without John Terry (left at home to organise a defence of a somewhat different sort) and with Frank Lampard, Fernando Torres and Juan Mata kept on the bench, were still strolling to a comfortable win.
This was not a good night to be a deputy keeper. Turnbull was consoled not only by the ultimate victory but by substitute Cech saving the penalty which followed his indiscretion.
For Jan Mucha, in for the rested Tim Howard, the inexplicable error that gifted Chelsea the lead on 38 minutes will not so easily be forgotten. In cricketing terms, it was a dolly. He did not just have time to catch the looping ball, he could have juggled it a few times before clutching it. Instead, it bobbled out of his palms and over his head leaving Salomon Kalou to sheepishly accept his congratulation. The dubious goals committee may determine the unwanted credit lies solely with the Slovakian keeper.
Regardless of the strange circumstances, it was the least Chelsea had deserved. Nicolas Anelka had casually missed a penalty on 16 minutes as the scene was set for a series of bewildering errors from both sides.
A few Saha efforts aside, David Moyes’ side were looking deficient in every department until they faced 10 men, while Chelsea rookies Romelu Lukaku and Josh McEachran offered a tantalising promise of an enterprising future at Stamford Bridge.
Belgian Lukaku has already been compared to Didier Drogba and on this evidence the comparison is not generous. His power and surging runs gave the Everton defence a consistently unkempt look. One of the unfortunate sub-plots of the Turnbull dismissal was the early exit of the young duo.
Everton’s hopes were restored when substitute Seamus Coleman’s perfect cross found Saha to revive the host’s hopes seven minutes from the end. They should have made their advantage count, but Drenthe’s daft lunge on Ryan Bertrand deep into extra time preceded a late Chelsea rally.
Anelka hit the post before substitute Sturridge struck, pouncing on a loose ball in the 116th minute, after Florent Malouda’s shot was pushed clear by Mucha.
“I didn’t think we deserved to lose it – in fact we should have won it in the 90 minutes. We have only got ourselves to blame,” said Moyes.
“At 11 versus 10 we were pretty much in control and looked on for at least a penalty shoot out, but at 10 v 10 we had to work hard to stop them. Our sending off probably turned it.”
Considering the Carling Cup supposedly ranks somewhere just above a pre-season friendly on the top four’s priority list, there is now a predictable familiarity about the last eight line-up.
As Chelsea joined Manchester United, Arsenal and Manchester City in the later stages, it was as much a statement of their overpowering strength in depth as it was their determination to lift the trophy.
Dull for the neutrals craving some romance, perhaps, but no doubt thrilling to the sponsors who are eyeing a showpiece final.


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

Mail:

Everton 1 Chelsea 2 (aet): Dan the man as extra-time winner sends Blues throughBy IAN LADYMAN

At the end Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas ran on to the field punching the air with both fists.
Then there was a hug for Nicolas Anelka.
Had anyone told him that this was only the Carling Cup?
To Villas-Boas's credit, he is clearly a man who values trophies.
Any trophy.
Jose Mourinho's first success in England was in this competition and maybe his former assistant remembers that.
Whatever the case for his post-match excitement, his relief was understandable.
This was a night of high drama; a night of missed penalties, red cards, heroics and blunders. It was just as well we didn't end up with a shootout. It probably would have gone on into the early hours.
'I was happy because we were able to triumph in difficult circumstances,' said Villas-Boas.
'That shows how committed this squad is to trophies. The emotional benefit we get from a game like this is important.'
Ultimately the day was won by Daniel Sturridge.
There were just four minutes of extra time remaining when the Chelsea substitute scored from 10 yards after Everton goalkeeper Jan Mucha parried a stinging shot from Florent Malouda into his path.
That, though, told nothing of the real story.
This was a game that either side could have won and at times looked as though they didn't really want to.
Largely, it was a match that revolved around three goalkeepers.
Everton's Slovakian Mucha was the first to take centre stage towards the end of a first half in which Everton played rather well.
Anelka had already missed a penalty - awarded after a quarter of an hour for a John Heitinga foul on Josh McEachran - when Mucha contributed one of the worst goalkeeping blunders this stadium has probably ever seen.
Certainly there seemed little danger when Chelsea's Salomon Kalou chipped a rather feeble cross towards the far post.
Mucha surely couldn't have dropped the ball if he had tried. But somehow he lost control of it and a second later it was dropping over his shoulder and into the net.
It was a calamity moment for Mucha and pretty disastrous for David Moyes and Everton too.
Nevertheless, they seemed to be handed a way back into the game 15 minutes after half-time when referee Lee Mason awarded his second penalty of the game.
This time Chelsea goalkeeper Ross Turnbull was the fall guy as he tripped Louis Saha in the area following a mistake by central defender David Luiz.
Mason had little choice but to send Turnbull off, and with Chelsea down to 10 men on came Petr Cech as a substitute.
There are those who say that Cech hasn't been the same since he suffered a head injury at Reading five years ago.
Here, though, he produced a remarkable cameo as he saved Leighton Baines's penalty with his first touch and then managed to spread himself to block the follow-up from the same player.
Two minutes later Cech excelled again, this time racing from goal to block a shot from the Russian Diniyar Bilyaletdinov at point-blank range.
Everton found some impetus late on and scored a superb equaliser with seven minutes left. Substitute Seamus Coleman got away down the right and when he delivered a cross to the near post Saha crashed a superb header down and into the corner.
In the moments that followed, Everton's best chances to win the game came and went.
Saha volleyed a foot or so wide and the Holland winger Royston Drenthe shot across goal.
Drenthe made his own mark on extra time when he was sent off for a second booking.
Both were stupid, one for dissent and another for a late challenge on Chelsea left back Ryan Bertrand.
'That turned it,' said Moyes. 'At 11 against 10, we were in control.'
In truth the 30 extra minutes were disappointing.
Anelka hit a post and then Sturridge scored.
Everton never threatened. Villas-Boas looked rather happy.

MATCH FACTS
Everton: Mucha, Neville (Hibbert 46), Heitinga, Distin, Baines, Bilyaletdinov (Coleman 81), Fellaini, Cahill, Rodwell (Stracqualursi 78), Drenthe, Saha.
Subs Not Used: Hahnemann, Barkley, Osman, Vellios.
Sent Off: Drenthe (107).
Booked: Fellaini,Drenthe.
Goals: Saha 83.
Chelsea: Turnbull, Ivanovic, Luiz, Alex, Bertrand, Malouda, Romeu, McEachran (Mikel 64), Anelka, Lukaku (Cech 60), Kalou (Sturridge 85).
Subs Not Used: Lampard, Torres, Mata, Ferreira.
Sent Off: Turnbull (58).
Booked: Alex,Mikel.
Goals: Kalou 38,Sturridge 116.
Att: 23,170
Ref: Lee Mason (Lancashire).

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

Mirror:
Everton 1-2 Chelsea (aet) -
Sturridge wins it in extra time for battling visitors
By David Maddock

When Chelsea boss Andre Villas-Boas celebrated at the end of this match as if he had won the final, you understood the extent of the tense drama that seems almost a recurring theme for his team.
It was the Carling Cup tie that had everything...missed penalties, red cards, missed chances and the usual controversy that surrounds the London club, even if it wasn't quite at the level of their bruising weekend encounter with QPR.
It left Villas-Boas punching the air, and grinning broadly afterwards, the win enough to even allow him a smile about the battle of Loftus Road as he conceded: "I have no complaints about the sending off....this time!"
He was, he insisted, proud of the response of his players after the weekend controversy. "There was so much fall-out from that game, so to show the resilience and character we did here was an incredible sign for us," he proudly asserted.
Eventually, they were the last team standing after slugging it out over 120 tortuous minutes with Everton, to win - or more accurately survive - after an excruciating extra time period, thanks to substitute Daniel Sturridge's strike four minutes from an increasingly likely penalty shoot out.
They had Royston Drenthe to thank, ultimately, for their victory, even if they always looked the stronger side. Everton's only real chance of progressing through to the quarter final came when the visitors were reduced to 10 men early in the second half after keeper Ross Turnbull's dismissal.
But Drenthe threw away that advantage, and that glorious opportunity for another Goodison upset, when he foolishly also got himself sent off in extra time for the second of two stupid yellow cards.
It was, his manager David Moyes admitted, a painfully costly mistake. "That sending off probably turned it because when we were 11 v 10 we were always in control, and the worse we would have got was a penalty shoot out."
Everton should have won in normal time after Turnbull saw red, and played with passion as they searched for the winner, but in extra time they ran out of steam, and when Drenthe trudged off, their chance was gone.
If there was always drama and tension in this tie, then there wasn't true quality often enough, with only Nicolas Anelka and Sturridge when he appeared as a second half sub providing anything approaching a match-winning impetus.
If Sturridge was the ultimate hero, when he was alert enough after 116 gruelling minutes to turn home a rebound when Florent Malouda's shot was beaten into his path, then the night was a tale of two keepers...or rather three, given the contribution from Petr Cech when he came on.
There was a certain symmetry in much of the game, with a horrendous mistake from home keeper Jan Mucha matched by a more unfortunate one from his opposite number Turnbull, to provide pivotal moments in the tie.
Mucha has played only five times for Everton, and his experience at this level was evident, when he inexplicably allowed a tame shot from Salomon Kalou from the edge of his box to slip through his grasp and into the net when it barely had the power to get there under its own steam.
That came on 39 minutes, and by then Chelsea could have been home and dry but for a bad penalty miss from the otherwise excellent Anelka, when he shot wide of the goal following John Heitinga's poor challenge on Josh McEachran.
Chelsea were dominant to that point, with only Louis Saha troubling Turnbull, something he did rather more significantly on 58 minutes when he capitalised on a mistake by David Luiz, and was hauled down.
From the spot kick though, Cech - rushed onto the pitch to face it - saved well from Leighton Baines, and saved even better from the follow up, and when Tim Cahill steered a resulting header wide, you worried for Everton.
They rallied though, and with six minutes remaining, produced a glorious leveller, when sub Seamus Coleman escaped down the right to send over a fine cross that Saha drilled in at the near post.
Drenthe could have won the game for his side in the dying minutes, but instead his naivety lost it for them, and with it an opportunity to head towards Wembley.


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

Sun:

Everton 1 Chelsea 2
By PHIL THOMAS

JEEPERS keepers! Another day, another red card for Chelsea — and even redder faces all round.
The red card came for reserve keeper Ross Turnbull, sent packing after 58 minutes for upending Louis Saha as the striker skipped past him in the box.
The red face came 20 minutes earlier for Everton's own second-choice stopper Jan Mucha. He did not so much gift-wrap Chelsea's opener as personally drive it round and drop it at their feet.
Thank heavens for a little sanity in the shape of Petr Cech, who stepped from the bench to show both of the others how to do it with a series of outstanding saves.
Thanks, too — at least from the Goodison fans — to Saha, who maintained his mantle as Chelsea's bogey man by popping up with the late, late goal which forced extra-time.
But the biggest vote of gratitude came from those travelling supporters to sub Daniel Sturridge, whose clinical, dead-eye, 116th-minute finish spared them the squeaky bum scenario of penalties — and booked the Londoners a last-eight ticket.
Mind you, none of that could seriously rival Mucha for bagging the headlines with a clanger so bad it even gave a THIRD Chelsea sending-off in three days serious headline-grabbing competition. In fact, if Mucha can negotiate himself a cut of the royalties for the various Football Blooper DVD's for which last night's cock-up is destined, he can look forward to a comfortable retirement.
Think Ronny Rosenthal's against-the-bar open goal for Liverpool at Aston Villa. Think Bobby Zamora's similar effort against Everton last Sunday, which from that distance could not have gone wider had he sported clowns' shoes.
That is the sort of calamity we are talking here. And even Chelsea, after all the woes of defeat, dismissals and an FA charge in recent days, will have found it hard to keep the smile off their faces. Salomon Kalou certainly did. He looked almost embarrassed to celebrate putting his side in front seven minutes before the break.
There was absolutely no danger when he swung over a lobbed effort that was either a lazy shot or a mishit cross. It was that poor.
Up went Mucha for the simplest of catches. Or so we thought. Unbelievably, he let it slip through his fingers and merely added to the comedy by scuttling back into the net alongside the ball.
Little wonder he had his head in his hands as his team-mates looked on in disbelief. At least he did not drop that.
It is not the only Carling Cup night which has contained Mucha mirth courtesy of Everton's No 2 keeper, whose blunder handed West Brom a spot-kick in the previous round before his side went through on penalties.
Not that he was the only one guilty of slip-ups, even if they were not on the same scale.
Nicolas Anelka had blown a spot-kick when Josh McEachran was hauled down by John Heitinga, clipping his shot off a post.
And how Leighton Baines must have wanted to plant a smacker on Saha, after missing the penalty as Turnbull saw red.
Baines' low spot-kick would never win a Penalty of the Year award. But Cech was still impressive in getting down to it, as he was to fend away the rebound.
Those two blocks, though, were nothing compared to the unbelievable save he produced to fly out and acrobatically deny Diniyar Bilyaletdinov when the Russian looked odds-on to score.
In those four magical minutes, Cech had eclipsed anything his two oppos had done all night. Having said that, it was not exactly difficult. Chelsea had not left Goodison as winners since April 2008. But just when they looked certain to break that jinx, up popped that man Saha to continue his run as the man Stamford Bridge fans love to hate.
He already had five goals in seven games against them before this tie. And with seven minutes remaining he made it half a dozen by coming to the rescue once more.
Seamus Coleman's cross from the right was decent, if not devastating. Yet Saha made it so, as he stepped in front of the leaden-footed David Luiz to bury his header into the corner. Tim Cahill could then have finished it in normal time. The Aussie was springheeled in meeting Royston Drenthe's cross but somehow headed over from bang in front.
With penalties looming, Mucha beat away a Florent Malouda drive, only for Sturridge to show once more he is a finisher supreme by drilling in the rebound.
That looked to be bad enough for Everton. But they also face hosting Manchester United on Saturday minus suspended Drenthe, sent off for a second yellow when he clattered into Ryan Bertrand.

DREAM TEAM STAR MAN — PETER CECH (Chelsea)

EVERTON: Mucha 3, Neville 5, Heitinga 5, Distin 5, Baines 6, Fellaini 7, Cahill 6, Rodwell 6, Bilyaletdinov 6 Saha 8, Drenthe 7. Subs: Hibbert (Neville 45) 7, Stracqualursi (Rodwell 77) 5, Coleman (Bilyaletdinov 80) 7. Not used: Hahnemann, Barkley, Osman, Vellios. Booked: Drenthe, Fellaini. Sent off: Drenthe.
CHELSEA: Turnbull 5, Ivanovic 6, Luiz 4, Alex 6, Bertrand 6, Malouda 6, Romeu 6, McEachran 6, Anelka 6, Lukaku 6, Kalou 7. Subs: Cech (Lukaku 58) 8 DREAM TEAM STAR MAN, Mikel (McEachran 63) 6, Sturridge (Kalou 85) 6. Not used: Ferreira, Lampard, Torres, Mata. Booked: Alex, Mikel. Sent off: Turnbull.


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Star:

EVERTON 1 CHELSEA 2: DANIEL STURRIDGE MAKES IT EXTRA SPECIAL
By Jeremy Cross

DANIEL STURRIDGE fired Chelsea into the Carling Cup quarter-finals with an extra-time winner on a night of high drama at Goodison Park.
The substitute struck on 116 minutes after Jan Mucha had parried Florent Malouda’s initial drive straight into the path of the England Under-21 star.
It capped a remarkable contest which included two red cards, two missed penalties, an amazing goalline clearance and a host of missed chances from both sides.
Who says the Carling Cup is boring?
But Everton only had themselves to blame for crashing out after failing to deliver the knockout blow to the Blues when Andre Villas-Boas’ men were on the ropes in the second half of normal-time.
Petr Cech looked to have been the unexpected hero as 10-man Chelsea tried to limp into the last eight on a night of incredible action at both ends.
It was a tale of two goalkeepers on Merseyside as one emerged the saviour while his opposite number proved the villain of this fourth-round tie.
Cech didn’t even expect to be involved after starting the game on the bench, but was thrust into the action on the hour when Ross Turnbull was sent off.
Turnbull was shown a straight red card for tripping Louis Saha and conceding a penalty, but Cech came off the bench to deny Leighton Baines with a superb double save.
To make matters worse for hapless Everton, rookie keeper Mucha had gifted the Blues a first-half breakthrough with an horrific blunder.
But Louis Saha rode to the rescue with a headed equaliser six minutes from time to force the tie into extra-time.
Slovakian keeper Mucha somehow allowed Salomon Kalou’s tame effort to beat him and hand Chelsea the lead after 38 minutes.
Kalou’s shot looked harmless and would have been meat and drink to most keepers.
But Mucha turned what wasn’t even a drama into a crisis after letting the ball spin through his fingers and trickle over the line to leave Everton boss David Moyes in despair on the touchline.
Even Kalou was embarrassed to celebrate as Mucha, making just his third appearance of the season, apologised to his stunned team-mates.
His blunder summed up an evening of highs and lows for both sides which also saw Nicolas Anelka miss from the spot inside 16 minutes.
Blues boss Villas-Boas made 10 changes and resisted the chance to stick with his big guns in the wake of last weekend’s shock defeat at QPR.
Captain John Terry was left at home in an attempt to shield him from the spotlight following his alleged race row with Anton Ferdinand, while Cech, Frank Lampard, Juan Mata and Fernando Torres were also absent.
It was a different tale for opposite number Moyes, who named a near full-strength side knowing a place in the quarter-finals was within his grasp.
The Toffees started well and were beginning to dominate when John Heitinga tripped Josh McEachran to concede a penalty.
It was the perfect chance for Villas- Boas’ men to seize the advantage but Anelka sidefooted his tame effort wide.
There seemed no end to the stalemate, that was until seven minutes before the break when Mucha handed the Blues the breakthrough.
It was a sign of things to come as a calamitous second half left both bosses shaking their heads in disbelief.
Anelka wasted a glorious chance to make it 2-0 on 56 minutes before the Blues found themselves down to 10 men moments later when Turnbull received his marching orders.
Cech came to the rescue, having not even warmed up, but all was not lost for the hosts as they piled forward in search of a leveller.
Royston Drenthe saw Cech produce another fine save to tip wide his blistering free-kick before the on-loan Real Madrid man also grazed the crossbar with another fine effort.
It looked like the Blues might hang on but they finally cracked on 84 minutes when Saha converted substitute Seamus Coleman’s cross with a neat header.
Moyes’ men could have even snatched a win in normal-time but wasted a host of chances despite laying siege to the Blues’ goal.
It proved costly when Drenthe was sent off for his second booking of the night in the second half of extra-time after a foul on Ryan Bertrand and that offered the Blues more hope.
It was their turn to pile forward and Anelka saw an effort deflect off Baines’ thigh on to the post and amazingly back into the arms of Mucha
But back came Chelsea and when Mucha could only block Malouda’s effort, Sturridge was on hand to deliver the killer blow with his fifth goal of the season.


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

Express:

EVERTON 1 CHELSEA 2 (AET): STURRIDGE HITS THE SPOT FOR CHELSEA
By Matthew Dunn

THERE were red cards and red faces, but Chelsea eventually booked their place in the quarter-finals. More importantly, nobody turned the air blue.
On a night when dramatic actions spoke louder than inappropriate words, two men were sent off, two more missed penalties and Everton goalkeeper Jan Mucha committed a howler that he will struggle to forget.
While 10-man Chelsea were made to sweat for an extra half-hour before Daniel Sturridge coolly slotted home the winner in the final minutes, John Terry had his feet up at home.
Now, having sat this out to avoid picking up a fifth yellow card and suspension – rather than hiding away from controversy on a night when Chelsea would not be drawn on questions about him – he will be charged with leading out his tired cohorts against Arsenal on Saturday.
Goalkeeper Ross Turnbull’s sending-off came on the back of two Chelsea red cards against QPR on Sunday. But manager Andre Villas-Boas was happier with last night’s decision than the ones at Loftus Road.
“There are no complaints about the sending-off – this time,” he said. “It was important to me to win after a defeat that happened like that. It was important to get back to winning ways.
“We were really committed and showed strength of character and resilience. We went down to 10 men once again, which made it difficult, but we were able to triumph over adversity. Although the physical effort was immense, the emotional benefit from the victory means we will feelfresh again for Saturday.”
He had tried to keep his big-name stars as rested as possible by keeping most of them on the bench – more than £120SHrSmillion-worth of talent held back in reserve.
The understudies started brightly enough, but they needed a huge helping hand – or rather two helpless ones – to gift them the lead.
Salomon Kalou’s clip was nothing short of hopeful at best, but Mucha somehow contrived to drop the ball over his line in an appalling fumble.
Chelsea should already have been in front, as minutes earlier Josh McEachran was bundled over by a clumsy challenge from John Heitinga and referee Lee Mason pointed to the spot.
Nicolas Anelka’s calm swagger up to the ball would have been impressively nonchalant if he had not proceeded to send his shot narrowly wide.
Early in the second half, Everton had a chance to show how to score from the spot.
David Luiz’s failure to deal with a bouncing ball enabled Louis Saha to get in behind him, only for Chelsea keeper Turnbull’s momentum to send the Everton striker flying.
Clear penalty. Inescapable red card. The only question was whether Leighton Baines could beat the incoming Petr Cech from the spot. The short answer was no. Cech was also equal to the full-back’s follow-up attempt and Tim Cahill headed the second ricochet high and wide.
Saha, though, has scored five in his last seven games against Chelsea and met with more joy when he popped up at the near post seven minutes from time.
The extra 30 minutes should have suited Everton with their numerical advantage, but that was thrown away minutes after the interval by a second unnecessary yellow card for Royston Drenthe for a foul of Ryan Bertrand.
A brilliant goalline clearance by Baines from Anelka delayed the inevitable but, in the end, nobody could stop Sturridge booking a belated place in the quarter-finals with a cool finish four minutes from time.
Everton manager David Moyes said: “I didn’t think we deserved to lose and over 90 minutes we deserved to win. We have only ourselves to blame for not doing so.
“The boys played really well in the second half and we were really unlucky.”

EVERTON (4-5-1): Mucha; Neville (Hibbert 46), Heitinga, Distin, Baines; Bilyaletdinov (Coleman 81), Fellaini, Cahill, Rodwell (Stracqualursi 78), Drenthe; Saha. Booked: Fellaini, Drenthe. Sent off: Drenthe 107. Goal: Saha 83.

CHELSEA (4-3-3): Turnbull; Ivanovic, Alex, Luiz, Bertrand; Malouda, Romeu, McEachran (Mikel 64); Anelka, Lukaku (Cech 60), Kalou (Sturridge 85). Booked: Alex, Mikel. Sent off: Turnbull 58. Goals: Kalou 38, Sturridge 116.
Referee: L Mason (Lancashire).


Add Image

Monday, October 24, 2011

qpr 0-1







Independent:
Queen's Park Rangers 1 Chelsea 0
By Glenn Moore at Loftus Road

John Terry last night categorically denied directing a racist comment towards QPR defender Anton Ferdinand during Chelsea's tempestuous derby defeat at Loftus Road.
A video circulated on the internet in the aftermath of yesterday's match, with some claiming it shows Terry insulting Ferdinand using racist language.
"I've seen that there's a lot of comments on the internet with regards to some video footage of me in today's game," Terry said in a statement. "I'm disappointed that people have leapt to the wrong conclusions about the context of what I was seen to be saying to Anton Ferdinand.
"I thought Anton was accusing me of using a racist slur against him. I responded aggressively, saying that I never used that term. I would never say such a thing, and I'm saddened that people would think so."
Reduced to nine men before half-time, and trailing to a 10th-minute penalty, Chelsea did everything but salvage a point in a wild second half in this west London derby. Nor did the final whistle halt their defiance. Having seen his team rack up seven yellow cards in addition to the reds received by Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba, André Villas-Boas confronted referee Chris Foy in the tunnel and, by his own description "aggressively" told the official what was wrong with his display.
The Chelsea manager then accused Foy of being swayed by the home support in this cockpit of a stadium claiming the occasion was "too big" for the referee. While Villas-Boas stopped short of saying there was a conspiracy against his team he said they had been on the wrong end of decisions three times in the last six matches.
"We were the better team with nine men," said Villas-Boas. "In a normal day with a referee with good judgement towards both teams we win the game. He was card-happy towards the team. I am not happy with the difference of treatment. The officials were led by the emotion of the crowd and applied uneven decision making."
Neil Warnock, unsurprisingly, saw things differently. "When you get beat like that it is easy to blame the ref instead of looking at your own mistakes. I used to do that. Chris Foy has made far fewer mistakes than either side today." Warnock added pertinently, given the way Chelsea's self-discipline broke down as the game wore on: "The top clubs are not used to having their feathers ruffled, but they have no divine right to beat you."
Looking at the respective team-sheets it seemed QPR's only chance was if Chelsea imploded or Rangers had the benefit of the doubt when it came to the officiating. In the event both happened. An inconsequential start came to life when Helguson chased a high ball into the Chelsea box, bumping David Luiz in the process. Luiz bumped him back rather harder and Helguson crumpled. He got up to convert the penalty, only Rangers' seventh goal of the season. For the next 24 minutes Chelsea had huge amounts of possession, but did little with it.
Then Adel Taarabt came to life releasing Wright-Phillips. As the little striker sped away, Bosingwa leant into him and tugged his shorts. Both fell and though Wright-Phillips was up first, Foy stopped play and, to Chelsea's horror, showed Bosingwa a red card. Villas-Boas said he thought it was a yellow as Terry was coming across to cover but the England captain would never have got there in time.
Eight minutes later Chelsea were down to nine. Drogba lost the ball in midfield and trying to recover it, lunged into Taarabt. Villas-Boas had no argument with that dismissal. Chelsea, driven on by a sense of injustice and their own fierce will to win, opened the second period with a wave of attacks which put QPR on the back foot. There were a series of penalty appeals. One, when Fitz Hall tugged Frank Lampard, should have been given but so eagerly were Chelsea diving to the floor Foy may by then had decided to ignore all claims.
There were near misses at both ends but only one clear-cut chance, Nicolas Anelka meeting Branislav Ivanovic's cross with 10 minutes to go only to head straight at Paddy Kenny. It had been 16 years since QPR last won this derby, and it was Chelsea's first defeat to a newly promoted team in 64 games stretching back a decade.
"I'm proud of my players," said Villas-Boas , adding they were only six points behind Manchester City and were yet to play them. Warnock was even prouder of his. "They'll talk about this in 30 to 40 years," he said of QPR's jubilant support. "In that respect it's one of the greatest days of my career."


Booked: QPR Derry, Barton. Chelsea Mikel, Lampard, Ivanovic, Luiz, Meireles, Cole, Terry
Sent-off: Chelsea Bosingwa (33), Drogba (41).
Man of the match: Kenny
Referee: C Foy (Merseyside)
Attendance 18,050

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Guardian:

Chelsea's André Villas-Boas slams referee after defeat at QPR
Dominic Fifield at Loftus Road

A furious occasion has drained composure from Chelsea's pursuit at the top. André Villas-Boas's side lost their discipline as well as a west London derby here and an opportunity to hoist themselves into second place and nearer Manchester City was passed up, not that those who waved the visitors on their way could care less.
Queens Park Rangers had waited 16 years to prevail in this fixture and their fans left this corner of the capital in a state of delirium at the end while Chelsea cursed at the perceived injustice of it all. They will incur a fine for the seven yellow and red cards flashed by Chris Foy, who sent off José Bosingwa and Didier Drogba, though the Football Association will surely also consider sanctioning Villas-Boas, normally so calm and calculated in front of the media, over his post-match reaction in the tunnel and public assessment of the referee.
The Portuguese had confronted Foy as the teams trudged from the turf and any potential punishment will depend upon what the official includes in his match report about that altercation. "The referee was poor," said Villas-Boas. "Very, very poor. And it reflected in the result. I spoke to him at the end and I was very aggressive. I don't care if he's OK or not. Anyone can have a bad day but this was not a bad day for us: it was a good day for us but a bad day for the referee. Conspiracy theories can lead to bans and people calling us cry babies, so we're not saying that. But it keeps happening."
The fact that he went on to cite other complaints – decisions that went against his team at Stoke City and Manchester United this season – suggests that, on some level, Chelsea feel they are fighting darker forces. "Three games played by Chelsea were influenced by the referee and this is not Premier League level," he said. "You have to accept there is human error but it's a big pattern for us. Things are not going our way."
The visiting manager's principal frustration was an apparent lack of consistency in the referee's awards. David Luiz, still so defensively vulnerable, was penalised for the ninth-minute shoulder barge that sent Heidar Helguson sprawling and allowed the Iceland international to score the game's only goal from the penalty spot. Yet Fitz Hall's tug back on Frank Lampard in the area went ignored, as did Helguson's own grapple with David Luiz. Had a penalty been awarded for either it would still have been deemed soft but such was the tone set by Foy in the first half.
There was outcry, too, at the decision to dismiss Bosingwa for tugging down Shaun Wright-Phillips after the winger had outpaced the full-back on his inside. John Terry, claimed Villas-Boas and the Chelsea captain himself, was covering in the centre to ensure the incident should not be considered a goalscoring opportunity. Foy disagreed, perhaps noting that Wright-Phillips had been able to stagger back to his feet with Terry still some distance off.
"The three match officials were led by the emotions of the crowd and couldn't deal with a game like this," added Villas-Boas. "I cannot understand the difference in judgment: not only the major decisions, but the fouls, the throw-ins.
"If he gives a soft penalty like their one, then he has to consider shoves in the opposite box, too. A couple of his decisions were right, yellow cards for sure, but I think he lost it and was card happy towards my team."
Neil Warnock, predictably enough, saw matters rather differently. "A lot of referees would have been conned, so I'm pleased we had him," QPR's manager said. "When you're beaten like that and have two men sent off, it's easy to blame the referee. When you're young, you do that."
What neither manager contested was the decision to dismiss Didier Drogba just before half-time, the Ivorian losing the ball to Alejandro Faurlín, then leaping in two-footed to regain it, sending Adel Taarabt spiralling into the air in the process.
That was born of frustration and, according to Warnock, "worthy of three sendings off". Drogba will miss three matches, the second of which will be against Arsenal, opponents he relishes tormenting, next Saturday.
Bosingwa and Ashley Cole will be absent in the midweek Carling Cup tie at Everton, the latter having accumulated five bookings. Foy also ended up finishing the contest 30 seconds early, possibly to spare himself having to consider dismissing the England left-back for a second bookable offence following a foul on Joey Barton.
Even with their numbers so depleted, Chelsea might have plucked an unlikely point near the end only for Paddy Kenny to thwart Nicolas Anelka from close range as nerves gripped the home side. The fact that QPR had been expected to prevail at the break had rather served to provoke panic, with the few chances they created all missed and their passing increasingly erratic. But theirs was the ecstasy on the final whistle, a first home win in the top flight since 1996 and a result Warnock claimed "they'll still be talking about in 30 or 40 years". Chelsea's sense of grievance may take that long to subside.


Man of the match Shaun Derry (Queens Park Rangers)


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

Telegraph:

Queens Park Rangers 1 Chelsea 0

Chelsea completely lost their discipline on Sunday as two sending offs, seven yellow cards and a penalty handed Queens Park Rangers a first win over local rivals for 16 years.
Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba both saw red in the Premier League clash at Loftus Road, while Ashley Cole also picked up a suspension for his fifth booking of the season.
The rot set in when David Luiz needlessly conceded an eighth-minute penalty which Heidar Helguson scored, but the nine men wasted more than one chance to level, most notably when Nicolas Anelka headed straight at Paddy Kenny.
The defeat saw Chelsea blow the chance to capitalise on Manchester United's derby humiliation and move second in the Premier League, while also leaving them six points adrift of Manchester City.
That merely added to the jubilation for the home fans as they celebrated their side's first home victory since promotion.
Captain Joey Barton's personal attack on opposite number John Terry six days earlier did not prevent the pair shaking hands before kick-off but there was no love lost between the rival fans in what was a cracking atmosphere at Loftus Road.
Daniel Sturridge and Luiz threatened early on but the latter's habit of making daft challenges cost Chelsea dear in the eighth minute when they failed to deal with a long clearance and the defender nudged Helguson over in the box.
Referee Chris Foy pointed to the spot and Helguson snatched the ball from a far-from impressed Adel Taraabt and sent the penalty into the top corner via Petr Cech's fingertips.
The were bossing possession without creating anything of note and their afternoon took another turn for the worse in the 32nd minute when Bosingwa was controversially sent off.
Bosingwa hauled down Shaun Wright-Phillips when the winger threatened to burst clear, with Foy deeming the right-back to be last man and brandishing red.
Chelsea were livid with the decision, which was followed by Taraabt curling the resultant free-kick too close to Cech.
Blues boss Andre Villas-Boas sacrificed Sturridge for Branislav Ivanovic but his misery was far from over, with Drogba getting himself sent off four minutes before half-time.
The striker lunged in two footed on Taraabt and - unlike his other two major decisions - left Foy with little option.
Villas-Boas took action again in first-half stoppage-time, withdrawing Mata for Nicolas Anelka.
It looked a lost cause for the nine men, who were sent out a full two minutes before their opponents after the break.
Incredibly, they went close to levelling straight away when Lampard was just beaten to Raul Meireles' brilliant cross.
Kenny also flapped at a dangerous Ivanovic ball but they were soon hit on the break and John Obi Mikel was booked for upending Taraabt.
Lampard and Shaun Derry had to be dragged away from each other following a penalty-box scramble, with Foy booking both.
Luke Young screwed a great chance wide as Rangers finally began to make their advantage tell, while Ivanovic became the latest man cautioned for clattering Taraabt.
Barton picked up a customary yellow for going in late on Terry before Taraabt was withdrawn for Tommy Smith on the hour mark, the Moroccan also living up to his reputation for storming down the tunnel.
Young got in behind again five minutes later but he drilled his cross straight at Cech.
Lampard was furious midway through the half when he felt Fitz Hall had bundled him over in the box only to see the officials unmoved.
Luiz was booked for another poor challenge before seeing a penalty appeal turned down when he hit the deck under challenge from Helguson.
Barton almost scored on the break, and Meireles was booked for dissent before being immediately withdrawn for Florent Malouda.
But there was no stopping the yellow tide, Cole almost made to pay for his booking when Helguson volleyed over from point-blank range.
Chelsea should have capitalised with just over 10 minutes left when Ivanovic put the ball on a plate for Anelka, who somehow headed the ball straight at Kenny from four yards.
Jamie Mackie replaced Derry but Chelsea wasted another great chance to level when Lampard deflected Luiz's overhead kick over the crossbar.
With time running out, Villas-Boas made his feelings clear to the fourth official, while tempers flared late on when Terry closed down Kenny and the pair squared up on the six-yard line.
There was still time for Cole to nod a weak header at Kenny and Cech - of all people - nearly to get his head on the end of a free-kick.


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

Mail:

QPR 1 Chelsea 0: Blues are shaken up by their very OWN noisy neighbour
By MATT BARLOW

This is how neighbourhood disputes start. A dubious penalty, two red cards, nine yellows and gallons of bad blood dripping from a thrilling game and a shock result.
On one side of the fence, Neil Warnock, parading on the pitch after the final whistle, pumping his fist and milking the roars of victory.
‘It were rocking weren’t it,’ grinned Warnock afterwards. ‘They’ll be talking about this in 30 or 40 years and quite right too.’
On the other, Andre Villas-Boas, who retreated from Shepherds Bush in a stew about ‘card-happy’ referee Chris Foy and an opportunity lost to close in on the Barclays Premier League summit.
Foy sent off Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba in the first half and gave the penalty for a foul by David Luiz on Heidar Helguson, who converted the only goal of the game from the spot.
It had been going splendidly for Villas-Boas until the ninth minute, when keeper Paddy Kenny punted into Chelsea’s box and Luiz bumped into the back of Helguson.
The Brazilian defender may be prone to attacks of clumsiness and distraction — this was the third penalty he has conceded in 14 Premier League games — but it is always a shame to see strikers rewarded for their lack of strength.
Contact was slight but Helguson crashed to the turf. Foy pointed to the spot and Helguson climbed up, won an argument with Adel Taarabt about who was taking it, and beat Petr Cech with some style.
Bosingwa was the first man off. Having allowed Shaun Wright-Phillips to steal a yard in pursuit of Taarabt’s pass, he grabbed a fistful of the winger’s shirt.
When the pair tumbled in a heap, Foy decided Wright-Phillips was denied a clear goalscoring opportunity and he was probably right, even though John Terry felt he would have made up the ground. Chelsea were reduced further in the 41st minute when Drogba launched an instinctive two-footed tackle on Taarabt in desperation to make up for a misplaced pass.
Drogba flew through the ball, into the man and seemed to know he was in trouble. Foy had little option but to flash his red card again. ‘Three sendings-off,’ said Warnock.
The Ivorian striker will be banned for three games, including Saturday’s derby against Arsenal. Bosingwa is out for Wednesday’s Carling Cup tie at Everton, as is Ashley Cole, who has reached five bookings. The club can expect an FA fine for collecting more than six cards.
Chelsea re-emerged full of the famous spirit forged under Jose Mourinho and rekindled by Villas-Boas. At times, however, it teetered on the brink of total indiscipline.
They were snarling and swashbuckling, committing men from all angles to support Nicolas Anelka, scrapping for every ball amid a blaze of yellow cards.
There was a nasty and vitriolic edge to it — either a product of perceived injustice or a deliberate guerrilla tactic in the face of their numerical disadvantage.
Uncharacteristically, Frank Lampard sought out Shaun Derry for a nose-to-nose row, aggrieved at a foul which had been missed by the referee. Both were booked.
Terry spoiled for an argument, first with Tommy Smith and then Kenny, who gave as good as he got.
Branislav Ivanovic, booked for a foul on Taarabt, was fortunate the officials missed a kick on Clint Hill.
Raul Meireles might have been dismissed on another day. He was booked for an off-the-ball trip on Smith but had been lucky to escape a yellow earlier when he deliberately handled the ball after he slipped in possession.
Chelsea’s bitterness boiled over when two penalty appeals were rejected — first a tug by Fitz Hall on Lampard, then a wrestle between Helguson and Luiz.
On the final whistle, Cole hacked down Joey Barton but Foy chose to blow 45 seconds early, rather than inflame the situation.
By the end, it must have been clear to Villas-Boas that he was destined to lose at Loftus Road.

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

Mirror:

QPR 1-0 Chelsea
By Neil McLeman

When Chelsea lose under Andre Villas-Boas, they do it in theatrical style.
Last month’s thrilling defeat at Old Trafford will always be remembered for Fernando Torres’ pantomime miss.
And yesterday the Blues staged a disciplinary horror show as they gifted QPR their first Premier League home win in 15 years with a suicidal first-half display in which they gave away a soft penalty and had two men sent off.
A further seven were booked and Ashley Cole, who collected his fifth caution of the season, could also have been dismissed if referee Chris Foy had not blown full time, immediately after his clattering of Joey Barton.
By then the Merseyside official had clearly had enough. Of the Blues starting 11 only Daniel Sturridge and Juan Mata, who were both subbed before the break, were not shown a card.
At least Chelsea now have Torres available for ­Wednesday’s Carling Cup tie at Everton after his three-match suspension.
But what made this ridiculous match all the crazier was nine-men Chelsea were the better team after the break and created the best chance only for sub Nicolas Anelka to head straight at Paddy Kenny.
Despite electric home support, QPR struggled to deal with the two-man advantage and were relieved to hang on for their first win at Loftus Road since April.
Chelsea blew a chance to close within three points of the new leaders in second place, as just when the day could not get any better for Manchester City, the West London derby came along.
Not that Villas-Boas was admitting his team deserved to lose only their second game in 13 this season.
“It was a difficult task, but we were superior, even with nine men,” the Portuguese claimed. “The best ­opportunities fell to us.
“We fought very hard and could have come out with a result. I was very, very proud of the team.
“The distance is six points behind the leaders, but before it was five points on United and now we’re only a point behind. We have two clashes with City where we can make things up. We didn’t profit from the Manchester derby, but this commitment gives us good signs for the future.”
The discipline did not. The first Chelsea cock-up came after nine minutes when Kenny’s goal-kick was allowed to bounce into their area. With Heidar Helgusson shielding the ball, David Luiz blundered into his back for a soft but clear penalty.
The Icelandic striker had to withstand a more threatening challenge from his own team-mate Adel Taarabt, who is yet to score in the Premier League after 18 appearances, before grabbing the ball to take the kick.
Luiz has conceded three penaltes in 14 Premier League matches, and Petr Cech could not stop
Helguson’s dinked effort, meaning he has moved clear of Richard Dunne as Rangers’ top scorer at Loftus Road this season.
The situation quickly went from bad to worse for the Blues after 33 minutes.
Jose Bosingwa was given a straight red for a last-man foul on Shaun Wright-Phillips, though Chelsea claimed John Terry was covering.
There was less dispute over Didier Drogba’s red for a two-footed lunge on Taarabt.
Villas-Boas sent on Anelka for Mata in first-half injury time and sent out his nine remaining early and they created three chances in the first five minutes.
Luiz and Frank Lampard had strong penalty claims, but Anelka spurned the golden chance from ­Branislav Ivanovic’s cross.
And the Blues’ day was summed up as Luiz’s overhead kick hit Lampard and riocheted over the bar.


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

Sun:

QPR 1 Chelsea 0
From MARK IRWIN at Loftus Road

CHELSEA lost the plot and QPR found a new hero as the Noisy Neighbours celebrated the victory they have been dreaming of for 16 years.
The moody Blues stormed away from Loftus Road raging at referee Chris Foy after collecting more cards than Clintons.
Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba both saw red in a mad first half and another seven Chelsea players found their way into Foy's notebook.
David Luiz and Ashley Cole were also fortunate to last and even at the end furious Cole had to be dragged away from Rangers' keeper Paddy Kenny.
Manager Andre Villas-Boas was just as enraged by the performance of the referee, refusing to blame his own team's complete lack of discipline.
Chelsea will now collect an automatic £25,000 FA fine but that is the least of their worries.
The truth is they can only blame themselves as they got sucked in by the occasion of their first League meeting with their near-neighbours this century.
Bosingwa was dismissed in the 31st minute for hauling down Shaun Wright-Phillips on the edge of area after being outpaced by his former Chelsea team-mate.
Ten minutes later Drogba saw a straight red for a brainless two-footed challenge on Adel Taarabt, taking the ball but wiping out the QPR man with the follow-through.
Drogba will now start a three-match ban just as Fernando Torres is returning from his suspension for last month's red card against Swansea.
The Blues have now suffered four red cards in 13 matches under Villas-Boas' management and maybe the new boss needs to get to grips with his wild bunch.
Victory at Loftus Road would have propelled them above Manchester United into second place in the Premier League. Yet they never recovered from the early blow of Heidar Helguson's penalty after the Icelandic striker was barged in the back by a clumsy Luiz challenge.
Brazilian centre-half Luiz looks good on the ball but the truth is he is not good at defending. For £21million, Chelsea are entitled to expect more.
Helguson had to argue with Taarabt, who demanded to take the penalty until he was pulled away by Shaun Derry and Joey Barton.
Even after Helguson converted, Taarabt waved an accusing finger under the nose of his celebrating team-mate.
So it came as no surprise that the sulky Moroccan stormed straight down the tunnel after being subbed in the second half.
Remarkably, that Helguson penalty was QPR's only real shot on target despite playing against nine men for more than 50 minutes.
Yet they used their numerical advantage well, keeping possession and making their overworked opponents chase the ball all afternoon. Veteran midfielder Derry turned in the performance of his career to put the shackles on Frank Lampard and Barton played like a man possessed . . . which he may well be.
The real surprise of a crazy afternoon was that Barton was only a peripheral figure in all the running feuds.
To Chelsea's credit, even when they were hopelessly outnumbered they refused to chuck in the towel and had numerous second-half chances.
Luiz and Lampard both reckoned they should have had penalties when they were wrestled to the ground.
Lampard had a goal-bound header deflected just wide by Luke Young and substitute Nicolas Anelka nodded a late opportunity straight at keeper Kenny.
Even Cech got in on the act, coming up to get his head on Florent Malouda's stoppage time free-kick.
There were only 18,050 at Loftus Road but the noise they created as they celebrated at the final whistle was probably heard up at Old Trafford.
QPR have been so long in the soccer wilderness that no one could begrudge them the euphoria of their first win against Chelsea since 1995... apart from Villas-Boas.

STAR MAN - SHAUN DERRY (QPR)


QPR: Kenny 6, Young 7, Ferdinand 7, Hall 7, Hill 7, Derry 8 (Mackie 5), Faurlin 7, Wright-Phillips 7, Barton 8, Taarabt 7 (Smith 5), Helguson 7. Subs not used: Murphy, Orr, Bothroyd, Buzsaky, Puncheon. Booked: Derry, Barton.


CHELSEA: Cech 7, Bosingwa 4, Terry 6, Luiz 4, Cole 6, Mikel 6, Meireles 6 (Malouda 5), Lampard 6, Sturridge 5 (Ivanovic 5), Drogba 4, Mata 5 (Anelka 6). Subs not used: Turnbull, Romeu, McEachran, Kalou. Sent Off: Bosingwa, Drogba. Booked: Mikel, Lampard, Ivanovic, Luiz, Meireles, Cole, Terry.
REF: C Foy 5

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Star:

QPR 1 - CHELSEA 0: BLUES IN REFFING RAGE AS JOSE BOSINGWA AND DIDIER DROGBA ARE SENT OFF


By David Woods

REFEREES’ chief Mike Riley might want to turn his phone off today following nine-man Chelsea’s sensational defeat at QPR.
For Andre Villas-Boas and his club are venting their anger big-time over the performance of referee Chris Foy.
In September the Blues were on Riley’s case over Phil Dowd’s efforts during the loss at Manchester United, lodging an official complaint alleging the ref and his officials should have spotted two goals were offside.
And Riley can expect another call from Villas-Boas about Foy, who awarded Rangers a match-winning penalty, sent off Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba in the first half, and booked SEVEN other Chelsea players!
To be fair, Foy got most of the big decisions right, although Bosingwa’s red could be argued to be harsh. Certainly John Terry thought so.
Foy also snubbed a couple of shouts for a penalty from Chelsea.
Even with nine men for an hour, Chelsea looked danger- ous and could have snatched a draw late on through Nicolas Anelka.
Rangers – with skipper Joey Barton in top form – just did not know how to go about using their two-man advantage but Neil Warnock’s men held on for their first top-flight win over Chelsea in 16 years.
QPR bagged their spot-kick in the eighth minute when David Luiz foolishly barged into Heidar Helguson as he raced on to a Paddy Kenny punt.
The Icelander made the most of it, but it was definitely a spot-kick. There was a fuss about who was to take it, with
Adel Taarabt seeming to throw a hissy fit when Helguson took the ball from him.
Helguson converted, though, with Petr Cech only able to push the shot into the net as he guessed correctly, diving to his right.
Then in the 33rd minute, Taarabt’s neat play sent Shaun Wright-Phillips through just ahead of Bosingwa and the Portuguese right-back grabbed a bit of the ex-England winger’s shirt.
Wright-Phillips fell over, but was able to get up after a quick look and did not appeal for a foul.
But Foy saw it as an attempt to prevent a goal- scoring opportunity and dismissed Bosingwa, sparking protests from Terry and Drogba,with the former claiming he was getting back to cover.
Even worse was to come in the 42nd minute when Drogba saw red for a two-footed challenge on Taraabt.
He protested that he got the ball, but he also got plenty of the QPR No.7 and had to go.
It meant Chelsea having to play 4-3-1, with Anelka coming on for Juan Mata to play up front on his own.
They still looked dangerous and soon after the restart a Raul Meireles cross looked set for Lampard to nod in until Luke Young got a vital touch.
John Obi Mikel was booked for tripping Taarabt in the 50th minute after a superb break down the right by Barton.
Lampard was furious when a bone-shaking challenge on him from Derry went unpunished.
The two went head to head, both picking up cautions.
Next to be booked was Branislav Ivanovic for catching Taarabt late, then Barton for a lunge on Terry.
Taarabt was replaced by Tommy Smith, with the immature Moroccan storming off down the tunnel.
Lampard appealed for a penalty in the 68th minute when he looked to be im- peded by Anton Ferdinand as he went for a Cole cross.
Four minutes later Helgu- son appeared to hold Luiz in the box as they battled to reach an Ivanovic throw. Again no penalty.
Then Luiz was Chelsea’s fourth booking for a foul on Anton Ferdinand.
Meireles was fifth for fouling Tommy Smith as QPR tried to break.
Cole was sixth after tripping Barton.
From Barton’s free-kick, Helguson contrived to volley over with his left from just a few yards out.
But that was topped in the 80th minute when Anelka headed tamely straight at Kenny from six yards following a perfect cross from Ivanovic.
Lampard deflected a Luiz overhead kick over the bar when it might have troubled Kenny.
Then in the final minute skipper Terry was booked for charging into Kenny, with the keeper and England star then having a face-to-face exchange.
Rangers held on and at the end there were some stormy exchanges between Young and Luiz and Cole and Ferdinand.
It mattered not a jot for Villas-Boas will see the table today and recognise his men have plenty to do if they want to win the title, with Manchester City looking so strong.


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

Express:

QUEENS PARK RANGERS 1 CHELSEA 0:

HOUSE OF CARDS
By Tony Banks


CHELSEA imploded in an orgy of indiscipline yesterday as they crashed to a second defeat of the campaign in a disastrous game that saw two of their players sent off and seven booked.
Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba were both red-carded by referee Chris Foy on an astonishing afternoon when Andre Villas-Boas’ players at times completely lost their rag.
John Obi Mikel, Frank Lampard, Branislav Ivanovic, David Luiz, Raul Meireles, Ashley Cole and skipper John Terry were all also booked in a west London derby that occasionally bordered on anarchy.
Amazingly, it could have been worse, with both Luiz and Cole lucky not to collect second yellow cards amid scenes of chaos as Chelsea played for more than 50 minutes with nine men.
In the middle of the carnage, Queens Park Rangers registered their first home win of the season and their first over their bitter rivals in 16 years, thanks to Heidar Helguson’s 10th-minute penalty, given for Luiz’s stupid push on the Icelandic forward in the penalty area.
It all went downhill for Chelsea from that moment in a game Villas-Boas will want to forget in a hurry.
It all went downhill for Chelsea from that moment in a game Villas-Boas will want to forget in a hurry
With Manchester United crashing 6-1 spectacularly in their derby clash earlier in the afternoon, it was a perfect opportunity to move into second place.
Instead, Chelsea are left looking at the utter wreckage of a day that saw them collect a fourth red card in 13 games this season.
Villas-Boas is big on detail, formidable on planning and more than able tactically. But he has a huge problem now with discipline on the pitch – and it is one he needs to solve quickly if their season is not to unravel.
Chelsea will now be fined by the FA for collecting more than five bookings in a game and will lose Drogba for three matches and Portuguese defender Bosingwa for two, though they are set to appeal his red card.
Villas-Boas will have Fernando Torres, sent off against Swansea last month, back to face Arsenal next Saturday. But much more of this kind of thing and he is going to start running out of players.
Chelsea started badly and it got worse. Luiz’s barge on QPR striker Helguson in the area set the ball rolling. The Icelander picked himself up to score from the spot, after a tiff with Adel Taarabt and a tricky game began to look tougher.
But if ever a team were up for a game it was QPR. Manager Neil Warnock had them revved up from the off and they were all over Chelsea like a rash.
Lampard and Cole both wasted chances as Chelsea tried to hit back, but then six minutes before half-time, Shaun Wright-Phillips was bursting past Bosingwa when the Portuguese dragged him back.
Foy showed the red card, though Villas-Boas later insisted Terry had been in a covering position and they would appeal.
Three minutes later, it got worse. Drogba lost control of the ball and lunged in two-footed on Taarabt. Out came the red again and it was nine against 11.
Ivory Coast striker Drogba appeared to row with team-mate Mikel as he left, shame-faced. Villas-Boas reorganised his side rapidly, but from then on it was damage limitation.
The bitter irony is that Chelsea actually played better with nine men than they had with 11 and very nearly saved the game by getting level.
Lampard saw a header deflected wide, Nicolas Anelka somehow headed straight at Paddy Kenny when he should have scored and then Luiz’s overhead kick was deflected. But QPR will not care. This was their day and Shepherds Bush rocked last night.



QPR (4-4-1-1) : Kenny 7; Young 7, Ferdinand 7, Hall 7, Hill 7; Barton 7, Derry 7 (Mackie 81), Faurlin 7, Wright-Phillips 8; Taarabt 7 (Smith 61, 7); Helguson 7. Booked: Derry, Barton. Goal: Helguson 10pen.


Chelsea (4-3-3): Cech 6; Bosingwa 5, Terry 6, Luiz 5, Cole 6; Meireles 6 (Malouda 71, 6), Mikel 6, Lampard 6; Sturridge 5 (Ivanovic 35, 6), Drogba 5, Mata 5 (Anelka 46, 6). Booked: Mikel, Lampard, Ivanovic, Luiz, Meireles, Cole, Terry. Sent off: Bosingwa 33, Drogba 41.
Referee: C Foy (Merseyside).