Monday, December 30, 2013

Liverpool 2-1




Independent:
Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1
Determined Chelsea start to show mark of Jose Mourinho
Sam Wallace

This is starting to look like his Chelsea again. Dominant in midfield; straining every sinew to match their opposition from front to back – capable of squeezing out the kind of performances that do not so much elicit joy as a grudging respect. And there they are as the season reaches its halfway point, sitting solidly in third place and just two points off the leaders Arsenal.
In the final seconds, Oscar scythed down his fellow Brazilian Lucas Leiva, a connection which precipitated a brief tussle. That was a challenge you could not have imagined Oscar involving himself in until Mourinho took over his career. It is a spirit that is permeating the whole side and, whether you like it or not, it has proven effective.
That is not to say that Chelsea were not fortunate. The stand-out moment of the second half was the foul by Samuel Eto’o on Luis Suarez with seven minutes of the game remaining as the Liverpool striker pursued Cesar Azpilicueta out the area. “Streetwise” was how Brendan Rodgers described it and it was curious that Howard Webb, who saw the incident, waved play on when Eto’o stepped across the path of Suarez and fouled him.
It should have been a penalty, despite Mourinho’s denials which, even he seemed to realise, given the haste with which he later changed the subject, were tenuous at best. Rodgers also picked out the foul in the second minute by Eto’o, studs up on the knee of Jordan Henderson that seemed to pass Webb by. The away team scored from the free-kick that followed but had the foul come later in the game, with cards already shown, it might even have been a sending-off.
Simon Mignolet is beaten by Eden Hazard’s equaliser Simon Mignolet is beaten by Eden Hazard’s equaliser  The friendship between Mourinho and Rodgers precludes the kind of tension that once existed between the Chelsea manager and Liverpool during his first period in charge. Yet there was a hint of how far Mourinho is prepared to go when he raised, in relation to Suarez and simulation, “the cultural nature of the player”, “People from that area,” he said, “they like it [diving]”.
It was dangerous territory and he corrected himself quickly, saying that it was the same in his “corner in Europe”. Rodgers was able to laugh it off. The Liverpool manager conceded that two consecutive games against Manchester City and then Chelsea had left his team short of the energy required to break down such a high calibre of opponent, and they did look tired by the end.
Having taken the lead through Martin Skrtel, Mamadou Sakho hit the bar with a header seven minutes after half-time with Chelsea leading through goals from Eden Hazard and Eto’o. That was as close as they came in the second half. Suarez spent most of the game isolated from Raheem Sterling and Philippe Coutinho and was never able to produce a moment to turn the game.
It will take something special to end Mourinho’s unbeaten home record in the league that now stands at 70. In terms of their nearest rivals, they have beaten City and Liverpool at home and secured points away at Arsenal and Manchester United with Everton the only team in the top six to have beaten them.
They came back from the early blow when Liverpool crafted a goal from the free-kick that Eto’o conceded. Mourinho was dismissive of the circumstances in which Liverpool scored, when in challenging Suarez, Branislav Ivanovic took all the pace off the ball and allowed Sktrel to finish from close range.
Later Ivanovic would find himself caught by Daniel Agger and unable to carry on past 30 minutes of the match. Rodgers’ team tried to open up their opponents with the quick ball out to the wings but too often they just found themselves marginalised in midfield and unable to retain possession.
Mourinho selected David Luiz alongside Frank Lampard who went off injured at half-time. Mourinho had previously said that he could not imagine playing the Brazilian in a position in which he became familiar last season under Rafa Benitez. But he left himself a get-out in exceptional circumstances and, in the absence of the suspended Ramires, this was one of those times. Luiz and Lampard dominated Liverpool’s midfield and, with Hazard the game’s outstanding player they immediately looked dangerous.
There was a shaky start from Willian who found himself well-beaten by Sterling early on and then all at sea for a while. But he came into the game and played a part in Chelsea’s equaliser on 17 minutes. Before then, Simon Mignolet saved brilliantly at full-stretch from a Lampard shot. There was not much he could do about Hazard’s equaliser, struck across him from the left after the ball had gone from Willian to Oscar and ricocheted off Sakho out to the Belgian winger.
There was more Mignolet could have done about the second goal, which dribbled past him. Before then, Liverpool had their chances to clear, first from Azpilicueta and then Oscar before the cross came in and Eto’o nipped in ahead of Skrtel to put a weak, eminently saveable shot into the goal.
Before half-time, Joe Allen forced a good save from Petr Cech but after that they found chances more difficult to come by. At half-time Sakho sought out Eto’o to change shirts and Coutinho did the same with Oscar. Informed of it later, Rodgers said that he would be having words.
There was one further penalty appeal from Suarez in addition to the foul by Eto’o, when Terry jumped on top of him in the act of hooking the ball away. Even Rodgers was not convinced of that one. On another day, his side might have had better fortune, but every opponent that comes to Stamford Bridge will have to fight for every yard that is yielded by the home team this season.

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Cech 7; Ivanovic 6 (Cole 5, 30), Cahill 7, Terry 7, Azpilicueta 6; Luiz 7, Lampard 6 (Mikel, ht); Willian 5, Oscar 7, Hazard 8; Eto'o (Torres, 86) 6.
Substitutes not used: Schwarzer (gk), Essien, Mata, Schurrle.

Liverpool (4-1-4-1): Mignolet 5; Johnson 5 (Aspas, 83), Skrtel 6, Agger 6, Sakho (Toure, 90) 6; Lucas 6; Sterling 6, Allen 5 (Smith, 61), Henderson 6, Coutinho 6; Suarez 5.
Substitutes not used: Jones (gk), Alberto, Cissokho, Rossiter.

Referee: H Webb
Man of the match: Hazard
Rating: 6/10

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Guardian:
Relentless Chelsea keep up pressure on the top with win over Liverpool
Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1
Dominic Fifield

José Mourinho had turned to the East stand as this contest lurched towards its conclusion and, arms aloft, beseeched the home support to whip up one last roar to haul the team over the line. Within seconds his gesture was repeated in celebration. Liverpool, one of the more eye-catching contenders in this season's title race, had been beaten to inject proper conviction into Chelsea's own challenge. The Portuguese's reaction betrayed the significance of the result.
The first chink of light has been spotted between the top three and the chasing pack, a three-point gap chiselled out between Mourinho's team and fourth-placed Everton to suggest a massed scramble towards the summit is thinning out. Liverpool, a point behind their Merseyside neighbours, will hope to come again and can draw real encouragement from their displays even in defeat at the Etihad and Stamford Bridge but those at the top will likewise hope they are shrugging themselves clear. "A big win, a big opponent, a big match," said Mourinho. It was the kind of contest to get the juices flowing.
In the end, perhaps inevitably, it was also laced with controversy. Brendan Rodgers had reason to denounce Samuel Eto'o's first-minute foul on Jordan Henderson, the striker raking his studs down his opponent's right shin and escaping a card of any sort from Howard Webb. Though Liverpool scored from the free-kick that followed, they would have been taking on 10 men for 89 minutes had the offence been properly penalised. Their other gripe centred, inevitably, on Luis Suárez as Eto'o appeared to shoulder barge him off the ball and inside the penalty area seven minutes from time. Rodgers and Mourinho, once apprentice and mentor in these surroundings, could only agree to disagree, though in the circumstances it was perhaps inevitable that Eto'o's contribution would ultimately be remembered for the winner.
Chelsea had their own non-award to bemoan, Lucas Leiva appearing to floor the live-wire Eden Hazard 11 minutes in, yet the revival of the old Mourinho versus Merseyside rivalry should not boil down to perceived oversights by the overworked referee. This was combustible, breathless and blisteringly competitive and therefore enthralling to behold.
While Liverpool seemed stretched by cruel successive away fixtures, Chelsea arguably mustered some of their finest attacking football of the campaign through that ferocious opening period. Their forays forward were slick and conducted at pace, Oscar and Willian rapid in pouring upfield while Hazard, the team's player of the moment, orchestrated it all.
The Belgian, watched here by his brother Thorgan in the stands, has been untouchable in recent weeks. He has learned from the error of his ways after missing a training session following a brief trip back to Lille to watch his former club – it did not help that he had mislaid his passport in France – and has been resurgent since. He started the move which created Chelsea's equaliser, shifting the ball from central midfield to Willian before Oscar took up possession and bolted into enemy territory. Liverpool defenders backed off, uncertain and panicked, with the Brazilian's intended pass for Eto'o rebounding from Mamadou Sakho and back across the edge of the area.
Hazard, his run unchecked, dispatched it first time, all whip and bend, with Simon Mignolet helpless and beaten. "The kid is changing," said Mourinho of the £32m signing he inherited. "Before he was a very talented player but was a bit … not lazy, but a kid enjoying football just in a funny way. Now he understands responsibilities and that football is not just about getting the ball and playing like he did when he was 13 or 14 in the street. There are other ingredients needed at this level."
That was his 10th goal in all competitions this season, a tally that has eased some of the pressure on Chelsea's blunt strikers, though this would eventually be decided by one of their number. David Luiz and César Azpilicueta combined for Oscar to gather, his initial touch appearing to strike Sakho's arm. The crowd's appeals for handball went ignored, the playmaker regathering and turning the centre-half to square for Eto'o, granted too much space by Martin Skrtel, to convert. Mignolet should have done better.
The festive period has been unforgiving for Liverpool. They sat top of the pile on Christmas Day, rightly satisfied by their campaign and with Suárez signed up to a new contract, and yet, after the first successive league defeats of Rodgers' tenure, now languish fifth and outside the Champions League places.
That is sobering enough, even without Sakho (hamstring) and Joe Allen (groin) now injured and surely absent for the foreseeable future. And yet, as Rodgers pointed out, there was still promise to be picked up from each of their defeats over the past week, whether in the bite to the attacks summoned by Suárez, Coutinho and Henderson or the excellence – that second goal aside – of Mignolet in denying Chelsea further reward.
They had led early, Coutinho delivering viciously towards the near post, where Suárez and Branislav Ivanovic – those familiar foes from Anfield in April – tumbled as they wrestled to connect and the ball struck the Serb and wrong-footed Petr Cech in the process. Skrtel, alone in front of a gaping goal, could not believe his luck. Yet that is where their good fortune ran out. Sakho looped a header on to the bar from Henderson's delivery before that late penalty appeal signalled the end. This was not to be their day. It is Chelsea who go tearing into the new year.
Man of the match Eden Hazard (Chelsea)

http://www.theguardian.com/football/gallery/2013/dec/29/premier-league-chelsea-liverpool-pictures-gallery

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Telegraph:
Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1
Henry Winter

Once again, Chelsea and Liverpool took a walk on the wild side. Once again, the rivalry spilt over. Samuel Eto’o, Oscar and Lucas could easily have been dismissed. But once again, there was some breathtaking football, much of it flowing from the marvellous Eden Hazard, vibrant in possession, diligent in tracking back and deservedly man of a thrilling match.
Once the cordite cleared, and the injured Frank Lampard, Branislav Ivanovic, Mamadou Sakho and Joe Allen were being tended backstage, it was obvious that Chelsea have to be respected as title contenders under the inspirational Jose Mourinho.
Responding to Martin Skrtel’s early goal, Chelsea played some of their best football of the season, a mix of the combative and the creative. John Terry, making his 600th appearance for the club, David Luiz and Willian pushed Hazard hard for the sponsors’ honours.
There was an intensity to Chelsea’s football, a steel in central midfield and at the back, and a fluidity moving forward. Hunger too. Liverpool stir their blood.
Once the smoke blew from the fray it was also very apparent that Liverpool’s squad requires strengthening. Brendan Rodgers had said that “we’ve built the house and now we have to decorate the inside” but there is still plenty of work to be done on the foundations first. The defence needs bolstering. Further forward, Rodgers simply did not have sufficient options to change the game from the bench with Steven Gerrard and Daniel Sturridge injured and Victor Moses unable to play against his parent club.
Rodgers even gave a debut to an Australian-born teenager with a Scouse accent called Brad Smith, a quick, muscular academy product who took up a position on the left but had little chance to show his potential. Mourinho was able to bring on Fernando Torres.
As well as accepting the need for reinforcements in the January window, Liverpool left the Bridge angered by the raking by Eto’o on Jordan Henderson in the second minute. Eto’o brutal?
Liverpool also lamented the reality of Luis Suárez’s 'previous’ working against him. Frustrated by some rough treatment by Chelsea players, Suárez looked briefly to Howard Webb for succour but then lifted his gaze to the heavens.
Chelsea supporters will simply dismiss Suárez’s complaints as a case of the biter bit but the Uruguayan, who sunk his teeth into Ivanovic the last time the sides met, had legitimate grievance. He felt he was brought down by Terry, clattered by Gary Cahill and then patently obstructed by Eto’o.
He had no joy from either Webb or Chelsea’s defence. Rodgers inevitably defended his No 7, but also could take some pride that his team pushed Chelsea so close, just as they had alarmed Manchester City before losing on Boxing Day.
The painful fact for Liverpool remains that they were top at Christmas but have tumbled out of the top four going into the new year.
This continues to be the season of twists and turns in the Premier League title race, with no team able to pull away from the pack. Arsenal’s resilience at in-form Newcastle United guaranteed them the No 1 position heading into 2014. City’s narrow victory over Crystal Palace showed they can win ugly at home as well as beautifully. Manchester United continue to rise, now only two points behind fifth-placed Liverpool. Everton, now fourth, continue to develop under Roberto Martinez.
News of the on-loan Romelu Lukaku scoring Everton’s winner must have featured in the thoughts of the Chelsea fans as they strolled into the Bridge on a chilly afternoon. By the break, the chattering-teeth classes were admiring the finishing of Hazard and Eto’o.
These games are never friendly for all the pre-match bonhomie between Mourinho and Rodgers, one of his former coaches here.
Reminder of the history between these sides was soon heard with Liverpool fans singing the name of Luis Garcia, scorer of what Mourinho called the “ghost goal” in the 2005 Champions League semi-final at Anfield. It was seen in the way that Suárez smiled as he shook hands with Ivanovic before kick-off.
The pair soon ran into each other again. After that filthy Eto’o foul on Henderson, Philippe Coutinho curled in the free-kick towards Suárez, whose header hit Ivanovic. Skrtel was quickest to the loose ball, turning it into the Chelsea net to launch a dramatic game after only four minutes.
Chelsea’s players rallied, matching their manager’s energetic movement around and occasionally beyond the technical area. Claiming control of midfield, Chelsea built towards their equaliser. Cahill headed a Lampard free-kick wide. Lampard unleashed one of his long-range specials, demanding a fine save from Simon Mignolet.
Liverpool’s keeper was beaten after 17 minutes. Chelsea drove through the middle, Oscar running at the heart of Liverpool’s defence, the ball rebounding off Sakho to Hazard, who curled his shot first-time past Mignolet. Stung, Liverpool charged back and only a well-timed interception by Cahill halted Allen’s passage towards goal.
Chelsea were defending resolutely and counter-attacking crisply, bringing the lead after 34 minutes. The ball was swept by Luiz to Cesar Azpilicueta down the right. His cross was controlled by Oscar, who turned and drove the ball on. Eto’o slid in, beating the sluggish Skrtel. Mignolet should have saved but his wrists were not strong enough, and he failed to stop the ball’s journey into the net.
Liverpool chased an equaliser and Cech did well to push Allen’s shot away before the break.
As the players headed for the tunnel, Sakho and Eto’o swapped shirts. So did Coutinho and Oscar. No such kinship was detected in the second half. Allen took a battering from Terry and he eventually limped off, the injection into his sore adductor wearing off.
The game continued to hurtle between the boxes. Henderson lofted in a ball that Sakho headed on to a post. Eto’o, a yard offside, ran on to Hazard’s pass and brought a good save from Mignolet. Cech held a Suárez volley and a Glen Johnson piledriver.
Suárez deserved a penalty when obstructed by Eto’o. Liverpool fans were chanting support for their No 7 and also taunting their former striker Fernando Torres with “are you happy on the bench?” Torres promptly came on, almost scoring after a weaving run in from the right.
Oscar then flew in on Lucas, who responded by pushing over his fellow Brazilian. Once again, this fixture was fractious to the end. Wonderful entertainment too.

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Times:

Luis Suárez reduced to hard labour in Eden Hazard county

Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1

José Mourinho continues to talk up Manchester City as champions elect, but no one in the Barclays Premier League will rest easy with Chelsea two points off the top at the halfway stage. While the Special One’s second coming remains a work in progress, Mourinho has established sound foundations at fortress Stamford Bridge.
For all the growing pains and repeated references to a squad in transition, Mourinho has his players where he wants them, as was demonstrated by an impressive victory secured by Chelsea’s most complete performance of the season. Eden Hazard and Samuel Eto’o finished off two excellent passing moves with élan to score wonderful goals, but of greater significance was the tenacity and resilience of their team-mates, who defended so well as a collective unit that Luis Suárez was strangely subdued.
Much of the talk afterwards centred on the return of Suárez’s supposed wild side, but other than his late tangle with Eto’o that should have yielded a penalty for Liverpool, the most notable aspect of the Uruguayan’s afternoon was his anonymity. John Terry and Gary Cahill encapsulated Chelsea’s spirit by doing a magnificent tag-team job on Suárez, who has failed to score in the past two matches, which by his standards is a drought of Biblical proportions. Terry was magnificent on his 600th appearance for Chelsea, and Roy Hodgson must wish that he could call upon him to tackle Suárez in Brazil next summer.
Liverpool looked lively enough in other areas, particularly when Raheem Sterling and Philippe Coutinho were given licence to attack on the flanks, but they lacked a cutting edge and successive defeats over a testing Christmas period may have given Brendan Rodgers a reality check. For all the excited talk of a tilt at the title, beating local rivals Everton and Manchester United to the fourth Champions League place may be a more realistic ambition.
Chelsea’s greatest strength remains the self-belief and commitment first instilled by Mourinho a decade ago, which ensured that they did not flinch after falling behind in the third minute, but they are also blessed with a number of wonderfully gifted individuals capable of winning any game in an instant. Hazard was the most prominent of Chelsea’s revolving cast of Three Amigos yesterday, but Willian and Oscar also impressed, the Brazilians playing a role in both goals.
The most notable aspect of Mourinho’s second spell with Chelsea has been his insistence that even the club’s star artists must graft like artisans. Hazard, in particular, has transformed the languid and rather fitful playing style that characterised his first season in England, as Mourinho acknowledged.
“He’s changing,” Mourinho said. “He was a very talented player, but a kid just enjoying football in a funny way. Now he understands responsibilities and that football is not just about getting the ball and playing like he did when he was 13 or 14 in the street.”
Not even Mourinho has been able to correct Chelsea’s occasionally haphazard defending, however, and they remain vulnerable to set-pieces, which Liverpool exploited to take an early lead. Rodgers was justified in complaining about Eto’o not being booked for a studs-up challenge on Lucas Leiva, but Chelsea were punished from the subsequent free kick, with Suárez first to Coutinho’s delivery and volleying it on to Martin Skrtel, who side-footed the ball past Petr Cech.
If Chelsea seemed shell-shocked, their response was impressive, Mourinho’s clear instructions to play with pace and intensity being followed to the letter. Hazard should have won a penalty in the eleventh minute when he was fouled by Lucas, while Simon Mignolet was also busy in goal, making smart saves from the Belgian and Frank Lampard.
Migonolet could have done better with both of Chelsea’s goals, however, which changed the course of the game midway through the first half. Hazard began and finished the first in the seventeenth minute, initiating the move with an elegant turn in his own half before passing to Willian, who quickly handed possession on to Oscar. After an incisive run through the middle, Oscar attempted to return the favour to his compatriot, but his pass was blocked by Mamadou Sakho and the ball fell to Hazard, who hit it first time to beat Mignolet with a magnificent strike from 25 yards.
Chelsea’s second goal in the 34th minute was just as eye-catching, their quick passing and movement being reminiscent of Arsenal at their best. Willian’s ball released César Azpilicueta and he crossed from the right towards Oscar. The Brazilian’s footwork was too quick for Daniel Agger and Sakho and he slipped the ball between the French defender’s legs, Eto’o nipping ahead of Mignolet to slide the ball in.
Liverpool were equally resilient after falling behind, although they faded after Sakho headed on to the bar from Jordan Henderson’s creative chip in the 52nd minute. Chelsea should have put the game to bed a minute later, but Eto’o shot straight at Mignolet after being released one-on-one by Hazard and the Cameroon striker was also involved in the game’s big flashpoint with seven minutes remaining.
Azpilicueta had overpowered Suárez legitimately in the penalty area, but Eto’o crossed the line of legality, making contact with his opponent’s thigh after the ball had long gone.
The ensuing controversy ensured a sour end to a thrilling spectacle, but having taken the points, Mourinho was not complaining.

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): P Cech 6 — B Ivanovic 6 (sub: A Cole, 30min 6), G Cahill 7, J Terry 7, C Azpilicueta 6 — D Luiz 6, F Lampard 6 (sub: J O Mikel, 46 6) — E Hazard 8, Oscar 7, Willian 7 — S Eto’o 6 (sub: F Torres, 87). Substitutes not used: M Schwarzer, M Essien, J Mata, A Schürrle. Booked: Terry, Luiz, Cahill, Oscar.
Liverpool (4-2-3-1): S Mignolet 5 — G Johnson 6 (sub: I Aspas, 83), M Skrtel 6, M Sakho 6 (sub: K Touré, 90), D Agger 5 — Lucas Leiva 6, J Allen 5 (sub: B Smith, 60) — R Sterling 6, J Henderson 5, P Coutinho 7 — L Suárez 6. Substitutes not used: B Jones, L Alberto, A Cissokho, J Rossiter. Booked: Johnson.
Referee: H Webb. Attendance: 41,614.
January Sales
Chelsea 
 
What they need: For all the big-money players that have arrived at Stamford Bridge in recent years Chelsea’s squad lacks balance, but new signings will be at a premium next month as the club are anxious of the need to comply with FFP. While signing a top class striker could win Chelsea the title the focus is on bolstering José Mourinho’s midfield, particularly in the holding role, where Frank Lampard and Ramires have been forced to compromise their natural games.
Targets: Chelsea are still interested in Nemeja Matic and Xabi Alonso, but having failed to sign them last summer may look elsewhere to Fredy Guarin, of Inter Milan.
Spending power: Theoretically limitless, but an outlay of more than £20 million is unlikely.


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Mail:

Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1: Eto'o slides in to seal another big win and Mourinho's men look just champion as they aim for title push
By Martin Samuel

So, that is Liverpool and Manchester City beaten at home, Manchester United, Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal equalled away. And Jose Mourinho is not on course for the title in his first year back in England, why exactly?
Oh yes, the practical option remains Manchester City, the romantics favour Arsenal and the true dreamers think Everton may even have an outside chance, but nestling in the heart of that top four are Chelsea and here they made their most emphatic statement of the season.
The 40 minutes that followed Liverpool's jolt of an opening goal here is arguably the best football Chelsea have played since Mourinho's return and if Roman Abramovich can supplement what is already an impressively deep squad in the transfer window, who knows what the second half of the campaign will bring.
The popular wisdom is that only Manchester United's squad know how to win a title over the long haul, but Chelsea have a fair few seasoned campaigners, too, and against Liverpool many of them turned in exactly the level of performance that will be required to kick on towards May.
John Terry was immense in defence on his 600th appearance for the club, so too his partner Gary Cahill. Ashley Cole, out of favour lately, was introduced after 30 minutes in place of the injured Branislav Ivanovic and was as reliable as the day he first stepped out as a Chelsea player.
Cesar Azpilicueta switched full-back positions, and coped superbly; Petr Cech was equally unflappable.
Yet it would give the wrong impression to suggest this was a victory based on stoic resistance.
Chelsea won the game in the first-half when, rocked by a Martin Skrtel goal after three minutes, they regrouped to play Liverpool off the park until half-time.
It was not that Brendan Rodgers' team were poor, more that Chelsea rose mightily to the occasion. Eden Hazard, in particular, was exceptional, as good as he has been in a blue shirt in recent memory. Willian and Oscar were a wonderful supporting cast.
Together this trio overwhelmed Liverpool in the high forward areas, with Lucas left surprisingly lonely and struggling to cope. Chelsea's two goals were thoroughly deserved and could have been supplemented by two more.
Liverpool came back in the second-half, but Mourinho's teams know nothing if not how to hold a lead and while there were some close shaves, Chelsea were not flattered by the award of three points.
It brought the best out of Chelsea that they went behind so early. Samuel Eto'o hit Jordan Henderson at knee height and was lucky not to receive so much as a yellow card, but justice was done once Philippe Coutinho whipped his free-kick into the box. Ivanovic made a hash of dealing with Luis Suarez and only half stopped the ball, which fell to Skrtel with Cech already committed. Chelsea trailed from the first attack of the game.
The response was instant. A free-kick from Frank Lampard was headed just wide by Cahill, Hazard had a decent penalty shout after being bundled over by Lucas and Lampard had a shot from the edge of the area tipped round by goalkeeper Simon Mignolet. After 18 minutes, however, Chelsea were level.
It was a move built around that nimble counter-attacking midfield three. Willian found Oscar who drove forward before being tackled, the loose ball falling to Hazard. His instinctive reaction was stunning: a curling, first-time shot which eluded Mignolet and nestled perfectly in the corner of the net; 16 minutes later, Chelsea took the lead.
David Luiz curled a sweet pass wide to Azpilicueta whose cross found Oscar. Skrtel made an error dealing with the danger and the ball fell to Eto'o who prodded it in. The striker is hardly a Stamford Bridge favourite, but his influence was vital. Not just the goal but another tough shift on his own against a robust back line. When he was replaced by Fernando Torres with four minutes remaining, Eto'o finally received the respect his diligence deserved.
Despite Chelsea's defensive strengths, though, Liverpool were never out of this. It took a tremendously timed tackle from Cahill to ward off Allen in a good position in the first-half, and Cech had to be at his best to keep out the same player after Cole had only half-blocked a cross from Raheem Sterling.
The visitors had the better of the second-half which was to be expected chasing the game, although they never got closer than in the 52nd minute, when a Mamadou Sakho header from Henderson's chip struck the bar.
The rest was tame by comparison: a Suarez shot easily saved and another from Glen Johnson that proved more of a test. At the other end, Hazard put Eto'o through one on one and he really should have done more with a finish blasted directly at Mignolet. Torres cut inside from the right late on, but his attempt was ordinary, and his cameo role will be remembered more for the hamstring injury it inflicted on Sakho giving chase. The demands of this time of year will do that, sadly.
The greatest controversy in the second half came from two penalty claims by Suarez. Mourinho was contemptuous but both had virtue, and the second in particular should have been given.
Terry stopped the striker jumping for a high ball in the 64th minute, waved away by Howard Webb, and then with seven minutes remaining, Azpiliciueta won the ball from the Uruguayan fairly, only for Eto'o to prevent him giving chase with blatant obstruction, bordering on a trip.
It would appear Suarez is still paying the price for all those times he went to ground too easily - the same happened to Gareth Bale, and before him Cristiano Ronaldo and Didier Drogba - and some will find that amusing, but it will be no laughing matter if one day a player whose talent is a gift to the Premier League tires of his weekly battering and departs.
By the end, it was a familiar scene. Chelsea repelling all intruders, Liverpool's travelling fans reduced to singing that song about history. It always sounds so defeatist, so rooted in the past.
Chelsea do have history, of course: three titles since Liverpool's last one, four FA Cups since Liverpool previously lifted the trophy, not forgetting that Champions League, the first won by a London club and arriving more recently than Liverpool's triumph in 2005.
This is meant to be the season when that run changes but as 2013 draws to a close, the league table shows Liverpool outside the top four again, behind even Everton. The margins are small and the club is without doubt going forward swiftly under Rodgers, but it is Chelsea and Mourinho who are more familiar with the course and distance from here.
Students of history know that on such occasions, the formbook tends to favour the master, more than the apprentice.

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Mirror:
Chelsea 2-1 Liverpool: Hazard and Eto'o on target as Blues recover from nightmare start

By Martin Lipton
Trailing within five minutes to Martin Skrtel's goal, Jose Mourinho's side hit back to record a hard-fought victory

Groundhog Day for Brendan Rodgers. More cruelly, Groundhog Day for Simon Mignolet too.
Costly errors, exacting a harsh price. Just like at the Etihad on Thursday, Liverpool left with a sense of injustice at the officiating.
This time, Howard Webb replaced Lee Mason in the cast list of Anfield villains, his contentious calls leaving Liverpool and Luis Suarez stewing, denying the Reds a late penalty. Yet in the matches that matter, key mistakes mean so much more.
Mignolet has played a major role in Liverpool’s unexpected challenge yet three days after helping Alvaro Negredo’s winner into his net at City, the Belgian was at it again.
Maybe Mamadou Sakho should not have allowed Oscar to turn and squirt the ball across from the right 11 minutes before the break.
Certainly Martin Skrtel, who had given the Reds a dream start inside three minutes, needed to react quicker than Samuel Eto’o.
But when the Cameroonian nudged goalwards, Mignolet still got a big hand to the ball, big enough to turn it away, rather than let it trickle against the upright and over the line.
A harsh criticism? Perhaps. Football, though, is a hard game. And when the dust settled, Jose Mourinho's Blues looked better equipped for the real title test.
This was an afternoon which tested the friendship between Rodgers and the Portuguese, ­demonstrated the bad blood between these sides still festers. Some shocking tackles - including one on Lucas by Brazil ­team-mate Oscar in stoppage time which was an absolute horror.
In the final analysis, though, it is Chelsea who go into the second half of the season with momentum, the Merseysiders whose ascent has stalled.
Top of the table on Boxing Day morning. Down to fifth before New Year’s Eve. History made in a manner Liverpool will not wish to mark.
They left complaining that it could have been different. Like they did on Boxing Day.
In fairness, while John Terry’s clash with Suarez could have been given, could have been ignored, Eto’o deserved to concede a spot-kick when he needlessly barged the Uruguayan to the ground six minutes from time, the ball already gone.
Webb, perfectly placed, deemed otherwise. A huge call. Yet Chelsea could also point, with justification, to the football they had played in the first half, ­especially after the shock of Liverpool’s opener.
That came when Eto’o slammed into Jordan ­Henderson’s shin – another escape for the African – Philippe Coutinho delivering the set-piece.
Suarez, up against Branislav Ivanovic for the first time since Anfield in April, flicked against the Serb, with Skrtel handily placed to sweep home.
The perfect start. But Chelsea, with David Luiz playing in central midfield to cut off the supply line to Suarez, were ­excellent.
Eden Hazard was terrific, Willian not far behind, Frank Lampard full of energy. Liverpool were out-muscled, out-harried, their limited options reflected on Rodgers’ bench.
Mignolet saved from Hazard’s skidder – Skrtel nearly put the rebound through his own net – and Lampard’s rising drive, but was powerless with the leveller.
Hazard began it, finding Willian, before continuing his run through the inside left channel as Oscar’s shot was blocked by Sakho. The Belgian then smashed first time into the top corner.
But Lampard’s thigh injury forced a flu-struck John Obi Mikel into the fray and Liverpool sensed a chance.
Sakho was so unlucky when he floated a header against the angle of post and bar, although Mignolet denied Eto’o when the flag, wrongly, stayed down.
Suarez and Glen Johnson tested Cech, the penalty appeals were rejected although Fernando Torres, on for Eto’o, might have finished it off.
No more goals. Mignolet’s slip ending up decisive.
Just as it was at City.

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

Express:

Samuel Eto'o is on song at last for Jose Mourinho
OF THE world-class strikers on show at Stamford Bridge yesterday, Samuel Eto’o was not the one expected to emerge as the winner.
By: Tony Banks

There was Luis Suarez, with 19 goals in 13 Premier League games the most in-form forward in Europe – the player every defence fears.
And then there was Eto’o, to many an expensive flop having scored just two goals in the league all season. The 32-year-old has spent most of the campaign gamely, but fruitlessly, chasing the ball.
But there he was yesterday, 34 minutes into a titanic battle, stabbing Oscar’s low cross past Liverpool goalkeeper Simon Mignolet for the goal that turned out to be the winner.
It was the goal that meant Chelsea had turned the game round after Martin Skrtel had given Liverpool a shock fourth-minute lead, which the brilliant Eden Hazard cancelled out.
And it was the win that meant Chelsea kept up their remorseless challenge to leaders Arsenal, with their third victory in their last four games.
It was also the second successive defeat that Liverpool had suffered against title rivals in the last three days – one that left Brendan Rodgers’ side lying fifth in the table, six points off the lead. They were top on Christmas Day.
Never mind the fact that Eto’o perhaps should not have been on the pitch after an awful second-minute challenge that flattened Jordan Henderson and led to Liverpool’s opener. Never mind that he almost gave away a penalty in the dying minutes as he bundled Suarez over.
Never mind the fact Mignolet should have saved his weak shot, getting both hands to the ball, but still unable to stop it rolling into the net.
Jose Mourinho will not care about any of that. One of his strikers scored! Hold the back page! For only the sixth time this season a Chelsea forward found the back of the net in the league.
What a crucial win this could be for Chelsea. Mourinho keeps saying this team is a long way from the finished article, that there is much work to be done. They have scrambled past Crystal Palace and Swansea in recent weeks and rarely looked convincing.
Yet as 2013 drew to a close, Chelsea once again stymied the hopes of another rival and showed that inch by sometimes painful inch the Special One is forging a unit that is slowly but surely gathering pace.
And in Hazard they have a player becoming more important to Chelsea, more crucial to their immediate future, to their chances of winning this title.
Once again, the £32 million Belgian, so infuriating for much of his 18 months at Stamford Bridge, was outstanding. His pace and trickery gave Chelsea an edge that their strikers so far have failed to provide.
Liverpool, aiming to bounce back from their Boxing Day defeat at Manchester City, got off to the perfect start. Eto’o felled Henderson and Philippe Coutinho swung in the free-kick. Suarez dived with Branislav Ivanovic, the man he famously bit last year, but the ball deflected off the Serb straight to Skrtel, who fired home.
Chelsea, inspired by Hazard, picked themselves up and fought back. His shot was blocked, then Gary Cahill headed wide and Mignolet brilliantly saved from Frank Lampard.
Then Oscar lost the ball as he surged forward, but Hazard was following up and his glorious right-foot shot seared past Mignolet for the equaliser – his 10th goal of the season.
Chelsea were on fire and when Oscar broke into the box on the right, he lost the ball but got it back and crossed low for Eto’o to strike. Mignolet should have saved – but Chelsea celebrated.
Referee Howard Webb dished out a flurry of yellow cards as tempers rose. Eto’o should have sewn the game up when he burst clear, but Mignolet saved.
Suarez, quiet yesterday, had only one effort, and Petr Cech foiled Glen Johnson before Mamadou Sakho struck the bar with a header. But Liverpool’s chances gradually ebbed away.
Oscar too was lucky to stay on the pitch after another poor challenge on Lucas which provoked a flare-up right at the end. But the day belonged to old master Eto’o.

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Cech 7; Ivanovic 6 (Cole 30, 7), Cahill 7, Terry 7, Azpilicueta 7; Luiz 7, Lampard 7 (Mikel 46, 6); Willian 7, Oscar 7, Hazard 8; Eto’o 7 (Torres 87). Booked: Terry, Luiz, Cahill, Oscar. Goals: Hazard 17, Eto’o 34.
Liverpool (4-2-3-1): Mignolet 6; Johnson 6 (Aspas 83), Skrtel 6, Sakho 7 (Toure 90), Agger 7; Lucas 7, Allen 7 (Smith 60, 7); Sterling 7, Henderson 6, Coutinho 6; Suarez 6. Booked: Johnson. Goal: Skrtel 4.
Referee: H Webb (S Yorks).

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

Star:

Chelsea 2 - Liverpool 1: Blues grab spoils after going Eto'o to toe with Luis Suarez & Co
YOU know you're in trouble when one of Chelsea's strikers scores the winner against you.
By Paul Brown

It was a day when nothing went right for Liverpool and everything did for Chelsea, who are getting up a head of steam in the title race.
The Blues are now two points from the top of the table, while the Merseysiders have lost back-to-back games against top-four rivals and have slipped from top spot to fifth.
Liverpool had a dream start when Martin Skrtel scored after four minute only for Eden Hazard to equalise 13 minutes later.
And, just like at Manchester City, the Anfield side ended up losing.
It was Samuel Eto'o who scored what turned out to be the winner with only the sixth league goal by a Blues striker this season.
Eto'o has his critics - and he has had better games than this. He also escaped what could easily have been a red card for a studs-up tackle on Jordan Henderson before he scored.
But he became only the second Blues striker to settle a league match for the club since Jose Mourinho's return - Fernando Torres was the first against Manchester City.
This felt like a big statement of intent from the Londoners.
It's seven points from nine for Chelsea this Christmas, and Mourinho was back to his cheerleading best at the end, strutting up the touchline waving his arms about wildly.
Liverpool will count themselves unlucky. They hit the woodwork and had two penalty appeals turned down for tackles on Luis Suarez.
There was a big surprise on the Chelsea teamsheet when Mourinho named David Luiz in midfield.
It was the first time it had happened under the Special One, who insists he sees Luiz as a centre-half first and foremost. But his inclusion helped cut off the supply line to Suarez.
There has been plenty of bad blood between these teams and the opening goal came after a bad, bad foul.
Eto'o is not someone you would associate with making tackles and maybe he should concentrate on trying to score goals because his hack at Henderson was a shocker.
He somehow escaped punishment but Liverpool scored from the resulting free-kick by Philippe Coutinho. Branislav Ivanovic - under pressure from Suarez, the man who bit him last season - got a touch and Skrtel stabbed home from six yards.
Chelsea responded strongly, Glen Johnson clearing off his own line and Gary Cahill wasting a free header before Eden Hazard had a penalty appeal waved away for a push by Lucas. It was breathless stuff, Simon Mignolet acrobatically tipping over a zipping shot from Frank Lampard.
Mourinho endured chants of "Boring, boring Chelsea" after his side were criticised for their display at Arsenal.
This was anything but boring with Chelsea soon level as Hazard finished superbly after an Oscar shot rebounded kindly to him.
When Eto'o made it 2-1 from close range after some good work by Oscar, it was only what Chelsea deserved. They were rampant.
But Liverpool sensed weakness when Ivanovic limped off. He was replaced by Ashley Cole, with Cesar Azpilicueta switching to right back.
Sterling got in behind him almost immediately, and Cech did well to deny Joe Allen after Cole was caught out again moments later. When John Obi Mikel emerge for the second half instead of Lampard, who had a thigh problem, Liverpool's belief was reinforced.
Chelsea instantly retreated into their shell and Mamadou Sakho hit the crossbar with a header.
Eto'o should have made it 3-1 when he found himself clean through oneon-one with Mignolet, but the keeper pulled off a fine reaction save.
It was another example of Chelsea's inability to kill off games. This time it didn't come back to haunt them, though Suarez twice had penalty appeals turned down for challenges by Terry and Eto'o and and Johnson was denied by Cech.
But it was far from pretty and in stoppage time both Oscar and Lucas could have seen red.




Sunday, December 29, 2013

Swansea 1-0





Independent:

Chelsea 1 Swansea City 0
Familiar frustrations for Blues but Eden Hazard ensures they remain in the hunt
Chelsea's strikers once again failed to produce in front of goal but Hazard ensured they took maximum points in low-scoring affair

By SAM WALLACE

It was a lot more anxious than it should have been for Jose Mourinho, watching his side defeat a Swansea City team who, all things considered, should have been disposed off long before Chelsea went into an anxious four minutes of injury-time pressure at the end.
“They kill me,” Mourinho said of his own players. “Every game. I’m tired”. He also lavished praise on his team but the problem is the same: Chelsea are incapable of killing off games because they do not have a goalscorer to complete the job. Today it was Samuel Eto’o who spent the afternoon affecting disbelief after a series of missed chances, but it might just have been Fernando Torres or the lesser-spotted Demba Ba.
Between them, the three strikers have scored just five league goals in a collective 17 starts – Mourinho picked none of them for the trip to Old Trafford in August. Eto’o scored none of the three chances that were created for him against Swansea and it is impossible not to consider where this Chelsea side might be with a striker who had even got into double-figures by now.
Instead, the goals must come from elsewhere, on this occasion from Eden Hazard who scored on 30 minutes in a period of pressure for the home side that should have yielded more. Mourinho complained that the Belgian winger should also have had a penalty after a challenge by Jordi Amat in the second half although there was little fuss from his players at the time.
The criticism from Mourinho was that Hazard was swept off his feet by a “scissor” action from Amat that took the player’s legs away from under him while also making contact with the ball. “Big scissors in the box,” he said. “Hazard touched the ball, the full-back doesn't. A big penalty. It's the kind of managers will cry about for two hours. I just say it was a big penalty.”
As for Eto’o, the tale of woe was extensive. The Swansea goalkeeper Gerhard Tremmel, at fault for Hazard’s goal, did well to save when Juan Mata’s ball over the top put the Chelsea striker free. Then, in the first minute of the second half, Eto’o was six yards out when he met Mata’s cross but had his shot saved by Tremmel again. The striker dragged another wide five minutes later when Hazard found him in space.
Fortunately for Chelsea, they can rely upon a defence that, changed again in terms of personnel, showed no signs of buckling. Ashley Cole was back in the side in the league for the first time since 2 November. David Luiz replaced Gary Cahill and those two were resolute, especially as the team fell back in the closing stages.
“Time goes on, we don’t score a second goal, and the opponent believes and risks a bit more,” Mourinho said. “They put on a second striker, and you are in a bit of trouble. You don't score, you finish feeling you are going to concede. But the boys worked hard and had control of the game. A deserved victory. An important victory.”
For Michael Laudrup, the result only increases the significance of the Aston Villa game on Saturday. Swansea have ten points from their last ten games and, in 11th place, are still just four points off the relegation zone. “To take the positive things today into the next game, we'll need a positive result up there,” Laudrup said. “Otherwise you don't use that positivity from this game.”
It was a slow start from Cole who had not directed play forward enough for Mourinho’s liking in the early stages and the Chelsea manager had gone through his usual repertoire of dismissive hand gestures followed by behind-the-hand muttering to his bench.
The goal for Hazard, however, sprung from a perceptive interception from Cole and a quick ball up the line to the Belgian who cut inside on his right foot to shoot. His strike was firm but should never have been enough to beat Tremmel who was partially unsighted by a defender crossing his path.
Two minutes later, Petr Cech did well to save from Alvaro Vazquez, who played alone in attack for Laudrup’s side. “We didn't miss,” Mourinho said, reflecting later on the game, “the goalkeeper made fantastic saves.” He went on to offer up another excuse for Eto’o but he must see what everyone else does, that this is a team in need of a goalscorer.

Line-ups:

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Cech; Ivanovic, Luiz, Terry, Cole; Ramires, Mikel; Mata (Schurrle, 72), Oscar (Lampard, 67), Hazard (Willian, 82); Eto’o.
Substitutes not used: Schwarzer (gk), Torres, Cahill, Azpilicueta.

Swansea (4-2-3-1): Tremmel; Rangel, Amat, Williams, Taylor; Canas (De Guzman, 61), Britton; Pozuelo, Shelvey, Routledge (Bony, 76); Vazquez.
Substitutes not used: Zabret (gk), Flores, Hernandez, Tiendalli, Davies.
Referee: M Jones

Man of the match: Hazard (Chelsea)
Match rating: 5
Booked: Ramires (Chelsea)

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

Guardian:
Chelsea lack cutting edge but Eden Hazard earns win against Swansea City
Dominic Fifield

Once the adrenaline was spent and the anxiety had given way to exhaustion, José Mourinho's sense of humour clicked in. "They kill me, they kill me," he offered through a smile. "Every game I'm left tired." Managing Chelsea might already carry a health warning, for all the hefty compensation pay-offs flung the way of the departed. Yet, even in victory, there is anxiety to endure when directing the current crop.
Mourinho has been animated on the touchline plenty of times since returning to the Premier League in the summer. He has been ordered from his technical area for constantly overreacting and once even charged across in front of the visitors' dugout and climbed into the East Stand to celebrate a goal with his son, José Jnr. Yet, while overseeing narrow success over a blunt Swansea team, the Portuguese's demeanour betrayed anxiety more than ever. This was pure pantomime. It was no wonder he looked drained.
There were constant bellowed instructions to his players whenever their guard slipped, the manager pacing his technical area and regularly resorting to scream in disbelief at his backroom staff whenever an opportunity, whether a clear-cut or half-chance, was passed up by his players. Steve Holland cowered, sinking further into his tracksuit, while Rui Faria pretended to ignore the histrionics, presumably having seen them all before. At one point Mourinho even started sinking to his calves, as if mimicking André Villas-Boas in that same chalked off area, when another line was fluffed out on the pitch.
Profligacy infects this team and dents their effectiveness. This should have been a stroll against a side whose best opportunity fell to Álvaro Vázquez just after the half-hour mark and was turned away by Petr Cech. "At half-time we all should be relaxed with a comfortable result and we weren't," said Mourinho.
"The first thing that happens in the second half was probably the biggest chance of the game and, after that, we had a clear penalty. If you add all these things up, we should have been comfortable and I could have been relaxed in the technical area and on the bench. But time goes on, we don't score a second goal and the opponents risk a bit more.
"The longer you don't score, the more you feel you are going to concede. At least today I can say the biggest responsibility for the lack of goals was their goalkeeper because he made three or four big saves. He played very well. We didn't miss chances. He saved them." Even so, this all felt familiar. Samuel Eto'o was denied three times, the opportunity 13 seconds after the break from Juan Mata's delicious delivery rather summing up the contest's trajectory. A yard either side of Gerhard Tremmel and the net would have bulged. As it is, Eto'o's volley from point-blank range struck the goalkeeper on the line and Swansea survived.
Those concerns over the strikers will persist, presumably, until the summer when the forward ranks are rejigged. Eto'o, Fernando Torres and Demba Ba boast five Premier League goals from a combined 17 starts this season, although criticising them is becoming a cliché. Chelsea could at least draw encouragement from Eden Hazard's winner, the team's leading scorer fed by Ashley Cole's pass to dart inside Jordi Amat and skim a shot goalwards, which Tremmel might have saved had Ashley Williams not dived across his eye-line.
Hazard was the subject of Mourinho's penalty appeal, too, as Amat dived in to claim the ball but then take the forward's back leg. "Big scissors in the box," said the Portuguese. "The kind of decision other managers cry about for two hours."
In truth, few home players had appeared aggrieved to see the calls waved away, even if it would have lanced the tension. When Swansea did threaten on the counterattack, Ramires scythed down the substitute Wilfried Bony on the halfway line and was booked. "It wasn't a silly action," added Mourinho but it did earn the Brazilian a fifth caution and a suspension for Sunday's visit of Liverpool.
Swansea cursed such cynicism though, appearing to be a side resigned to their own shortcomings. Michael Laudrup's team retain that class in possession but, stripped of the injured Michu, they can be toothless. This loss left them with two wins in 14 matches in all competitions, the Europa League having stretched their resources and disrupted their lineup.
trip to Aston Villa suddenly appears critical, particularly with a collision with Manchester City to come. "We have to take positives from this into the game at Villa," said Laudrup. "But this was what we expected. Teams like that have quality players who eventually make the difference: Oscar, Hazard, Mata, top, top international quality level. There's a reason these players play in certain teams rather than others."
It is upon those players whom Mourinho is leaning, both to create and convert. He had moved to shake Laudrup's hand well before added time had ticked down here, as if desperate for this all to be over. Even in victory, this did not feel enjoyable.

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

Telegraph:
Chelsea 1 Swansea City 0
Jeremy Wilson

Jose Mourinho has been repeatedly telling his team that they need to become “killers” but this was another frustrating example of their propensity to rely on a glancing blow rather than bludgeon such obviously inferior opposition into submission.
The positive was a win that keepsChelsea within sight of thePremier League summit yet Mourinho’s touchline theatrics in added time were vivid illustration of his frustration at the result having still been in doubt.
“They kill me every game,” said Mourinho. “Every game I’m tired.”
Chelsea did have the opportunities to put this match beyond Swansea City within 45 minutes but, ultimately, had to contend with an unnecessarily nervous finale in which two points could conceivably have been dropped. Samuel Eto’o was again most profligate, although the problem clearly runs deeper and Chelsea’s three strikers are now heading towards 2014 with only five Premier League goals between them.
“If the strikers score 10 in the second half of the season, we’ll have more chances,” said Mourinho. “At half-time, we all should be relaxed with a comfortable result and we weren’t. Time goes on, we don’t score a second goal, and the opponent believes, risks a bit more, puts on a second striker, and you are a bit in trouble. You finish feeling you are going to concede.”
Although this has become a familiar analysis of recent Chelsea matches, Mourinho attributed Thursday’s struggle to the performance of Swansea goalkeeper Gerhard Tremmel.
“I can say the biggest responsible for the lack of goals was their goalkeeper because he made three or four big saves,” he said. “My strikers always give something to the team. Every one of them who plays gives something. No winning goals? OK.”
Having labelled Arsenal “boring” on Monday for their failure to create clear chances in a home match, Mourinho could hardly have continued the restraining tactics he had so effectively employed at the Emirates.
The 4-3-3 system was duly ditched in favour of a more expansive 4-2-3-1 formation that allowed Eden Hazard, Oscar and Juan Mata to interchange in behind Eto’o. With Ramires and John Obi Mikel forming the midfield base, Chelsea were soon in full control and creating chances almost at will.
Hazard’s clever pass had provoked a slip from Ashley Williams but Oscar miscontrolled when the goal would have been at his mercy.
Eto’o’s reverse pass then did put Hazard clear but he dragged his shot back across both Tremmel and the outside of the post. With Chelsea’s attacking players so unreliable in front of goal, John Terry remained one of his team’s biggest threats from set pieces and, in the space of five minutes, forced a save from Tremmel and then a goal-line clearance by Ashley Williams.
When Chelsea did finally score the goal that their dominance had merited, it owed as much to errors in the Swansea defence as their own precise finishing. Hazard had taken advantage of a moment’s hesitation by Jordi Amat to find space infield and his low shot squirmed under Tremmel after Williams’s botched attempt at a headed clearance had restricted his goalkeeper’s view.
It was slightly fortuitous but, for his work rate alone, no Chelsea player had more deserved a slice of luck than Hazard. Mourinho is especially happy with the Belgium winger’s response to being dropped against Schalke last month as punishment for losing his passport and missing a training session.
“He never missed one after that,” said Mourinho. “He gave everything, so I’m happy. His last action in the game was defending our box.”
Before that, Eto’o had missed wonderful chances to put the game beyond Swansea either side of half-time. First Mata split the defence only for Tremmel to save from Eto’o low to his left and then, 15 seconds into the second half, he had a volley blocked by the Swansea goalkeeper after David Luiz and Mata had combined brilliantly.
Michael Laudrup’s Swansea team selection suggested that he had one eye on Saturday’s match against Aston Villa and, beyond a half chance that Álvaro Vázquez volleyed over and then a penalty claim for a possible Mikel elbow, their threat was almost non-existent.
Mourinho eventually turned to a familiar source in Frank Lampard to add some comfort to the scoreline but he was also denied by Tremmel, while Chelsea felt aggrieved over Amat’s two-footed tackle on Hazard.
“Big scissors in the box,” claimed Mourinho. “A big penalty – it’s the kind managers will cry about for two hours.”
Perhaps but Mourinho’s wider concern, quite rightly, is with his strikers.

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

Mail:
Chelsea 1 Swansea 0: Hazard spares blushes of wasteful Blues
By Matt Barlow

There were tidings of joy for Jose Mourinho but little comfort as Chelsea continued to accrue points without flair and without much help from their strikers.
Eden Hazard scored the only goal against Swansea at Stamford Bridge as Samuel Eto’o replaced Fernando Torres at centre forward with similar results.
‘They kill me,’ said Mourinho. ‘Every game I am tired. At half-time we should be relaxed with a comfortable result and we weren’t.’
Eto’o missed three glorious chances in an eight-minute spell either side of half-time. The first when he was played clean through by Juan Mata.
Gerhard Tremmel sprang to his left and pushed it away and then denied the Cameroon striker 12 seconds into the second half. Mata again was the creator, with a ball from the right for Eto’o to meet six yards out on the  volley, with the inside of his left foot.
It was on target but too close to Tremmel, who saved. Mourinho hailed the Swansea goalkeeper but Eto’o completed his trio of chances by firing wide from just outside the penalty area, in the 50th minute.
‘The biggest (factor) responsible for the lack of goals was their goalkeeper,’ Mourinho said. ‘We didn’t miss, he made fantastic saves.’ The Chelsea manager also grumbled that referee Mike Jones should have awarded a penalty when Hazard was challenged by Jordi Amat, early in the second half.
Hazard was in full flow when Amat dived in from the side, taking the ball with his right boot while wiping out the Belgian’s legs from behind with a swing of his left foot.
‘Clear penalty,’ said Mourinho. ‘Big scissors in the box. It’s the kind of thing some managers will cry about for hours. I just say it was a penalty.’
Hazard made the difference. It was not only the goal. He was a ball of energy on the Chelsea left until he was replaced by Willian in the 82nd minute and really seems to have responded since he was dropped after missing a training session at the start of November.
‘He never missed a training session after that,’ smiled Mourinho. ‘He gave everything and so I’m happy. His last action in the game was defending our box to stop the progress of their left back. The kid was exhausted. He plays a high-intensity game and I needed a fresh player.’
The goal came in the 29th minute. Collecting the ball on the left, Hazard jinked inside, drifted past Amat and went for goal with his right foot from outside the penalty box. Tremmel did make splendid saves from Eto’o and later from substitute Frank Lampard but he loses credit on the goal. It was not  a complete howler but it was close enough to save and he dived over the ball.
Chelsea were again found wanting in front of goal against Swansea - check out our brilliant Match Zone service here
For Hazard, it was a seventh goal in 18 league appearances, which is two more than the three Chelsea strikers — Eto’o, Torres and Demba Ba — have between them in the league.
Since being left out for a Champions League game against Schalke after missing a train back from Lille — and training —  the £32million winger has scored a last-minute equaliser from the spot against West Bromwich, two in a 4-3 win at Sunderland and this goal against Swansea.
Mourinho was in no mood to criticise his strikers, preferring to point out that Chelsea’s title challenge will be boosted if they score 10 instead of five in the second half of the season.
‘They always give something to the team,’ he said. ‘Every one of them who plays gives something. No winning goals, OK. But they give.’
Chelsea are well in touch with the top ahead of Liverpool’s visit to  Stamford Bridge on Sunday, but will be without Ramires, who picked up his fifth yellow card when he halted a quick Swansea break with a midfield foul on Wilfried Bony.
They summoned a frantic finish to stress Mourinho out but attacking threats were all too rare from low-key Swansea, who have taken only 10 points from their last 10 games.
Alvaro Vazquez had the  clearest chance for the visitors, soon after Hazard had struck, but fired a half-volley straight at Petr Cech, who turned it over the bar.
‘It’s never good to lose but the fact we were in there until the last second is a positive,’ said Swansea manager Michael Laudrup.

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

Mirror:
Chelsea 1-0 Swansea City: Dominant Blues stay in title hunt after Eden Hazard nets winner
Martin Lipton

Jose Mourinho watched his side labour to victory again yesterday, and admitted: “They’re killing me.”
Eden Hazard’s first-half strike proved the difference as Samuel Eto’o wasted three great chances either side of the break.
It made for an anxious finale as Swansea finally turned up, and while Mourinho absolved the Cameroon star of blame, he conceded Chelsea are becoming their own worst enemies. “This team doesn’t let me relax, no,”said the Blues boss.
“They kill me. Every game. They kill me. Every game, I’m tired at the end. I should have been relaxed in the technical area and on the bench.
“But time goes on, we don’t score a second goal, the opponent believes and risks a bit more and you are a bit in trouble. You finish feeling you are going to concede.”
Mourinho, insistent that Hazard should have been awarded a penalty from Jordi Amat’s scything challenge, has become used to frustrations in front of goal.
Between them, Eto’o, Fernando Torres and Demba Ba have scored just five league goals this season.
This time, Eto’o was the guilty party. Played in by Juan Mata before the break, he allowed Gerhard Tremmel to save to his left.
The German keeper was culpable for Hazard’s goal, as the midfielder threaded a shot between him and Ashley Williams.
At the start of the second half he should have been beaten again, but Eto’o hit him from six yards.
Belgium star Hazard has now scored seven on his own but Mourinho, who was also forced to witness Williams clear off the line when John Obi Mikel seemed to have a tap-in, insisted: “This time it is different.
“The biggest responsibility for the lack of goals was their goalkeeper because he made three or four big saves. He played very well. It wasn’t misses but saves.”
Victory, making it seven points from nine since the shock defeat at Stoke, came at a price with Ramires ruled out of Sunday’s clash with ­Liverpool after picking up his fifth booking of the campaign.
Mourinho, who gave Ashley Cole his first league start since November 2, had no complaints at the Brazilian’s foul on Wilfried Bony, deeming it a necessary act of sacrifice.
“He had to stop the game,” said Mourinho. “If he doesn’t there’s a risk of a dangerous counter-attack. I don’t complain. It wasn’t a silly action. I don’t want to cry. That’s life.”
Swans boss Michael Laudrup was equally phlegmatic. The Welsh side have now picked up 10 points out of 30 and their lone strike on target by Alvaro Vazquez was easily repelled.
“When you play against teams like this you know you have to suffer a bit because of the quality of their players,” said the Dane.
“The fact we were in there until the last second is a positive going into the game at Aston Villa. We need to take that positive into the next few games.”

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

Express:
Chelsea 1 - Swansea 0: Eden Hazard stars as Jose Mourinho feels the strain
Tony Banks

This may be the season of goodwill to all men, but Mourinho’s players seem intent on putting their manager through the emotional wringer.
Not for Mourinho a seasonal glass of brandy and a cigar as his expensive, talented team sweep all before them. Instead the Portuguese is condemned to a nervous pacing of the technical area, brow creased , as his team squander chance after chance to finish off other sides.
Chelsea, as they usually do these days in home games, clung on for a win thanks to Eden Hazard’s 29th-minute goal.
But had striker Samuel Eto’o taken any of three good chances this was a contest that would have been over by half-time.
As it was, Swansea gained strength in only being one goal down and caused Chelsea many anxious moments in the second half.
Mourinho said: “This team don’t let you relax. They kill me. Every game I’m tired.
“At half-time, we all should have been relaxed with a comfortable result. But we weren’t.
“The first thing that happens in the second half was probably the biggest chance of the game. And after that we had a clear, big penalty. If you add up all these things, we go home with a comfortable result and I can be relaxed in the technical area and on the bench.
“But time goes on, we don’t score a second goal, the opponent risks a bit more and you are in trouble. So you finish feeling you are going to concede.”
But Mourinho added: “The boys worked hard and had control of the game. It was a deserved victory and important. The person most responsible for the lack of goals was their goalkeeper.
“Eden gave everything, so I’m happy. His last action in the game was defending in our box. The kid was exhausted.”

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

Star:

Chelsea 1 - Swansea 0: Jumpy Jose Mourinho's health Hazard with team star Eden
David Woods

The Portuguese coach was going bonkers as his title-chasing team failed to capitalise on Eden Hazard's 29th-minute goal.
Samuel Eto'o wasted three chances, two of them great ones, leaving Mourinho in despair.
On one occasion, he turned to his bench with both hands in the air and a look of exasperation on his face.
Hazard, with seven league goals, has two more than Eto'o, Fernando Torres and Demba Ba combined.
Praise Mourinho admitted he can never relax watching his men this season.
"No, they kill me," he said.
"Every game I'm tired.
"At half-time, we all should be relaxed with a comfortable result. And we weren't.
Mourinho was full of praise for Swansea's German keeper Gerhard Tremmel.
"Today, I can say the biggest responsibility for the lack of goals was their goalkeeper, because he made three or four big saves," he added.
But Tremmel, 35, also played his part in the Blues winner. Ashley Cole sent Hazard scurrying down the left and he skipped clear of Jordi Amat. Cutting into the box, he fired in a low right-foot shot which Tremmel dived over.
He was almost certainly put off by the dive of Ashley Williams, who looked like he might head clear, but failed to make contact.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Arsenal 0-0




Guardian:
Arsenal and Chelsea in goalless stalemate crammed with controversy
Arsenal 0 Chelsea 0
Dominic Fifield at the Emirates Stadium

Instinct suggests this snarl of a contest merely benefited those mustering a charge in the distant north-west but Chelsea will have gained conviction from a show of strength. Clean sheets away from home have been rare this term but, by reverting to a game plan more in keeping with his previous brushes with this derby, José Mourinho will have inflicted damage on Arsenal's own belief. The result looked to be more satisfying to the visitors.
Only in the frantic final moments, when Chelsea had retreated entirely into their shells and even hauled Fernando Torres from the fray for David Luiz, did Arsenal hint at pilfering a win. Twice Olivier Giroud might have prospered, first when liberated by Tomas Rosicky and Aaron Ramsey, then when finding space to meet Kieran Gibbs's low cross. But, where his first attempt had been sliced wastefully wide, the second was deflected high over the bar by Petr Cech, darting in to stifle at the forward's feet. The Frenchman's early season bite may well have been blunted by overuse.
Giroud departed the pitch shaking his head in disbelief as if he had been denied his just rewards, yet those were the clearest opportunities they chiselled out from the huff and puff and their nervy performance hardly warranted victory. Arsène Wenger acknowledged the edginess to their display born, he said, of that 6-3 mauling at Manchester City, a result which followed so swiftly on from the damaging defeat at Napoli in the Champions League.
His team are joint top of the table but have now gone four games without a win in all competitions. "We're going through a patch where it's a bit more difficult but it's how you deal with that," said the Frenchman. "It's a bit difficult but we'll come through it."
The sense is that momentum has been checked and this was an opportunity passed up, given Chelsea's recent and regular traumas on their travels. Yet Mourinho had drilled his players on defensive duties remorselessly since last week's Capital One Cup defeat at Sunderland, asking Mikel John Obi to suppress the "phenomenal" talent that is Mesut Özil and supplementing his midfield with Ramires's energy and Frank Lampard's threat.
The derby brought the spiky best from them; their defence, so porous in recent weeks, was strong-arm and aggressive. "It's their home game," said John Terry. "It's up to them to bring it to us." That summed them up.
Arsenal would bemoan the manner in which the visitors imposed their game plan on the contest at times. César Azpilicueta's unpunished clip of Ramsey's right heel set an early tone while also appearing to send the Welshman's radar off kilter. Mikel's lunge on Mikel Arteta, the Nigeria international planting his right foot into the inside of the Spaniard's right calf, was uglier – yet Mike Dean allowed play to continue.
Within seconds Theo Walcott was toppling over Willian's leg in the penalty area, the referee deeming the contact minimal and the reaction excessive. The managers, predictably enough, agreed to disagree.
Yet if that suggested the impetus was all one way, it was not. Chelsea had actually been the more composed through the first hour at least, tapping in to Ramires's energy and springing regularly on the break to stretch a home back line denied the presence of the injured Laurent Koscielny. When Eden Hazard dropped into space and clipped a glorious diagonal pass beyond the Arsenal rearguard, there was Frank Lampard, rolling back the years, to burst beyond Arteta and belt a volley on to the underside of the crossbar. The ball bounced down and not over the line but the threat was clear.
Of the half-chances to which Mourinho referred after the match, Ramires and Willian might have done better when granted sights of goal. This team continues to create but not always convert. Therein lies the real frustration of the manager's second coming. No Chelsea forward managed an away goal in the Premier League in 2013.
"If we score goals in direct relation to the chances we produce, we'd be in a fantastic situation," he acknowledged.
"But it's not just a problem with the strikers – it's also a problem of the other people not transforming half-chances into goals and we had half a dozen of those today, where we were not aggressive, sharp or attacking people to score …"
Solve that weakness and Chelsea will be persuasive challengers at the top, though they will have relished this reminder that they can still be pragmatic and workaholic in key contests.
Arsenal, for their part, must rediscover their fizz. Perhaps Jack Wilshere might have made a difference, relishing an occasion as scrappy as this to illuminate the scene, but he was absent serving the first game of a two-match suspension.
Instead they yearned for a dash of quality from Özil or Ramsey to inspire them and, when their frustration was prolonged, tempers flared. In the end, and much to the delight of Liverpool, Manchester City and Everton, the capital's contenders simply cancelled each other out.

http://www.theguardian.com/football/gallery/2013/dec/23/arsenal-chelsea-premier-league-gallery

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

Telegraph:

Arsenal 0 Chelsea 0

By  Henry Winter, Football Correspondent, at Emirates Stadium
This was mission accomplished by Chelsea, and a not particularly pretty mission. Judging by their players’ celebrations at the final whistle, Chelsea departed with what they came for, a point, from a Premier League match that was a five-star advertisement for late-night, last-minute Christmas shopping.
There was more entertainment to be had watching Arsène Wenger taking three attempts to zip up his long sleeping-bag coat at the start of the second half. In keeping with football guaranteed to trigger drowsiness, “Snorefest” was the succinct tweeted verdict from Rio Ferdinand.
It was a stalemate that will have been most enjoyed by Brendan Rodgers’ Liverpool, who remain top of the Premier League tree at Christmas, on goal difference from Arsenal as the title race becomes even harder to call. Liverpool are inspired by Rodgers and Luis Suárez. Chelsea certainly cannot be discounted, not with Jose Mourinho’s ability to dictate a game from the sidelines. Manchester City have the best squad. Everton play with exuberance. Arsenal need to shake off their slight lethargy; they certainly failed to shake off the cloying, close attentions of Chelsea’s players.
It was a poor game, not helped by the inclement conditions, some of Chelsea’s robust ending of Arsenal moves, some inexplicable decisions from the referee, Mike Dean, Olivier Giroud’s loss of sharpness and also Wenger’s perplexing preference for not bringing on any of his substitutes.
Arsenal were crying out for Santi Cazorla, especially after Tomas Rosicky was cautioned. Lukas Podolski, although short of match sharpness, might have enlivened Arsenal’s attack late on. Wenger did nothing. Maybe he couldn’t get his hands out of the sleeping-bag coat.
He could legitimately complain about how Dean let John Obi Mikel stay on for a dangerous challenge on Mikel Arteta, his foot following through, snapping the Spaniard’s shin-pad and leaving him writhing on the soaked pitch. Wenger could genuinely voice his disbelief that Dean had not awarded Arsenal a penalty when Theo Walcott was caught by Willian. But Arsenal were hardly angelic, and Rosicky clattered César Azpilicueta and Branislav Ivanovic.
But the fact remains that Arsenal failed to break down Chelsea’s defensive midfield and a thick blue back-line in which John Terry and Gary Cahill were outstanding. Arguably Arsenal’s best attacking option came from the overlapping Kieran Gibbs on the left. No wonder Wenger observed afterwards that he was unlikely to consider bringing back Ashley Cole, who is in Mourinho’s bad books. Not with Gibbs in this sort of vibrant form at left-back.
Despite Gibbs’ energy, Arsenal needed a more central creative force, but Mesut Özil was disappointing, the German international fading in the face of Chelsea’s physicality and sharp interceptions. Aaron Ramsey was subdued and Giroud easily controlled by Terry and Cahill, barring one attempt.
Bizarrely, Giroud appeared to be apologising to Terry for one accidental aerial challenge in the first half which the Chelsea captain had laughed off anyway as a mere pinprick. It is hard to imagine the likes of Ian Wright going around saying sorry to their markers. Giroud could be a very fine centre-forward but he needs to impose himself more.
This stalemate highlighted that opposing teams believe they can outmuscle Wenger’s team of aesthetes. This was the type of test of character that Arsenal knew they would have to face to answer questions about their fortitude. It was still surprising to see Mathieu Flamini start on the bench. The combative Frenchman was made for this sort of intense duel of a game.
There were few highlights. Some of the football really was as wretched as the weather. Mistakes littered the game. Arsenal struggled to find their stride, hustled relentlessly by the visitors. Mikel, Frank Lampard, Ramires and company intercepted and tackled, occasionally fouling.
Azpilicueta caught Ramsey. Lampard dived in on Bacary Sagna, leaving the right-back floored, as Mourinho mimicked playing the ball.
Mourinho had clearly ordered his men to close Arsenal players down rapidly and robustly, particularly his old Real Madrid schemer, Özil. One move by Arsenal took the ball unerringly from Özil to Giroud to Ramsey and back out to Özil, who was promptly fouled by Lampard.
Chelsea were defending well. When Sagna crossed from the right, Cahill slid in to clear. Terry, reading the situation well, then calmly intervened to cut out Ramsey’s attempted pass to Theo Walcott. This was a disciplined tactical performance from Chelsea, with occasional fast forays upfield. Fernando Torres was feisty, running at Per Mertesacker and Thomas Vermaelen. A few opportunities fell Chelsea’s way. Ramires headed wide.
Chelsea then had the best chance of the half, Lampard volleying against the bar after Eden Hazard’s fine through ball. Torres then turned sharply and brought a low save from Wojciech Szczesny.
The game then passed through a fractious period, catcalls being directed at Dean after Mikel poleaxed Arteta and then Walcott was brought down by Willian. Dean again caused consternation amongst Arsenal supporters, players and management by flamboyantly signalling no penalty.
This was a derby, a game played for high stakes in the Premier League race, and a match slightly compromised by the swirling rain, but it still made poor fare for the viewing hundreds of millions. Still the tackles went in. Ramires on Arteta. Walcott on Azpilicueta.
Football broke out occasionally. Ivanovic hooked a shot goalwards but Szczesny saved comfortably. The Pole then dropped down to smother a powerful drive from Lampard, following Torres’ perfect nod-down.
The fouls continued. Ivanovic’s boot was dangerously high on Özil.
Mourinho began making his changes, controlling the game. The hard-running Andre Schürrle came on for the disappointing Hazard. Oscar replaced Willian. Inbetween the arguments continued. Azpilicueta disputed the game’s finer points with Sagna. Giroud remonstrated with Mikel. Some of the players queried events with Dean. The Premier League debating society was out in full force.
Giroud then sliced a shot wide and was denied at close range by Petr Cech following a slick move involving Gibbs and Rosicky. The sight of David Luiz coming on for Torres indicated that Mourinho was happy with a point. Wenger’s side still attacked. Vermaelen met a corner with a downward header but Azpilicueta cleared off the line. By the end, Arsenal fans were chanting “boring, boring Chelsea” but it was the visitors singing more happily in the rain.

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

Mail:
Arsenal 0 Chelsea 0:
Dave rides to rescue... Azpilicueta the hero as Jose’s jinx keeps Arsenal off top spot
By Martin Samuel

It was rather fitting that on the night when the late John Sullivan’s family were in attendance, Chelsea should be rescued by the man they call Dave.
Sullivan was the genius behind Only Fools And Horses, the creator of Del Boy, Rodney, Boycie and Trigger, and a lifelong Arsenal fan. He would have been 67 on Monday.
One of his running jokes was that Trigger, no matter how many times he was corrected, mistakenly referred to Rodney as Dave.
Discussing Del Boy’s impending fatherhood, Trigger tells his pub audience: ‘If it’s a boy they’re going to call it Rodney.’ Pause. ‘After Dave.’
And so it was that when Cesar Azpilicueta arrived at Stamford Bridge, the players took one look at that name, with its many syllables, that p straight after the z and the tricky cuet sound near the end and decided: Dave.
So Dave it is, and Dave it was who, at the moment when Chelsea could have surrendered three points in the final minute, came to the rescue. Bacary Sagna’s header was not the most powerful, but it was downwards and goalbound, and there would have been precious little time for Chelsea to get back into the game had there not been a protector at the far post.
And that protector was: Dave. He launched the ball upfield and Chelsea survived. He certainly won’t be invited to Arsenal’s Christmas party next year — unlike the man he replaced at full-back, Ashley Cole.
You’ve got to hand it to Jose Mourinho. He knows his way around matches like this. It is 10 games and counting without defeat against Arsene Wenger and despite that late escape, had Chelsea not got a point here justice would not have been done.
Arsenal had a smattering of chances late on, but Chelsea had the best of the first half and looked more dangerous on the break. As they settled for a draw, the Arsenal fans taunted them with cries of ‘Boring, boring Chelsea.’
The arch riposte would have been that Arsenal were meant to be at home. It didn’t look like it for long periods.
A search party would not have turned up Mesut Ozil — at a cost of £42.5million, the man the club should be looking to for the decisive influence on nights such as this — and first had to locate Olivier Giroud. The striker was anonymous until late in the day, when he missed one good chance, and was thwarted with another.
So rare were Arsenal’s opportunities that when Giroud was played in after 78 minutes by Aaron Ramsey, the whole place stiffened in expectation.
Here, against the odds, was the goal that would separate the teams. Not only did Giroud miss the net, he missed the side-netting, too. His shot was sliced horribly wide, much to the derisive jeers of the away end. 
Soon after, Tomas Rosicky found Kieran Gibbs on the overlap, picking out Giroud again, only for a combination of Petr Cech and the outstanding John Terry to divert his shot over the bar.
Terry, along with Gary Cahill, Dave and Branislav Ivanovic, were the success story of the night. The only mistake Ivanovic made against Ozil was a high boot that nearly provoked a fight, but the rest of the time he was entirely under the Serb’s control.
In front of the back four sat a protective bank of as many as five, with John Mikel Obi particularly effective. Some thought he should have been sent off for a challenge on Mikel Arteta that caught the Arsenal midfielder high, but it appeared both men were reckless in their approach and the culpability could easily have been reversed. 
One genuine Arsenal grievance occurred in the 37th minute, when Willian clumsily brought Theo Walcott to the floor in the penalty area, only for his transgression to be ignored by referee Mike Dean.
Meanwhile, the architect of Wenger’s frustration stood imperious on the perimeter of the technical area throughout this, the latest rain-blasted edition of their rivalry. It was Mourinho’s night, in more ways than one. He will have felt most pleased with the result, his team turned in the better overall performance, and the inhospitable conditions reflected his gameplan.
Chelsea were not negative, but they were constant, cussed, spoiling, much like the rain that drenched the Emirates Stadium and many within. Chelsea’s organisation won the day, as did the weather. It was a night on which it was impossible to play the beautiful game, and Chelsea settle more happily into the ugly side of things.
They resisted Arsenal defiantly, broke more threateningly on the counter attack and Arsenal were limp and ineffectual for long periods. Wenger had sought a reaction to the 6-3 defeat at Manchester City, but this wasn’t it. A defeat would have been worse, but a strong performance would have been better. Wenger sat doubled over, arms tightly folded across his stomach on the bench. He looked like a man in pain. He wouldn’t have been alone, watching this.
All that could be said in defence of the teams is that these really were the filthiest conditions imaginable. Swirling wind, heavy rain - from the opening minutes when Gibbs overhit a simple back pass it was obvious the weather would be the star performer here. Arsenal’s technical game would be blown off course and even Chelsea’s more robust approach was no match for the conditions.
Once the game got going, however, it was Chelsea who set the early pace. They had several opportunities but the pick of it - the pick of the night, in fact - came in the 32nd minute when a Willian chip, exquisitely delivered and perfectly timed, fell for Frank Lampard ghosting into space on the far side of the penalty area. He met the ball on the volley, blasting it against the crossbar and down, but out.
A minute later, Eden Hazard’s fine run ended with a feed to Fernando Torres but Wojciech Szczesny was equal to his rather underpowered shot. Chelsea’s best spell finished with a dangerous break from Hazard, knocking the ball in to Willian whose shot was snatched and disappointing.
It was, in this way, typical Mourinho. Chelsea’s 0-0 draw at Manchester United earlier in the season had put the padlock on the champions, and here he contrived to do the same to the early front-runners.
The fact that in throwing a big blue blanket over the proceedings he also managed to have as many chances, underlined his clarity of thought. Mourinho replaced Torres with David Luiz late on, prowled some more and called it a night.

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

Independent:

Arsenal 0 Chelsea 0
Dean’s mistakes deny top spot to Arsenal
 
Sam Wallace 
All of the aggression and needle of the great rivalry that characterised Arsene Wenger v Jose Mourinho Part I in the last decade, but so little of the quality tonight that once made these two clubs the pre-eminent sides in English football.
 
There was plenty of pain in the December rain, largely inflicted, it should be said by Mourinho’s foot soldiers or, as they were at times, the foot-up soldiers. Ten games and counting and Wenger’s Arsenal have still not defeated a Mourinho side and whatever they might say at the Emirates, it is a record that rankles with the locals.
Mourinho was booed off at the end, along with referee Mike Dean, and regaled with “boring, boring Chelsea” from those left in the home seats around the tunnel. It was a criticism he leapt upon later, “I agree,” Mourinho said. “I played against them 10 times and I never lost.” Then, for reasons that were not entirely clear, he started singing a chant of his own “Funny, funny Jose”, before adding, “ten times they don't win once.”
Mind you, that was mild compared to the criticism of Arsenal for their appeal for what was a blatant red card when John Obi Mikel caught Mikel Arteta studs-up above the ankle in the first half. “They like to cry,” Mourinho opined, “that’s tradition”. On the tackles itself he said that “Football is for men,” and then sensing he may have strayed into dangerous territory added, “or for women with fantastic attitude.”
If he was looking for a fight, Wenger did not rise to the bait, at least not tonight but as of now it feels like the old bad feeling is creeping back in. It is most definitely on again after the summer rapprochement. As for the Premier League title race, it feels as enthralling as ever.
It was not pretty but it was effective, Arsenal barely finding their rhythm in the first half.
It is Liverpool who lead at Christmas for the first time since 2008, second are Arsenal on goal difference with Manchester City one point behind on 35 and Chelsea on 34. With two points dividing the top five teams, the season is set perfectly - even if this game did not allow for any definitive judgements.
It was a bad night for referee Dean who should have sent off Mikel for his challenge on Arteta on 36 minutes, which met the excessive force criteria. Just seconds later there was a penalty appeal against Willian for a trip on Theo Walcott that looked plum, which was not given. Frank Lampard had rattled the crossbar minutes earlier, which was as close as Chelsea got to scoring.
And then in the second half it got that little bit more aggressive when Branislav Ivanovic caught Mesut Ozil with a high foot and the shoving and finger-pointing becoming ever more intense. But what is worth remembering is that not until Olivier Giroud forced a save from close range out of Petr Cech with six minutes of the game to play was there finally an effort on target from either side.
This was raw and attritional throughout. There were Arsenal trying desperately not to bow to the recent trend of history and succumb to Chelsea. And then there was Chelsea being, well, Chelsea.
It was a classic Mourinho performance: his team refusing to budge despite the pressure and, along the way, very little leeway given to his creative talents. Eden Hazard shimmered with promise in the first half but his manager gradually grew tired of him conceding possession and he was withdrawn for the more orthodox Andre Schurrle instead. When David Luiz came on for Fernando Torres with minutes remaining it was clear what direction Mourinho was taking.
Faced with risking defeat against a direct title rival, Mourinho settled for a draw. He had done so at Old Trafford earlier in the season, preferring to take his chances getting three points at Stamford Bridge.
The first half passed without incident until Lampard hit the bar following a nice diagonal ball from Hazard. Then came Mikel’s lunge. Following that the ball was worked forward to Walcott in the penalty area and, quite frankly, things got worse for Dean. Willian stabbed his foot to get the ball away from Walcott in the penalty area and the Arsenal man went straight over the challenge with the ball untouched.
There was the old physical approach from Chelsea at the start of the game when Cesar Azpilicueta went through Aaron Ramsey. Lampard caught Bacary Sagna. Tomas Rosicky tried to level it up with fouls on Ramires, Hazard and Lampard. The concern for the home team was the anonymity of Mesut Ozil in that first half and Ramsey seemed a long way from his best this season.
It got no more refined after the break with another bad challenge on Arteta, this time from Ramires who was booked. Dean finally started reaching for the cards with Walcott going into the book for a trip on Azpilicueta. Rosicky’s fouling earned him a place in the book. Remarkably, Mikel managed not to get his name taken.
It was a challenge by Ivanovic on Ozil, not a strong influence on the game against his former coach Mourinho, that really stoked things up and began the recriminations and pushing that suggest a game is reaching boiling point. Yet Arsenal were never able quite to convert the late pressure into a goal to decide the match.
There was a good chance for Giroud but he sliced the ball wide on 78 minutes running onto Ramsey’s ball in behind the defence. Six minutes he finally got the first shot of the game on target and Cech proved equal to it. Later, Azpilicueta kicked a shot from Sagna off the line. While Chelsea lived dangerously they were never likely to be overwhelmed. John Terry and Gary Cahill were outstanding.
So it proved that Mourinho’s men ended the game attacking and with a series of corners that, in the end, Arsenal defended well given the circumstances. There was something impressive too in the way that Arsenal, with Thomas Vermaelen partnering Per Mertesacker in the centre of defence, did not give in to the onslaught.
The goalless draw means that Chelsea end the calendar year without a goal away from home in the Premier League from one of their strikers. There was not a single shot on target from the away side and that told its own story. So far the indications have been that Mourinho will not sign a new striker in January although that is a problem that surely needs fixing.
Yet for all that, the obstinate old qualities in Mourinho’s Chelsea remain. They may not be pretty to watch on nights like these but they served a cold reminder to Arsenal, and their resurgent new team, that these are the kind of obstacles that they will have to overcome if they have their eye on that first title since Mourinho first pitched up in England.

Match facts
Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Szczesny; Sagna, Mertesacker, Vermaelen, Gibbs; Arteta, Ramsey; Walcott, Ozil, Rosicky; Giroud.
Substitutes not used: Fabianski (gk), Monreal, Jenkinson, Flamini, Cazorla, Bendtner, Podolski
Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Cech; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Azpilicueta; Mikel, Lampard; Ramires, Willian, Hazard; Torres.
Substitutes not used: Schwarzer (gk), Cole, Luiz, Schurrle, Mata, Oscar, Eto'o.

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

Express:
Arsenal 0 - Chelsea 0: All square at the Emirates
ARSENE WENGER has outlasted 11 Chelsea managers, but the one he cannot get the better of is Jose Mourinho. Ten times he has faced him and is yet to taste victory.
By: Simon Yeend
Wenger knew a win for Arsenal last night at the Emirates would take his side back to the top of the table.
He was left frustrated as his team were choked by Chelsea, failed to force a save out of Petr Cech until the 85th minute and got involved in a physical battle that generally they came out of second best.
Referee Mike Dean was the pantomime villain for the Arsenal fans, failing to send off John Obi Mikel for a challenge on Mikel Arteta.
A point is not a disaster for either team and takes Arsenal level with Liverpool at the top, but will taste sweeter for Mourinho.
But there is a feeling that the capital’s title challenge is losing momentum as Liverpool and Manchester City pick up speed.
Worryingly for Arsenal, they have had three games against Napoli, Manchester City and Chelsea and have not won any of them.
Chelsea stay two points behind in fourth but impressed with their disciplined display.
Wenger wrote in his programme notes: “It’s a time when we can give people some presents, in the form of football that they enjoy.”
What Arsenal fans enjoy is attractive, quickfire, attacking football. And winning.
The Gunners played that free-flowing stuff in their last game and got battered 6-3 by Manchester City as they tried to chase the game.
Last night the result was more important than turning on the style.
Arsenal were without Jack Wilshere, suspended for his middle-finger gesture to the City fans, and Laurent Koscielny, who had not recovered from a gashed knee.
In came Thomas Vermaelen, while Mathieu Flamini dropped to the bench, with Aaron Ramsey playing in a deeper role and Tomas Rosicky on the left.
Mourinho picked his team with containment on his mind – Mikel selected to try to tame Mesut Ozil while Juan Mata was left on the bench along with Oscar. Chelsea strung five across midfield, played deep and closed the space to prevent Arsenal playing between the lines.
This blue blanket ensured a tame start, but matters got spicy when Cesar Azpilicueta went through the back of Ramsey’s legs and Frank Lampard followed moments later sliding in on Bacary Sagna right on the touchline in front of Mourinho.
The Chelsea manager tried to lift Sagna back to his feet, but the Arsenal man was having none of it.
It took Arsenal nearly 25 minutes to create their first opening, with Sagna breaking free on the right and delivering a skidding cross into the area. Fortunately for Chelsea, Gary Cahill was alert at the near post and slid in to clear.
Chelsea went up the other end and fashioned a chance of their own, Ramires heading Willian’s cross over.
In their next attack Chelsea went agonisingly close. Lampard laid it off to Hazard, continued his run and then volleyed the Belgian’s chip on to the underside of the bar.
The game went up a further notch as Cahill caught Rosicky late. And Mikel’s tackle on Arteta drew a furious response from the home fans as he left the Arsenal man writhing.
Arteta went in for the challenge, too, with his studs raised and referee Mike Dean waved play on.
The anguish was doubled for the Arsenal fans as Dean then turned down a penalty appeal when Willian slid into Walcott.
Dean was the centre of attention again midway through the second half with Arteta again the victim of a physical challenge. Ramires was the man in the firing line but after a long pause, Dean produced only a yellow card.
The next confrontation saw Ozil and Branislav Ivanovic going head to head after the Chelsea man cleared the ball with his boot rather too close to Ozil’s chin for his liking. It was catching – Ivanovic going down like an anvil into a mineshaft after being clipped by Rosicky.
Mourinho upped the ante with a theatrical arms raised in mock outrage. Rosicky booked. And a game that could very much be placed in the category – spicy.
Cech did not have a save to make until the 85th minute, but when his moment came he was immense.
Kieran Gibbs and Rosicky linked up well to set up Giroud with a low cross six yards out.
The Frenchman connected but Cech was there to smother and send the ball over the bar.

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

Star:

Arsenal 0 - Chelsea 0: Big guns firing blanks

JOSE MOURINHO made it 10 out of 10 as he stretched his unbeaten run against Arsene Wenger last night.
By David Woods

His Chelsea side came away from the Emirates with a goalless draw that stopped Arsenal going back to the top of the Premier League for Christmas.
Mourinho's men could have won it if Frank Lampard's first-half effort had gone in after bouncing down off the bar.
And Olivier Giroud twice could have snatched an Arsenal win.
He miscued horribly 12 minutes from time when put through by Aaron Ramsey, then was blocked out in front of goal by John Terry seven minutes later.
Chelsea had two lucky first-half escapes in the space of a minute as they fought for a foothold.
John Obi Mikel could have been shown red for a high challenge on Mikel Arteta in the 36th minute.
Seconds later Theo Walcott tumbled in the box under a challenge from Willian.
On both occasions referee Mike Dean waved play-on, much to the disgust of Arsenal and Wenger.
But the Blues had the best chance of a tight first-half, when Lampard hit the underside of the bar with a cleanly-hit shot.
Yet on a wet, windy night, this match was often a damp squib with the sides cancelling each other out.
Blues boss Mourinho went for a surprise 4-3-3 formation, which was quickly shifted to 4-5-1 when defending.
After their 6-3 hammering at Manchester City 10 days ago, Wenger's men were never going to be gung-ho, even at home.
Chelsea had a decent opportunity in the sixth minute after Cesar Azpilicueta tackled Walcott and exchanged passes with Eden Hazard.
The Spaniard then picked out Lampard, but he made a mess of his attempted shot.
A minute later Per Mertesacker was sharp enough to dispossess Fernando Torres after he pinched the ball off Ramsey and tried to burst through on goal.
Azpilicueta was lucky to escape a booking for a blatant tap on the right heel of Ramsey in the 12th minute, then Lampard slid in with feet up on Bacary Sagna, who tumbled theatrically, leaving Mourinho unimpressed.
Gary Cahill came to Chelsea's rescue in the 25th minute when an inviting cross from Sagna, who was played in by Ramsey, looked like picking out Giroud but Cahill stretched to intercept for a corner.
Soon after a sharp Chelsea move led to Willian crossing for Ramires to head over, with the midfielder needing to have been a couple of inches taller to capitalise.
Lampard came close to scoring in the 32nd minute after a wonderful flicked-up pass from Hazard bounced invitingly in front of him 20 yards out.
He took his time to shoot on the half-volley.
When he did the connection was a good one, but it struck the underside of the bar then bounced down two feet in front of the goal-line.
Torres then turned neatly and shot straight at Wojciech Szczesny with his left foot and Mertesacker rushed in to block when he tried again from the opposite side of goal.
Mikel was fortunate to escape censure after his sliding tackle saw him go in studs up on Arteta and catch the Spaniard high on the shin.
Then a clumsy challenge by Willian on Walcott saw the Brazilian catch the off-balance winger and trip him.
The contact was light but it was there, but referee Dean waved play on.
A Chelsea breakaway ended with a disappointing attempted curler from the left by Willian which was easily taken by Szczesny.
Cahill then blocked a shot from Mesut Ozil and Tomas Rosicky volleyed well wide from the follow-up.
The Blues should have done better in the 66th minute when Willian had Ramires and Hazard free in the box to his left.
But his ball was behind Ramires and Hazard looked surprised when it came to him and miscontrolled it for a goal-kick.

ARSENAL: Szczesny, Sagna, Mertesacker, Vermaelen, Gibbs, Ramsey, Arteta, Walcott, Ozil, Rosicky, Giroud. Subs: Podolski, Monreal, Cazorla, Flamini, Fabianski, Bendtner, Jenkinson.

CHELSEA: Cech, Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Azpilicueta, Mikel, Lampard, Ramires, Willian, Hazard, Torres. Subs: Cole, Luiz, Mata, Oscar, Schurrle, Schwarzer, Eto'o.
Referee: Mike Dean.

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