Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Arsenal 2-0




Independent:

                                                                Arsenal 0 Chelsea 2
Arsene Wenger's wait for victory over Jose Mourinho goes on as Blues advance in League Cup
Mata the star as Jose's hex over Gunners manager continues
By SAM WALLACE

Nine matches, five defeats and so the wait goes on for an Arsene Wenger team to beat one managed by Jose Mourinho. At least this season, the League Cup does not represent the only realistic hope that Arsenal have for a trophy.
Wenger's side are still top of the Premier League. They have still played some of the most exciting football in Europe this season. They were, in terms of individuals, the weaker of these two mid-week League Cup XIs before a ball was kicked. Yet even so, the result said much about the depth of Chelsea's resources and the sheer bloody-mindedness of their manager to get a result in a tie that he has, at various points over the last few weeks, proclaimed to give up on.
When you can name Juan Mata in the second string, and when the Spanish No 10 comes up with a goal like the one he scored here, there is not much doubting the talent at Mourinho's disposal. Even so, he still has to marshal it effectively and Chelsea gave very little away, virtually nothing in the way of chances, while punishing Arsenal ruthlessly on the counter-attack.
It is Chelsea who are in the quarter-finals of the Capital One Cup, with a goal in the first half from right-back Cesar Azpilicueta and then Mata's beauty after the hour. Meanwhile, Arsenal were forced to rely on the inadequate Nicklas Bendtner in attack and suffered a Carl Jenkinson error to let Chelsea in for the first.
It is carelessness such as this that has cost them in the past and while the 2013-2014 version of Arsenal  looks much more promising there was still some of the old weakness. Wenger could have gambled more on winning this game, but in the end his team risked too little and gained nothing. Worst of all, they looked vulnerable in the face of another Mourinho masterplan.
The team that Mourinho fielded can be valued in transfer fees at around £140m, around three times as much as the side Wenger picked. Neither manager selected extensively from their Under-21s, although it was Wenger's side that looked - on paper at least - the weaker.
There was not the core of homegrown young 'uns in the home team that characterised Wenger's side in the previous round against West Bromwich Albion. He selected Ryo Miyaichi in his starting team but chiefly it was players like Thomas Vermaelen, Nacho Monreal and Carl Jenkinson who have found their first team opportunities restricted this season.
Nevertheless, there was enough in the Arsenal side, including Aaron Ramsey and Jack Wilshere that they would have expected to make a better fist of it than they did. A goal down in 26 minutes, they never really forced Mark Schwarzer into a big save. In the first half a shot from Monreal from the left was deflected marginally wide by Gary Cahill's sliding block.
Wenger had picked a mixed bench, including Mesut Ozil and Olivier Giroud, as well as the lesser-spotted Ju Young Park and the 18-year-old Isaac Hayden. Mourinho also gave himself some options, with Fernando Torres, Eden Hazard, Ramires and Branislav Ivanovic among the substitutes. Once Chelsea had taken the lead, it was hard to see where Arsenal might prise the initiative back from the away side with Bendtner so anonymous.

Arsenal passed the ball beautifully at times, not least when they worked it left to right on 15 minutes, eventually winning a corner. But Chelsea, with Michael Essien and John Obi Mikel in front of the back four, were hard to break down and were gifted a goal on the counter-attack.
That attack might have broken down when Samuel Eto'o passed the ball inside and Essien was obliged to challenge Ramsey for the ball. From their collision it looped forward into the Arsenal box. Wilshere seemed to gesture to Jenkinson that he should leave the clearing up to the midfielder but the latter attempted a header back to Lukasz Fabianski which fell fractionally short and Azpilicueta nipped in to toe it past the Arsenal goalkeeper.
Azpilicueta? It was not immediately clear what the Chelsea right-back, out of favour this season under Mourinho, was doing so far forward other than he must have been blithely following the counter-attack. It was a neat finish for his first goal for the club.
Otherwise, Mourinho's regular bouts of touchline applause seemed to indicate that he approved of the way his defence kept the ball and passed out under pressure from Arsenal. The much-maligned Kevin De Bruyne was given a reprieve and, back in the team, was heavily supervised for the first half by his manager on the near touchline.

In the second half, it was only a matter of minutes after Wenger started to throw his resources at the comeback that Mata's goal put it out of the reach of the home team. In fact, Ozil, on as a substitute, had scarcely given away a foul on the edge of the Chelsea area then the away team, a rapid counter-attack unit all night, ventured to the other end and scored.
The second goal will go down as another pure strike from the right boot of Mata, but it was also the scrapping and the effort that got the ball to him on the edge of the area that marked out Chelsea's night. From a throw-in on the right to Eto'o on from a header from Willian to Mata who struck the ball with enough of the outside of his right to send it spinning away from the glove of Fabianski.
Steve Holland, a substitute himself for Mourinho in the post-match press conference, made the case that Mata has played in his “share” of the bigger games of the season. But there is no doubt he remains an understudy to Oscar in their preferred position. “What appears to be the team that's preferred at the moment won't be the team that's preferred in January,” Holland said, “and that will be different again in March, April and May. We need everybody.”
In the aftermath of the goal, Wenger sent on Giroud for Bendtner whose revival has become a theme of late at Arsenal. Not here, perhaps not ever. Although Bendtner has until January to make an impression when Wenger may well be forced into signing another striker. Unfortunately for Arsenal, the reliance upon Giroud was writ large as Bendtner generally laboured around the place to the annoyance of many of the home fans.

The strangest moment was when he was fed the ball by Tomas Rosicky in the area and seemed to be unaware that he was unmarked and able to turn to face goal. Instead he laid it off to Ramsey and the little patience that remained for Arsenal's Danish striker appeared to ebb away.  Even Park was sent on at the end.
There was a warm handshake offered by Mourinho and accepted by Wenger at the end of the game, as there had been at the start. The Arsenal manager warned against snap judgements on his team following this defeat and last week's to Borussia Dortmund, but he could certainly do with a victory over Liverpool on Saturday to placate the fears that his side struggle against this season's leading teams.
 
Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Fabianski; Jenkinson, Koscielny, Vermaelen, Monreal; Ramsey (Park 82), Wilshere; Miyaichi (Ozil 63), Rosicky, Cazorla; Bendtner (Giroud 66).
Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Schwarzer; Azpilicueta, Cahill, Luiz, Bertrand; Essien, Mikel; De Bruyne (Ramires 67), Mata (Kalas 90), Willian; Eto'o (Ba 81).
Man of the match Mata.
Rating 6/10.
Referee P Dowd (Staffordshire).
 

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Guardian:

Juan Mata seals comfortable Chelsea win as Arsenal rediscover bad habits

Dominic Fifield at Emirates Stadium

Those "psychological effects" to which Arsène Wenger had referred when considering the significance of this collision between the Premier League's top two may now be afflicting his Arsenal squad rather than bolstering them. Chelsea crossed the capital to win this tie and a place in the League Cup quarter-finals with relative ease. They were more streetwise, more powerful and certainly cannier in key areas, their victory achieved with a goal in each half and plenty to spare. It all seemed ominously comfortable.
Perhaps that was inevitable given the weight of resources at José Mourinho's disposal but Wenger will have departed gripped by familiar frustrations. His personal record remains wretched after his ninth brush with the Portuguese, none of which he has won. If he can block out that horrible reality, then he must wonder if successive home defeats, after Borussia Dortmund's win here last week, could erode the confidence that had been growing in the squad since the second week of the campaign. Liverpool's visit on Saturday is looming large and then follow the return against Borussia, a trip to Manchester United and a visit from high-flying Southampton.
How Wenger must have craved a victory here to pep conviction before that awkward sequence, let alone retain one route to rare silverware. Instead he must now convince a squad that has grown used to near misses that normal recent service is not being resumed. His positive response afterwards, drumming home that there is no need for panic and the mistakes being made are freakish, suggested as much. The problem is the imminent fixture list appears brutal and, for all the clear improvement in this calendar year, these games will put a relatively kind first nine matches in the Premier League in proper context. "You can't go to conclusions too quickly," he said. That may be revisited in a month's time.
Chelsea are taking plenty of heart at the damage they have inflicted on fellow contenders this week. A sixth successive win in October in all competitions appeared assured from the moment César Azpilicueta had poked the visitors ahead midway through the opening period following Carl Jenkinson's horrible error.
Chelsea's had ostensibly been a protest selection. Mourinho was outraged at having to play 48 hours after that thunderous meeting with Manchester City at Stamford Bridge and only Gary Cahill was retained from the starting line-up on Sunday. In reality it was a match-day squad which cost in excess of £250m to assemble, and an XI of seasoned international quality crammed with personnel still with much to prove to the new manager. He has tapped into their hunger before and they responded.
Azpilicueta's reward was similar to that of his compatriot Fernando Torres on Sunday. Chelsea had defended a corner stoutly with Juan Mata calmly sending Samuel Eto'o upfield and the Cameroonian, in turn, slipping a pass to Michael Essien.
The midfielder's pass looped up from Aaron Ramsey's snapped challenge, the ball arcing towards the home penalty area and kicking up from the turf. The retreating Jack Wilshere spotted Jenkinson's intention to nod back towards Lukasz Fabianski and bellowed a warning, pleading with his team-mate to let him collect instead. As with Matija Nastasic on Sunday, this call went unheeded.
The rest was inevitable. Jenkinson's connection was weak and Azpilicueta darted through on the blindside to poke his shot beyond the advancing Pole and in off the far post. Only once before in a seven-year professional career had the right-back scored, for Marseille against Auxerre in his final match for the French club. His expression was still tinged with disbelief as he left the pitch at half-time.
Wenger called out the cavalry, with Mesut Özil on the pitch and Olivier Giroud preparing to replace a wheezing Nicklas Bendtner. The Dane's display provoked grumbling discontent, at best, from the locals. But just as Arsenal considered building up a head of steam, Eto'o hooked a throw-in back into the box, Willian nodded on and Mata took a touch before slamming his finish beyond Fabianski with his right foot. He may feel on the margins but this was a reminder that the Spaniard remains a player of sumptuous talent, vision and finesse.
"The manager is the one who makes the decision but I will always try my best for this club," said Mata. "That's what I'll always try and do. We've played City and Arsenal this week, two of the best teams in Europe, and we've beaten them. That shows we're ready to fight for titles."
Whether Arsenal are remains to be seen but the next month will offer a proper indication of their progress. This seemed like a reality check. It is up to Wenger now to prove it was a blip rather than a portent of things to come.
 
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Telegraph:

Arsenal 0 Chelsea 2
By  Henry Winter, Emirates Stadium

Jose Mourinho left with Mesut Özil’s shirt, and once again with Arsenal’s scalp. Mourinho is now undefeated in the last nine competitive meetings with Arsène Wenger and his Chelsea side progressed with little trouble to the Capital One Cup quarter-finals.
Arsenal, barring another strong shift of work from Aaron Ramsey, were deeply disappointing, their fringe players totally failing to take their chance. Nicklas Bendtner was so poor, so anonymous, so much a spectator that he was eventually removed by Wenger probably to save him from the rising wrath of the home support.
Arsenal fans expect commitment at the very least, a willingness to give everything for that famous shirt.
Bendtner let them down on Tuesday night. Again. Bendtner needs to take a long hard look at himself after this.
The man leading the opposition line, Samuel Eto’o, did not look like scoring but at least he kept running, kept looking for a chance, and also helping create Chelsea’s first, nimbly taken by Cesar Azpilicueta after 24 minutes. Juan Mata added the second after 65 and Chelsea could easily have scored more late on.
They were by far the better side, hungrier for the ball, quicker to use it, and sharper in front of goal. Chelsea’s sixth win in October confirmed how they are responding to Mourinho.
It highlighted the contrast in squad depths, a painful reality for Wenger that he needs to address in January. His first-choice XI, the one that sits top of the Premier League, is undeniably impressive, lifted by such stars as Özil and Olivier Giroud. Without those in two particular, the respective creative and finishing forces of the side, Arsenal look so much the weaker.
Three regulars, Laurent Koscielny, Jack Wilshere and Ramsey, began the game and Santi Cazorla demonstrated some of his skills in the first period, including a nutmegging of John Obi Mikel, but Chelsea’s second string were still too strong.
The contrast will surely remind Wenger of the need to bolster the squad in January, particularly in attack where they look so anaemic without Giroud.
The Frenchman, whose name was sung more loudly the more Bendtner laboured, came on and managed Arsenal’s only meaningful attempt on goal.
It also encapsulated the contrast in squad strengths late on when Mourinho removed Eto’o and sent on Demba Ba while Wenger replaced Ramsey with Chu-young Park. Barring Gary Cahill, none of the Chelsea side were automatics for Mourinho. In the dressing-room before kick-off, Mourinho had told them to give him selection headaches for next weekend. They have done.
They simply reminded everyone of their abilities here, of their readiness for action when required. Mata was man of the match, soon having the loud contingent of 9,000 Chelsea fans singing his name with his passing and also earning applause from Mourinho midway through the first half when he went tracking back to regain the ball.
Willian looks to be picking up the frenetic pace of English football, Mikel and Michael Essien largely con­trolled midfield while Apzilicueta kept raiding down the right.
Mourinho had talked positively about Azpilicueta at the weekend, praising the Spaniard for being patient, for not complaining with Branislav Ivanovic being the manager’s preferred starter at right-back. Azpilicueta, whose lengthy surname has prompted Chelsea fans to call him “Dave”, responded here, scoring after 24 minutes.
The goal was a reward for his decision to make a lung-breaking run in support of a Chelsea counter-attack, and also his gamble on a defensive mistake, which duly came, echoing the Joe Hart-Matija Nastasic mix-up when Fernando Torres pounced in the last minute against Manchester City on Sunday.
After dealing with a Cazorla corner, Mata and then Eto’o sprinted upfield. When Eto’o played a quick forward pass to Essien, Ramsey challenged, and the ball ballooned up, seeming to drop into an area patrolled by Carl Jenkinson and Wilshere. Any danger seemed minimal. It begged only a straightforward header back to Lukasz Fabianski, who had not followed the rash example of Hart and rushed out. Fabianski moved into a sensible position to receive the header. Wilshere indicated to Jenkinson what to do. This was routine stuff. But the Arsenal right-back headed the ball upwards, delaying its arrival towards Fabianski, allowing Azpili­cueta to nip and poke the ball in.
Mourinho’s celebrations at a second gifted goal in succession was more muted, more respectful to the opposing manager than his run in front of City’s Manuel Pellegrini. There had been all the usual talk of the old enmity between Mourinho and Wenger yet there has seemed a rapprochement in recent times.
An hour before kick-off, Mourinho was seen climbing off the bus, high-fiving Gunnersaurus, and then, shortly before kick-off, having chatted to Özil, his old Real Madrid player, Mourinho waited at the top of the tunnel to greet Wenger warmly.
The reception from the Chelsea fans was less gracious towards the hosts, reminding the locals that their former player Ashley Cole had won a European Cup with them and that it had been “eight years” since Arsenal won anything. Their volume rose after Azpilicueta’s goal midway through the opening half. “We are top of the league,’’ chorused the home fans.
They were not playing like it, bowing out of this competition with scarcely a fight. Bendtner, the main culprit, did deign to close down Azpilicueta at one point, presenting Nacho Monreal with a chance but he shot just wide. Chelsea’s work-rate was superior, their desire for the ball greater than Arsenal’s.
Ramsey worked hard, going close with a deflected shot, but Bendtner and Ryo Miyaichi did little to justify even temporary ownership of an Arsenal shirt. Bendtner, supposedly a striker, even refused the opportunity to have a strike at goal early in the second half, triggering howls of frustration.
Ramsey gamely tried to drag Arsenal back into the tie, and Özil arrived to replace Miyaichi, but Chelsea soon scored again. Mata’s class had already graced the game but this was truly special. Controlling the ball with his left, Mata then connected with his right, imparting such power that Fabianski had no chance.
Arsenal fans’ desire for the removal of Bendtner was soon granted. Giroud arrived and soon went close, giving Mark Schwarzer something to do. But Ramires twice almost scored while Ba worried Koscielny and Thomas Vermaelen late on. By then, many Arsenal fans were leaving while Chelsea’s were singing about Wembley. Wenger, surely, was thinking about the January transfer window.
 
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Mail:



Arsenal 0 Chelsea 2: Azpilicueta and Mata continue Mourinho's hoodoo over Wenger

By Neil Ashton



At the final whistle there was a touching moment when Mesut Ozil ran towards Jose Mourinho and handed him his jersey.

On Tuesday night, Chelsea’s manager had the shirts off Arsenal’s backs. There is nothing for Mourinho to be afraid of here, nothing to suggest the Gunners have his side’s staying power.

The ‘psychological influence’ that Arsene Wenger spoke of ahead of this Capital One Cup-tie was stripped away with a swing of Juan Mata’s right boot in the 66th minute.

Chelsea are through to the quarter-final of this competition and yet it feels like something so much bigger took place. Arsenal have lost to two proper teams under the lights at the Emirates inside a week. First Dortmund, now Chelsea. Not good enough.

Wenger will only breathe easily if the Barclays Premier League leaders recover to beat Liverpool in Saturday’s teatime kick-off.

They made a dog’s dinner of this, frustrating their fans by allowing Mourinho’s team to dictate the tempo and pace of the game in their own backyard.

Champions don’t allow that to happen. Wannabe champions do.

Chelsea kept Arsenal at arm’s length, easing their way through to the quarter-final with Cesar Azpilicueta’s first for the club and Mata’s beauty.

Wenger had never beaten Mourinho in eight attempts before last night. It will be agony for Arsenal to contemplate it, but the Frenchman must now add another.

Chelsea’s back-up keeper Mark Schwarzer barely had a save to make, an observer as blue shirts swarmed all over Arsenal.

They fell behind after a dreadful defensive mistake by Carl Jenkinson allowed Azpilicueta to nip in and beat Lukasz Fabianski with a cool finish.

It sent Chelsea’s travelling fans into raptures and they taunted Arsenal with one of their favourite songs: ‘Where’s your European Cup?’

The answer is nowhere, of course. After this they will not even be able to add the Capital One Cup. The agony goes on.

It sparked reminders of Mourinho, then at Real Madrid, demanding to know why Wenger was still in a job after failing to land ‘a single little trophy since 2005’.

This cup is fourth on Mourinho’s list of priorities, but he has a real affinity with a trophy he first won with Chelsea in 2005.

They are looking good, full of self-assurance and more than a hint of that familiar Chelsea swagger.

When Azpilicueta scored in the 25th minute, after Jenkinson’s terrible header, they looked capable of scoring whenever they fancied it. It was too easy.

Michael Essien and Samuel Eto’o engineered it, breaking at speed in the centre of the pitch when an Arsenal corner was cleared.

Aaron Ramsey challenged Essien and when the ball spun into the air it forced Jenkinson into a catastrophic attempt to head the ball back to Fabianski. It didn’t reach him.

Azpilicueta took his chance, steering his effort beyond the Arsenal keeper and rolling it inside Fabianski’s far post. He celebrated his first goal for Chelsea with a swan-dive in front of the home fans. Nothing went Arsenal’s way.

Nicklas Bendtner’s touch let him down, making life too easy for Essien and John Mikel Obi to sweep up in front of the Chelsea back four.

He was booed off when he was substituted, but he alone is not to blame for this performance.

Santi Cazorla’s passes were a fraction too long and Tomas Rosicky was having the same problem when he was in possession. They needed precision.

That was Arsenal’s trouble every time they played the final ball. It was nearly there, but nearly is not good enough against a team with Chelsea’s pedigree.

The fact that it’s the fourth round of the League Cup is irrelevant. There is never any let-up against Chelsea. Against Mourinho. Against their fans, who were baiting Arsenal’s from the stands.

The game had its moments of genuine quality. Mata’s elegant backheel 10 minutes into the first half made fools of Cazorla and Ramsey.



Cazorla exacted revenge on Chelsea’s creator, twisting like an eel and scurrying away with the ball when Arsenal were in trouble on the edge of their own area.

But this was not the performance of potential champions. Far from it.

The moment Chelsea sensed danger in the second half, they moved into a different gear and accelerated out of sight.

They scored again when Ryan Bertrand’s throw-in was flicked on by Eto’o and into the path of the onrushing Mata.



It was not a simple finish, but he made it look easy. He took a touch with his left foot and hammered a swerving shot beyond Fabianski with his right. It was a peach.

Wenger had sent for Mesut Ozil, who worked with Mourinho during his spell at Real Madrid, from the bench to bring them back into it.

There was not nearly enough time. Ramsey ran his legs off. He was deep in the red zone when Arsenal went down to 10 men against Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park on Saturday. Wenger called in a favour last night, starting him in the centre of midfield in an attempt to muzzle Essien and Mikel.

He looked almost out of juice.

Even Ozil, for all his obvious skill and craft, couldn’t find a way to prevent Chelsea powering on.

After this, you can put your shirt on Mourinho’s team.



Arsenal: Fabianski 6, Jenkinson 5, Monreal 6, Ramsey 7, Koscielny 6, Vermaelen 6, Miyaichi 6 (Ozil 63, 6), Wilshere 6, Bendtner 4 (Giroud 67, 6), Rosicky 6, Cazorla 6



Subs not used: Sagna, Viviano, Park, Hayden, Yennaris



Chelsea: Schwarzer 6, Azpilicueta 6, Bertrand 6, Mikel 6, Cahill 6, David Luiz 6, De Bruyne 6 (Ramires 69), Essien 7, Eto'o 6 (Ba 81), Mata 8 (Kalas 90), Willian 6



Subs not used: Ivanovic, Torres, Hazard, Blackman

Booked: Mikel, Essien



Goals: Azpilicueta 25, Mata 66



Referee: Phil Dowd

Attendance: 59,455



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Mirror:



Arsenal 0-2 Chelsea: Jose Mourinho beats Arsene Wenger again to reach Capital One Cup quarters



Azpilicueta and Mata goals ensure Gunners boss still hasn't beaten the Special One - and extend his wait for a trophy



By Martin Lipton



The long wait goes on for Arsene Wenger.

Now nine years without a win over Jose Mourinho. Nine games too.

And you start to wonder if he will ever get one over his nemesis.

Here, as the Emirates began to empty from the moment Juan Mata’s right foot sealed a victory that got easier the longer the game went on, that elusive first win over the Portuguese looked further away than ever.

Yes, Mourinho was able to make 10 changes and still field a side that cost nearly £140million to put together, with another £120m-worth on the bench.

But it was Wenger who chose to leave Mesut Ozil and Olivier Giroud on the sidelines for more than an hour, doing nothing as the gulf in class was exposed.

Arsenal remain top of the Premier League.

Wenger, who insisted he had “no regrets”, cares little about this competition - although he had reached the last eight for 10 straight seasons.

Yet on a night that saw the 9,000 travelling fans revel in their mastery, and that of the Special One, the Gunners’ campaign to date was put in perspective.

Suddenly it is back to back home defeats, and their next three games are against Liverpool, Dortmund and Manchester United.

Real tests, with no Mathieu Flamini, and no back-up for Giroud.

And with the knowledge that, from first kick to last, as Ramires and David Luiz whistled over the bar, they were second best.

What will have made it worse, even if the killer blow was struck by Mata - and agent of their destruction before but now playing for a role in Mourinho’s thinking - was that the vital wound was so entirely self-inflicted.

In the past, of course, it was Didier Drogba who took advantage of their defensive deficiencies.

Cesar Azpilicueta is a more unlikely assassin,with just one previous goal in his career, during his spell at Marseilles.

But when Carl Jenkinson suffered his own personal Matija Nastasic moment, panicking as he wondered whether he or Jack Wilshere would deal with a ball that looped into the air and selling Lukasz Fabianski horribly short, the Spaniard nipped in to poke home.

It was the sort of goal, a lightning counter-attack from an opposition corner, that Arsenal scored in their Thierry Henry-inspired pomp, before Mourinho arrived to upset the established order.

Thereafter, while Nacho Monreal was a foot wide almost straightaway and Aaron Ramsey had two close efforts at the start of the second half, Arsenal never looked like breaking through, Mata relishing in his preferred No 10 role, pulling the strings, making his point.

The home fans were turning on Nicklas Bendtner, whose mood will not have been helped by Wenger’s response to a question about the Dane: “I will not go into an individual assessment of players in a press conference. I keep that between myself and the players.”

But just two minutes after Ozil’s arrival, Arsenal’s Capital One Cup goose was cooked.

Samuel Eto’o, always available, hooked back, Willian flicked on and after one touch with his left foot, Mata smashed into the top corner with his right.

Giroud, belatedly on for Bendtner, did force the lone save out of Mark Schwarzer.

Chelsea, though, finished far stronger, only Laurent Koscielny’s goalline clearance denying substitute Ramires after he scampered past Thomas Vermaelen, before the Brazilian and his compatriot Luiz went close in added time.

At the close, Wenger and Mourinho shook, with a smile, although the Frenchman chose not to declare their feud over.

It felt like game, set and match to the Portuguese.



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Express:



Arsenal 0 - Chelsea 2: Jose Mourinho's jinx is too hot for Arsene Wenger



JOSE MOURINHO'S stranglehold over Arsene Wenger remains as firm as ever after his Chelsea team dumped Arsenal out of the Capital One Cup at the Emirates last night.



By: Simon Yeend



The Chelsea boss has faced his Arsenal nemesis nine times and never lost, this victory resuming the domination he enjoyed during his first spell at Stamford Bridge.

Cesar Azpilicueta picked a perfect night for Mourinho to score his first goal for the club and man-of-the-match Juan Mata sealed it with a wonderful strike as Chelsea’s season gathers momentum.

Mourinho first arrived at Chelsea in 2004 and won this trophy in his first season, the need to get silverware – any silverware – paramount. Second time around, the urgency is not so great but Mourinho knows an opportunity when he sees one.

As well as a potential trophy, it also offered Mourinho a chance to put Arsenal’s great start to the season in check.

Wenger’s side were outplayed in the first half and Chelsea had plenty in reserve as Arsenal pressed for an equaliser and then mugged them on the break with Mata’s arrow.

It is the first time in 10 seasons that Arsenal have not reached the quarter-finals, but Wenger has never won the League Cup and the eight-year wait for a trophy gets more of a burden with each exit.

Chelsea will fancy their chances after making 10 changes for this game and stifling Arsenal to win comfortably.

Mourinho had threatened to field Chelsea’s under-21 development side as a protest at being made to play 48 hours after the victory over Manchester City. That was bluster but he did leave out all but one of the team that started against City, with only Gary Cahill starting.

Chelsea will fancy their chances after making 10 changes for this game and stifling Arsenal to win comfortably

Wenger revealed his own ambition for this match with a robust midfield selection that included Aaron Ramsey, Jack Wilshere and Santi Cazorla – with Mesut Ozil in reserve on the bench – as well as retaining Laurent Koscielny to partner Thomas Vermaelen in central defence.

But the lack of depth at Wenger’s disposal in a key area was highlighted by Nicklas Bendtner starting up front to give Olivier Giroud’s batteries a much-needed recharge.

Ryo Miyaichi was also given a rare start on the wing.

Mourinho, dressed in the tracksuit-trainer combo favoured by urban youth across the land, waited for a minute or so at the tunnel before kick-off for Wenger to emerge and then greeted him with a warm smile and a handshake. Wenger, in sharp suit, returned the smile. Feud very much over.

It was up to the teams to renew hostilities. Two diminutive Spaniards shone in the early stages – Mata pulling the strings for Chelsea, Cazorla full of tricks for Arsenal, including a cheeky nutmeg on Michael Essien.Yet it was another Spaniard who proved the unlikely safe-cracker in the 25th minute. Chelsea broke quickly from an Arsenal corner with Eto’o feeding Essien and, although Ramsey blocked the through-pass, the ball spun towards the Arsenal area.

Wilshere and Carl Jenkinson looked to have it covered, only for the full-back to misjudge his header back to goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski. Azpilicueta raced on to it and volleyed the ball into the corner of the net.

It was a near carbon copy of the goal that gave Chelsea victory over Manchester City on Sunday and, alarmingly for Arsenal, another example of how vulnerable they leave themselves to counter-attacks from their own corners.



Nacho Monreal kept the Spanish theme going, almost dragging Arsenal level within minutes, intercepting a pass from Azpilicueta, bursting into the area and shooting just inches wide of the far post.

Arsenal were subdued, Wilshere misfiring, the need for reinforcements from the bench obvious.

It was left to Ramsey to lead the Arsenal charge, having one shot blocked and sending another just wide.

On came Ozil to a huge cheer in the 63rd minute. Three minutes later it was game over as Mata pounced on a header from Willian and sent an unstoppable shot into the top corner.

On came Giroud and immediately brought a save from Mark Schwarzer with a smart turn and shot. It was the only time the 41-year-old Schwarzer had to make a save, and that tells its own story.



ARSENAL (4-2-3-1): Fabianski; Jenkinson, Vermaelen, Koscielny, Monreal; Wilshere, Ramsey (Park 81); Miyaichi (Ozil 63), Rosicky, Cazorla; Bendtner (Giroud 67).

CHELSEA (4-2-3-1): Schwarzer; Azpilicueta, Cahill, Luiz, Bertrand; Essien, Mikel; De Bruyne (Ramires 69), Mata (Kalas 90), Willian; Eto’o (Ba 81). Booked: Mikel, Essien. Goals: Azpilicueta 25, Mata 66.

Referee: P Dowd (Staffordshire).



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Star:



Arsenal 0 - Chelsea 2: Carl Jenkinson gifts it to the Blues

IT was Groundhog Day for Chelsea last night, this time with Arsenal’s Carl Jenkinson the culprit.



By David Woods



“This was the Mourinho motivational magic working again!”

Two days after a defensive mix-up gifted Fernando Torres the 90th-minute winner against Manchester City, something ­similar happened at the Emirates.

A Torres goal in the league is something of a collector’s item. Sunday’s was only his second this year.

But one from another Spaniard, Cesar Azpilicueta, is even rarer. Before last night he had only scored once in 213 games, for Marseille in May 2012.

Still, the right-back decided to go for it in the 25th minute as Chelsea broke at speed from an Arsenal corner.

Samuel Eto’o passed to Michael Essien, who continued bursting forward. Aaron Ramsey challenged and the ball spun up and high towards the home goal as ­Jenkinson and Jack Wilshere ran back.

There seemed uncertainty between the pair but England right-back Jenkinson opted to head towards keeper Lukasz ­Fabianski, just as Matija Nastasic had with Joe Hart at Stamford Bridge.

But unlike Hart, Fabianski did not dash out of his box and Azpilicueta gambled, nipping in to volley just inside the keeper’s left post.

Not too many punters would have had the 24-year-old down for first scorer and on this occasion Jose Mourinho’s celebrations were muted, unlike his dash across the City bench to get into the crowd on Sunday.

He had singled out Azpilicueta for praise – something he rarely does – in his programme notes, for coming in to play left-back against Schalke in the Champions League.

Maybe this was the Mourinho motivational magic working again!

Before last night, Mourinho had some sort of hex over Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger, although the pair shook hands in a warm manner before kick-off.

In his first spell at Chelsea, the Portuguese coach did not lose any of their eight encounters, winning four and drawing four.

Their one meeting before in this compet-ition came in the final of the Carling Cup in 2007, which the Blues won 2-1.

Both bosses sent out strong teams for this fourth-round tie, Chelsea’s marginally the more impressive. For the Gunners it was a big night for striker Nicklas Bendtner.

But the pony-tailed Dane, who surprised just about everyone by not leaving the club in the transfer window, started poorly, ­giving the ball away on two of the first three occasions he touched it.

AZ GOOD AS GOLD: Azpilicueta storms toward the Arsenal goal [GETTY]

Kevin De Bruyne was one Chelsea player with his own point to prove after not impressing Mourinho in his last game, the Capital One Cup win at Swindon. He managed a shot on target early on but it was never going to trouble Fabianski.

After the Chelsea goal, Azpilcueta almost undid all his good work, giving the ball to Nacho Monreal as he tried to find De Bruyne. The Spanish left-back was not far off sneaking his low shot inside the far post.

Mourinho seemed to recognise the importance of winning a trophy straight away for Chelsea when he first arrived in 2004, conquering the League Cup.

Since then he has landed 13 other ­trophies, while Wenger has just the 2005 FA Cup to show in the same period.

The Blues started after the break brighter, with Eto’s sending a shot a couple of feet wide in the 50th minute.

Santi Cazorla was a bit wider with his effort soon after but it was not struck with too much conviction.

A Ramsey effort looked more dangerous, but deflected for a corner off David Luiz.

Bendter tried to tee up Ramsey when a more confident striker might have turned to try and shoot, considering he was in the box with some room behind him.

Ramsey flashed a shot narrowly wide in the 64th minute and seconds later Wenger opted to send on £42.5m Mesut Ozil for Ryo Miyaichi, with Mourinho knowing well the qualities of the German playmaker from their time together at Real Madrid.

But it was Chelsea’s creative genius, Juan Mata, who struck even before Ozil had had his first sprint.

Ryan Bertrand’s 66th-minute throw-in was flicked on by Eto’o, with Willian then getting his head to the ball to find Mata.

He took a deft touch with his left and then struck a sublime angled shot with the outside of his right boot into the far corner to settle this Capital One Cup ­encounter.





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Juan Mata ensures that the long wait goes on for Arsene Wenger

The Times.  Rory Smith

Arsenal 0 Chelsea 2

And the wait goes on. Arsène Wenger has gone nine games and nine years now without a win against José ­Mourinho. That is bad enough, but there is another wait, one that is a little less long-lasting but of rather more concern. It is eight years and counting since Arsenal won a trophy.
This was their first chance of the ­season, possibly their best chance, to end that drought. And now it has gone.
It went with a whimper, too, goals from César Azpilicueta and Juan Mata sending Chelsea to the quarter-finals of the Capital One Cup and proving Wenger’s second-string were no match for Mourinho’s. That will soften the blow, of course: this was not Arsenal’s first-choice side, and it was not Arsenal’s first-choice competition. But that does not mean defeat did not matter.
The League Cup may often be ­written off as an afterthought, the ­silverware of the desperate man. That this was battle done ­between reserve squadrons goes some way to augmenting that view.
There are times, though, when this competition’s insignificance provides a rather useful prism through which to glimpse some important truths.
One, of course, is that Arsenal’s ­resources are simply not as deep as Chelsea’s. A quick glance at the team-sheets proved that: Mourinho made ten changes, but could still name a side full of top-class internationals. Some of them — Michael Essien, Samuel Eto’o, Mark Schwarzer — may be a little over-ripe, but their quality, even if it is ­dwindling, endures.
Perhaps the best example is Eto’o. Where Mourinho could call on a serial champion, a two-time Champions League winner, as his second-choice forward, Wenger had Nicklas Bendtner, whose most notable ­contribution to football’s rich and ­varied annals is that he was the first player to use his underpants as an ­impromptu advertising hoarding.
That gulf was clear from the start. “José addressed the players before the game and asked to be given selection problems for the weekend,” the ­Portuguese’s assistant, Steve Holland, said afterwards. “He didn’t want a flat performance. He wants headaches and everyone doing well when they get the chance to play. The players responded to that.”
Chelsea, backed by 9,000 travelling fans, took control from the off. There was no spite to the game, no edge — Mourinho and Wenger, the old ­enemies, even embraced before kick-off — but maybe that, too, was telling.
Mourinho saves his pantomime ­villain act for those he deems threats. Wenger, on this showing, does not ­warrant that status just yet.
It was all too easy for Chelsea. Essien prowled through the midfield, ­occasionally bursting forward as he did at his peak. He is a little slower, a little more cumbersome, now, but the power is still there, even if it takes a little longer to reach second gear. Mata and Willian flickered and flitted, Eto’o ­darted and probed.
The visiting side deserved their lead, even if it did come with a healthy dose of good fortune, Aaron Ramsey tackling Essien just inside his own half, the ball ballooning back towards Lukasz Fabianski’s goal. Carl Jenkinson tried to head it back to his goalkeeper, but his touch was too soft. Azpilicueta, the ­farthest man forward, nipped in and slipped home.
“I am not sure I am allowed to make that run,” he said, rather sheepishly. That was his first goal for the club; if he can be that effective, he will be allowed to do whatever he likes.
There was a parallel, as Holland ­noted, with the goal that helped ­Chelsea to beat Manchester City just two days ago. “It was almost identical to the goal Fernando [Torres] scored,” said the Chelsea first-team coach.
“A player chasing a lost cause, hoping to create some doubt and exploit it. It goes to show that willingness, that ­competitive attitude you look for in your players.”
The gods, it would seem, are smiling on Mourinho, right at the moment while they appear to have deserted Wenger.
Arsenal toiled in vain to get back into the game, but the ease with which ­Chelsea held the home team off — even when Mesut Özil and then Olivier ­Giroud entered the fray — does not bode well as Wenger’s side enter a ­crucial phase of their season.
The Frenchman had hoped to see his side use this game to prove they are genuine contenders, the real deal, to end that long wait for a trophy; if ­anything, it served as a reminder that there is still some way to go.
There has been a suspicion ­throughout this season — articulated on a number of occasions by Mourinho — that Arsenal’s position at the summit of the Barclays Premier League table owes as much to a kindly fixture list as it does to the quality of their squad; Wenger’s team did little to disabuse him of that notion here.
They created just a handful of ­chances, none of them desperately clear cut. Aaron Ramsey fizzed wide just after the break; Özil’s introduction lifted the fans, lifted the team, but it proved illusory. No sooner had the ­German appeared than Mata had ­settled things, driving home from the edge of the box, his shot unerring ­despite being hit with his weaker foot.
Arsenal did not have an answer. Not on the pitch, where Giroud drew one solitary save from Schwarzer and ­Wilshere fired over, and not in the stands, where Chelsea’s fans crowed in delight. “Nine years, and you’ve won,” they sang, followed by words which were designed to convey an absence of trophies.
Listening to that was bad enough; it might have got worse. Laurent ­Koscielny cleared off the line to deny Ramires, Demba Ba and David Luiz both sent efforts over as the game ­petered out. Mourinho wandered onto the pitch after the game, eager to collect Özil’s shirt as a keepsake. He has his trophy. Arsenal will have to wait for theirs.




 


Monday, October 28, 2013

Man City 2-1



Independent:
Chelsea 2 Manchester City 1
Fernando Torres scores late winner to secure Blues triumph

Dramatic 90th-minute effort concludes thrilling encounter at Stamford Bridge

By SAM WALLACE

Bad Torres v Good Torres: the battle for the soul of Britain’s most expensive-ever footballer continues. For today at least, you can chalk it up as a victory for Good Torres, but it was not as if we did not see a glimpse of the dark side too.

Fernando Torres’ 90th minute winner was the dramatic conclusion to a game that was drifting to a draw and it meant that he left the pitch to the sound of his own name being chanted over and again, not always the way during his time at the club. For periods of this game he was superb, not least when he made Chelsea’s first goal for Andre Schurrle and then when he prodded in the winner after Joe Hart and Matija Nastasic’s miscommunication in defence.
But there can be no ignoring it, that moment in the 29th minute which precipitated a familiar sense of dread around Stamford Bridge. The miss. The moment when Bad Torres took over and conspired to volley a perfectly decent chance over the bar from eight yards out. That is how it goes with Torres, the light and the dark, the certainty and the indecision. The Torres that embarks on those barnstorming runs and then the blank-eyed, just-lashed-it-over-the-bar, Torres.
For Jose Mourinho, this was a major result, one of those that, over the course of the season, might just prove decisive. His team are still second, two points behind Arsenal, but they have their first major scalp of the season against one of the title contenders. That was why Mourinho celebrated by climbing into the supporters behind the benches in search of his son Jose junior, he said later, who has been allocated a season ticket behind the away dug-out.
Manuel Pellegrini did not take kindly to that, although given his team’s three away defeats already this season, you might argue that he has bigger things to worry about. Having played well in the second half, and with a useful draw in the bag, City threw it all away in the final minute with a goal very similar to the winner scored against them by Andreas Weimann in the defeat to Aston Villa last month.
Willian, a substitute, played a long ball over the top, Hart ran out to get to the ball and, just as he thought he had reached it, Nastasic headed it past him. Torres still had some work to do to beat Martin Demichelis to clip the ball in, but by then the blame was already being dished out.
This being Hart, he will cop it more than any other and Pellegrini’s refusal even to discuss his goalkeeper or the incident is probably not a good sign for the Englishman. Yes, Hart came out quickly and left his area but Nastasic also showed a lack of awareness about the man behind him. Hart has made some bad mistakes in the recent past, but this was not the worst of them, however much it might have cost City.
Afterwards, Pellegrini would concede only that he was tired of his team conceding “stupid points” and expressed himself content with all aspects of his team’s performance apart from their defending. “Keeper’s, f****** keeper’s,” Hart said as he trudged back to get the ball out the net, but there is no knowing what he said in those critical moments when he came out to try to claim Willian’s ball over the top.
It leaves City in seventh place with as many defeats in the league – three – as their Mancunian neighbours, United, and only one place better off. Nevertheless, City look a much more coherent threat in attack than United and much will hinge on whether Pellegrini meant “arrange” or “re-arrange” when it came to his plans for his defence.
He gave a debut to Demichelis at the heart of City’s defence, once again prompting the question what it is that Joleon Lescott has to do to get a game these days. He was not even on the bench. As an introduction to life in the Premier League, they come no rougher than playing against Torres in this form.
Not until the half hour did it really come alive when Torres incredibly missed from Ramires’ cross from the right which he chested down and then conspired to volley over the bar from about eight yards out with only Hart to beat. The two goals against Schalke last week mask the fact that today’s winner was only his second league goal of the year. He is never going back to be the Torres of 2007-2009 again, the question is, what can he salvage?
Within minutes of the miss he was magnificent, dominating Gael Clichy with a powerful run down the right flank that took him past the City left-back easily and into a position by the goal-line where he could pick out Schurrle for a finish just yards from the line. Feeling the love from the Chelsea support he left Demichelis trailing in his wake on 37 minutes in a run down the opposite channel, the left, and hit a shot across Hart that struck the join of post and bar.
Chelsea conceded four minutes after the break, a superb finish from Sergio Aguero who ran down the left, picked up Samir Nasri’s ball and blasted it past Petr Cech at his near post. He hit it hard enough that the Chelsea goalkeeper never adjusted in time.
After that, City imposed themselves more on the game. Javi Garcia, who operated in front of the City back four, had a free header from a David Silva free-kick from the left which he might have done better with. After the hour, Cech was obliged to save from Aguero with his feet when the striker found space again on the left side to get a shot away.
Mourinho ended the game with Torres and Samuel Eto’o on the pitch, the latter his third substitution. The Chelsea manager had become steadily more aggrieved with Howard Webb’s decisions, including the referee’s refusal to give a penalty for what looked a trip by Pablo Zabaleta on Eden Hazard.
Neither team wanted to lose the game, Mourinho claimed later. While Ramires was Chelsea’s most exceptional all-round performer, it was Torres’ instincts that took him into the right places to win the game. Euphoria engulfed Chelsea’s No 9, although recent history tells us that there is no telling what he will produce next.

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Cech 6; Ivanovic 6, Cahill 6, Terry 7, Cole 6; Ramires 8, Lampard 6 (Mikel 6, 66); Hazard 6 (Eto’o, 84), Oscar 5, Schurrle 6 (Willian, 66); Torres 8.
Substitutes not used: Schwarzer (gk), Luiz, Mata, Azpilicueta.

Manchester City (4-1-4-1): Hart 5; Zabaleta 5, Demichelis 5, Nastasic 5, Clichy 5; Garcia 6 (Kolarov, 80); Nasri 7 (Navas, 70), Y Toure 6, Fernandinho 6, Silva 7; Aguero 7 (Negredo, 86).
Substitutes not used: Pantilimon (gk), Richards, Milner, Dzeko.
Booked Chelsea Lampard, Ramires Manchester City Zabaleta, Nastasic, Garcia

Referee: H Webb (South Yorkshire)
Man of the match: Ramires
Attendance: 41, 865
Rating: 7

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

Guardian:
Chelsea's Fernando Torres exploits late error to sink Manchester City
Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge

It was around six seconds from time here, with the fourth official preparing to hoist his board on the touchline, when ­Fernando Torres buried Manchester City's prospects and, in the process, confirmed his personal renaissance. Pinball in midfield had culminated in Willian's punt over a backtracking Matija Nastasic, the centre-half panicking as he stretched to nod back to Joe Hart.
The Serb might just have caught sight of his goalkeeper's close proximity as he made contact on the edge of the area, then watched the ball loop over his team-mate whose sprint, mystifyingly, ended up carrying him well outside his penalty area. There was Torres, tearing beyond the visitors' confused last line of defence and away from a leggy Martin Demichelis, to convert into the gaping net.
City players crumpled to the floor, Nastasic burying his face in the turf while Hart retrieved the ball from the net and could be seen screaming "keeper's, fucking keeper's" in livid frustration. The pair were culpable but the Englishman had put himself in no position to collect, intercept or divert. He wore the look of a guilty man.
Torres's name was chanted all around, the chorus persisting as José Mourinho extricated himself from the crowd behind the visitors' dug-out where he had apparently dived – much to Manuel Pellegrini's disgust – to celebrate with his son, José Jr. This was the second week running the Portuguese has ended up in the crowd ­following last week's dismissal against Cardiff City, but this time he was not the centre of attention. That was reserved for Torres alone.
This performance summed up the Spaniard's Chelsea career, veering as it did from the ridiculous to the sublime, though it was the manner in which he recovered from the former to serve up the latter that suggested that his inner strength has been restored. The 29-year-old had been guilty of a dreadful miss on the half-hour, spooning over Ramires's fine pass when free and alone near the penalty spot. In the recent past a miss so glaring might have left him cowed, his display shrivelling thereafter. Here it served to galvanise.
Within minutes he had embarrassed Gaël Clichy with his pace across the grass, the full-back left gasping in his vapour trail, before squaring for André Schürrle to tap in a first Chelsea goal. Then there was the shot curled sumptuously on to the angle of post and bar as half-time approached that left Mourinho slumped over the wall in his dug-out, aghast that one of his players could be so bereft of fortune. This, after all, was a striker who had scored only once in the league – on last season's final day – since December. Those manic celebrations at the end greeted the breaking of a drought.
"It was a fantastic performance and, even better, because it came after an easy goal was missed," said Mourinho. "When a striker misses an easy chance, he can be affected for the rest of the game. But it was like that was the moment he decided he would be man of the match. The fans were amazing and supported him, saw how hard he worked for the team and saw his heart."
Torres has been prolific in Europe this year, albeit largely in the Europa League, but it should be noted that his best ­performances under Mourinho have now come against sides of better quality: Bayern Munich in the Uefa SuperCup, ­Tottenham Hotspur in the league, Schalke in the Champions League in midweek and now City.
The trend has been upwards, certainly since half-time at White Hart Lane last month, even if that particular afternoon had ended with his dismissal and that unpunished but catty scratch at Jan ­Vertonghen. Rafael Benítez could not coax displays this menacing from his ­compatriot during last season's interim spell in charge. "It would be easy for me to say that we did this or that but we did nothing," added Mourinho. "We believe our ­methodology improves players' sharpness and speed in the first 15-20 metres. We work high intensity for short periods and that helps them to become sharp. But he's responsible. I don't know if he was the same last year but since I arrived he's worked very, very hard every day."
This was his and Chelsea's reward, the dramatic nature of the victory ensuring City departed bruised as well as beaten. They must have thought they had wrested control of this contest having started the second half with such urgency, the excellent Sergio Agüero – "a powerful tank," according to Mourinho – darting behind Gary Cahill to collect Samir Nasri's pass and thump a glorious finish high beyond Petr Cech at his near post. City had never previously lost a Premier League game when their thrilling Argentinian had scored and, had David Silva not been guilty of over-elaborating and Javi García mustered a more convincing header from the Spaniard's free-kick delivery, that record might have been maintained.
As it was, they had seemed content enough with a point, particularly given recent failings at Cardiff and Aston Villa, only for Hart's rush of blood and Nastasic's header to provide a sting in the tail. The lack of communication between goalkeeper and centre-half was damning, the scrutiny fixing inevitably back on the England keeper whose untouchable status for club and country now looks fragile. ­Pellegrini, riled by Mourinho's dash across his box, hardly offered a vote of confidence in his later mumbled assessment. It all seemed as damaging to City as it was rejuvenating for Torres.

Man of the match Fernando Torres (Chelsea)

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Telegraph:

Chelsea 2 Manchester City 1
By Henry Winter, at Stamford Bridge

On a day when Joe Hart and Jose Mourinho both ended up out of their areas, Fernando Torres ended up back in a place he looked to have left long ago.
Playing with strength and speed, preying on opponents’ mistakes, Torres evoked memories of his predatory Liverpool days with an accomplished performance here.
Still only 29, with three or four good years ahead of him, Torres can be a vital force for Chelsea if he repeats such displays as this.
There was a bad miss but otherwise so much to admire in the powerful way he created André Schürrle’s goal, in the way he cut in from the left to hit the post, and how he kept hunting chances and his persistence was rewarded with the injury-time winner to erase the memory of Sergio Agüero’s majestic equaliser.
It was reward for all the work Torres has put in during training, doing what Mourinho calls the “high intensity for short periods” that helps the players become even sharper.
It was Torres’s first Premier League goal of the season and only his second goal in 24 league games in 2013. Chelsea will hope this is the start of a renaissance.
Before kick-off, the DJ had played The Story of the Blues and there were so many storylines. As Torres was to discover and exploit, there was another worrying entry in Hart’s blotted copybook.
When Willian lifted a long ball forward, the 20-year-old Matija Nastasic could have thumped the ball clear but decided to head it back to his goalkeeper. Hart had already rushed out, leaving his box, as Nastasic’s header flew over him.
Marooned outside his area, Hart looked back in despair on as Nastasic lay on the ground, Martin Demichelis slid in but was too late to stop Torres turning the ball in. As he retrieved the ball from the net, Hart shouted “keeper’s, f------ keeper’s” in frustration. Judging by the filthy mood of Manuel Pellegrini, usually so urbane, the debriefing at Carrington this week will not be pleasant.
Vincent Kompany cannot return from injury soon enough to bring some more experience and leadership to Manchester City’s defence.
Hart has been caught out of his area before, most recently allowing Andreas Weimann to score Aston Villa’s winner in September. There was also an embarrassing mix-up with Kolo Touré against Blackburn Rovers in 2010. Hart came flying out to meet Morten Gamst Pedersen’s hooked ball, misjudged it and Nikola Kalinic scored.
This really was a story of people straying out of their area. As Torres’s goal went in, Mourinho celebrated wildly, running in front of Pellegrini and City’s shocked coaching staff to reach his son, whose season ticket is behind the away area.
As Mourinho embraced his son, one fan tried to join in the hug and take a picture simultaneously, a reflection of the modern trend that an event is only real if recorded.
There was the latest episode of “handshakegate”, a very English drama seemingly as long-running as The Mousetrap. Pellegrini disappeared down the tunnel with the final whistle still lingering in the air, ignoring Mourinho.
Whatever the understandable depths of the Chilean’s frustration over the result, and annoyance of Mourinho’s celebration, Pellegrini’s piqued reaction was disappointing. He is better than that.
There was the sight of the Premier League table, showing Chelsea rising to second because they never gave up, and highlighting the openness of the race.
Arsenal lead the way, two points clear of Chelsea. Liverpool lie third and the goalscoring double act of Luis Suárez and Daniel Sturridge will ensure they remain involved in the hunt.
Spurs keep defending tightly and winning narrowly. Southampton may not possess the squad depth to stay so prominent but their exuberant attacking and intense pressing has been a feature of the season so far. Everton, too, have goals and adventure.
The two Manchester clubs occupy the next positions, City in seventh and United in eighth, but they will surely climb up. Their early-season labours, particularly focused on City’s defending and United’s issues in midfield, have provided some of the storylines of the season.
There were so many plot-lines to this story of the Blues but the main one was the Torres show. Others had claims to positive headlines, particularly Ramires, Agüero and David Silva, but this was Torres back approaching his peak.
It took half an hour for the Spaniard to get going. Space was at a premium.
Javi García and Fernandinho were anchoring for City, with a subdued Yaya Touré pushed on in the hole behind Agüero.
City had Demichelis making his debut at centre-half alongside Nastasic. Chelsea immediately looked for any vulnerability in the heart of the City defence.
Barring an early Torres header, City were actually creating the better chances for half-an-hour. Samir Nasri shot wide. Agüero’s effort was blocked by Gary Cahill.
Another attempt by the Argentine was saved by Petr Cech. Then came the Torres show, the ridiculous miss and then a sublime passage of play when he absolutely terrorised City’s defence.
The miss before the assist was staggering. Ramires released Torres, who chested the ball down and then fired it way over Hart’s crossbar. Mourinho leaned back in his seat, his eyes ablaze with frustration at Torres’s profligacy.
Torres could have hidden but he responded superbly. He ran again into the box, looking to make amends. He then crumpled under a foul from Nastasic but got up and carried on.Then, collecting possession from Schürrle, Torres deceived Gaël Clichy, looking inside, wrong-footing the left-back, and then accelerating past him. He crossed low and hard, picking out the unmarked Schürrle, who enjoyed the easiest of tap-ins.
Torres was now invigorated, cutting in from the left, and sending a curling strike against the post.
The Matthew Harding Upper and Lower were now chanting Torres’s name, but were seething with annoyance four minutes after the restart when Chelsea’s defence was exposed by the brilliance of Agüero.
Silva and then Nasri shaped the move to City’s equaliser, the Frenchman sweeping the ball down the inside-left channel. Agüero had darted between John Terry and Cahill, who responded too slowly to the forward’s movement. Cech was then caught out by Agüero’s ferocious left-footed strike.
The Torres show resumed. He had a header held by Hart and was then cynically baulked by García. Hart went Awol, Torres pounced, and Mourinho went walkabout.

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Mail:

Chelsea 2 Man City 1: Nightmare for City as Nastasic and Hart gift Torres late winner after Aguero's stunner cancelled out Schurrle opener at the Bridge

By NEIL ASHTON

Chelsea had stunned City in the final minute of this exhilarating match, and Mourinho was where he likes to be — centre stage.
On the touchline his assistant Rui Faria sprinted on to the pitch with clenched fists, sank to his knees and looked up to the heavens.
The Chelsea ranks were pumped full of energy but on the pitch bodies were everywhere as the knees buckled on City’s players.
They collapsed on the turf as if they had just blown their chances of winning the Barclays Premier League. Perhaps they have.
There was certainly no talking to Manuel Pellegrini on Sunday night when he appeared, very briefly, to analyse City’s third defeat on the road. This one hurts the most and has left them six points off Arsenal at the top.
‘We are losing stupid points,’ was City boss Pellegrini at his most coherent during a torturous five-minute assessment of his side’s performance.
He was going through the motions but that’s what happens when your title rivals strike for glory in the last minute and the opposition manager’s name happens to be Mourinho. There is disbelief. And there was disrespect.
Pellegrini also confirmed he had refused to shake Mourinho’s hand at the final whistle.
Whatever the semantics, it’s a long-standing custom in English football to afford the opposition manager the courtesy at the final whistle. City’s coach will have to learn the way things are done here.
Once the Chelsea excitement had died down — and the stadium announcer confirmed that Torres had scored his first goal in the league this season — there was only one question: Joe Hart, what were you doing?
His face was contorted when Torres sprinted beyond him in the final seconds but he has only himself to blame for this inexplicable error.
Hart operates at the highest level and there is no hiding place for a keeper once considered good enough to be spoken of in the same breath as Manuel Neuer, Gianluigi Buffon and Petr Cech. Not any more.
The late, great Brian Clough always claimed that a good goalkeeper could save a team between 10 and 15 points a season. Hart is costing City as many.
Hart was in familiar territory. Only last month he came racing out of his penalty area to intercept Andreas Weimann at Villa Park.
Weimann shimmied past him in the 75th minute to win the game for Aston Villa, adding to a collection of howlers on the Hart showreel. City’s keeper is a liability right now.
His deputy, Costel Pantilimon, is expected to replace him for the Capital One Cup tie against Newcastle on Wednesday at St James’ Park. From there, it has to be the Romanian’s jersey to lose.
This was a brilliant match. It was full of magical moments from both teams as they tested and stretched each other to the limit at Stamford Bridge.
David Silva’s 360-degree spin that took him past two Chelsea midfielders was a blur of skill and speed, a real jaw-dropping moment.
Then there was the cheek of Chelsea full-back Branislav Ivanovic when he nutmegged Silva as he set up yet another attack down the right flank.
Chelsea were bombing on all afternoon down that wing, throwing numbers forward to test the resilience and confidence of City’s left-back Gael Clichy. They had his measure.
Torres was sensational, galloping past him to set up Chelsea’s first-half opener by Andre Schurrle.

STAMFORD BRIDGE MATCH ZONE by Laurie Whitwell
Stats not the whole story
Manchester City bettered Chelsea in all key statistics other than the most vital . . . goals.
Manuel Pellegrini’s visitors enjoyed 54.4 per cent of possession in the game, and 53.8 per cent of the play came in Chelsea’s half.
And with Spanish midfielder David Silva in fine form City also made 478 passes compared to Chelsea’s 396.
Aguero edges it for G-Nev
There was some confusion over who was Gary Neville’s man of the match, leading Ladbrokes to pay out on bets for Sergio Aguero AND Fernando Torres.
Sky pundit Neville chose Aguero but then suggested he might change it to Torres, prompting the bookies to pay out twice. Alex Donohue of Ladbrokes said: ‘We’ve listened to Neville and Torres backers will be celebrating.’
But Neville later tweeted: ‘Aguero best striker on pitch!’

Wherever Schurrle is on the pitch, the ball is attracted to him and he scored his first goal for the club in the 33rd minute.
By then Chelsea could have been clear. Torres had already failed to meet Ramires’ cross and he hit the joint between post and crossbar with a curling effort from the edge of the area. He has rediscovered his mojo.
So, too, had City at the start of the second half when Sergio Aguero’s fabulous left-foot shot beat Cech hands down.
It was a terrific finish, outwitting Gary Cahill with the timing of his run to seize on Samir Nasri’s smart through ball.
Aguero’s explosive finish raised the stakes. Mourinho threw on substitutes to try to win their fifth successive league game at home, sending for Samuel Eto’o, Willian and John Obi Mikel to change the game.
But this was Torres’ day. His attitude was first class and his commitment unquestionable after he saved a goal-kick by sliding into the electronic advertising hoardings.
It was the Torres of old who ran through in the final minute, reading Willian’s hopeful pass and making a mug of Matija Nastasic and Hart on the edge of City’s area.
He finished the job, applying the touch in front of The Shed that could turn the season into a title race fought between two teams.
Chelsea are two points off Arsenal at the top and by the time they face each other on December 23, they could be both be in the clear.
After this, Chelsea are one, big happy family.

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

Mirror:

Chelsea 2-1 Manchester City: Fernando Torres capitalises on late defensive mix-up to secure victory for hosts
By Martin Lipton

The Spanish striker set up Andre Schurrle's opener before scoring the winner in dramatic circumstances
He celebrated as if they had won the title, not just one match.
But Jose Mourinho has ­transformed the mood of Chelsea, the mindset of Chelsea.
And unlocked the beast inside Fernando Torres.
Not bad for nine Premier League games.
As Torres’ tap-in saw Mourinho hurling himself into the seats behind the dug-out in search of his son, the Londoners' boss seemed to have found what is even more important for the Chelsea fans.
The same sense of destiny they had first time around, when the Special One was making his mark.
This was more than just a victory, extending his remarkable unbeaten league record at ­Stamford Bridge to 65 games, matching the return from the first 27 points on offer when he took Chelsea to the title in his first season.
After all, when Sergio Aguero scored a stunning equaliser for the visitors at the start of the second period, ­everything that Chelsea had done in the first half was wiped out.
City looked in the ascendancy.
Aguero was tormenting Gary Cahill, David Silva weaving pretty patterns, Fernandinho beginning to stir.
First, Chelsea weathered the storm. And then, as the game entered its last 15 seconds of normal time, they ­chiselled out a huge ­psychological blow.
If any player deserved to score the winner, though, it was the Spaniard.
Since his arrival from Liverpool in January 2011, Carlo Ancelotti, Andre ­Villas-Boas, Roberto Di Matteo and even Rafa Benitez have tried, but failed, to recreate the man who was magnificent at Anfield.
Mourinho, it was felt by some, would just decide Torres was not his cup of tea. That he would ease him out.
But against Spurs last month, he was scintillating before his undeserved red card.
Here, he was simply electric, all the more impressive in light of what had happened on 28 minutes.
All alone 14 yards out when City’s off-side trap – with Martin Demichelis horribly out of ­position – failed to work, Torres snatched at his shot, sending it miles over the bar.
The old Chelsea Torres would have gone into hiding. Not this new, revitalised version.
Five minutes later, he destroyed Gael Clichy down the right, rolling it across for Andre Schurrle to tap home.
Next he left Demichelis on his backside, scooted down the left, turned inside and cracked against the angle of post and bar.
“When a striker misses an easy chance, he can be affected for the rest of the game,” said Mourinho. “But it was like that was the moment he decided he would be man of the match. The fans were amazing and supported him, saw how hard he worked for the team, and saw his heart.”
They did.
Torres was on fire, City being burned, only for Aguero, fed by Samir Nasri before rifling into the top corner, to alter the equation again.
Had Javi Garcia, unmarked, headed past rather than at Petr Cech soon afterwards, City might have won, not slipped to their third defeat in five away games.
But it looked like ending as a draw until Matija Nastasic and Joe Hart made their total Horlicks of dealing with the ball that lofted forward off sub Willian, the keeper again in no-man’s land as Torres stabbed home.
Cue bedlam around the ground and behind seething boss Manuel Pellegrini.
“I don’t look back,” insisted ­Mourinho. “The past is the past, this is a new situation. But the team is improving.
“And if we can play like that against City, why can’t we in every match? That is the ­self-esteem we need.”

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

Express:

Torres winner puts Chelsea second

Fernando Torres netted a 90th-minute winner as Chelsea claimed a dramatic 2-1 Barclays Premier League win in a pulsating contest with fellow title-contenders Manchester City at Stamford Bridge.
One of the most eagerly awaited games of the season so far, pitting together squads lavishly assembled by Roman Abramovich and Abu Dhabi's Sheikh Mansour and two former managers of Real Madrid, was decided by a much-maligned £50million striker.
In a thrilling match, a rush of blood saw Joe Hart try to reach a Willian through ball which allowed Torres in to net a crucial winner to extendChelsea's 100 per cent home start to the Premier League season.
Jose Mourinho celebrated the goal and the extension of his unbeaten Premier League run at Stamford Bridge to 65 games by leaping into the crowd, where he finished the prior home match with Cardiff following his touchline dismissal.
Torres had missed a sitter earlier on and made amends by provided the cross for Andre Schurrle to tap in his first Chelsea goal.
Torres then crashed a shot against the bar after terrorising the City defence with his pace for a second time.
The Spain striker had designs on making the match about one man, but another former Atletico Madrid striker had other ideas and Sergio Aguero struck his ninth goal in seven games four minutes into the second half.
Then Torres struck in a dramatic finale which Hart and City boss Manuel Pellegrini will not want to see again.
Debutant Martin Demichelis - one of three changes to the City side which won at CSKA Moscow - conceded a third-minute corner when not under pressure and Gary Cahill squandered the opportunity to give Chelsea an early lead.
City half cleared and Oscar's cross was met by Cahill, who blasted over.
John Terry had been standing in an offside position, but a flag was not raised and Cahill was left to rue the chance.
City's constant movement - particularly the attacking triumvirate of Aguero, David Silva and Samir Nasri - continually troubled Chelsea.
Frank Lampard was booked for fouling Fernandinho in the centre circle, thwarting another attack as Chelsea tried to get to grips with their opponents.
The hosts were enjoying some space on the right between Silva and Clichy, with the rampaging Branislav Ivanovic and Ramires threatening.
Ramires provided the cross from which Torres should have scored after breaching the City offside trap.
The World Cup-winner chested the ball down and blasted over the bar. A more subtle touch would surely have beaten Hart.
Mourinho's reaction was one of disbelief after investing so much faith in Torres, who had one Premier League goal in 2013 entering the match, against Everton on the final day of last season.
Torres atoned for the miss soon after when Ivanovic flicked the ball on from a goal kick.
Torres surged around Gael Clichy down the Chelsea right and rushed to the byline where he crossed for Schurrle to score.
Chelsea, and Torres in particular, were lifted and the striker smashed a shot on to the bar after another driving run which terrorised the City defence.
Despite his team's forward inroads, Petr Cech had to be on his guard and he saved well from Aguero after the Argentina striker had turned Terry.
City made a fast start to the second half and, after Pablo Zabaleta shot over, were level when Nasri's through ball caught Cahill flat-footed. Aguero ghosted in behind the defender and beat Cech at the near post with an early shot.
Javi Garcia was unmarked when he had a header saved from Silva's free-kick soon after.
Chelsea appealed for a penalty when Eden Hazard went down under the challenge of Zabaleta, but the Belgium forward's cause was not helped by a flamboyant fall which had referee Howard Webb unmoved.
Torres had a header held by Hart and was then cynically blocked by Garcia in a move more at home in Sunday's NFL contest at Wembley.
Try as they might, still Chelsea could not subdue City and Cech saved with his feet from Silva before Mourinho turned to his bench.
He replaced Schurrle with Willian and Lampard with John Obi Mikel, while Pellegrini opted for Jesus Navas in place of Nasri.
The threat of Aguero was constant and he chipped narrowly wide after being found by Silva.
Ramires shot over as an end-to-end contest entered the final 10 minutes and Mourinho made another change, throwing on Samuel Eto'o for Hazard.
Then Torres settled matters in Chelsea's favour. Willian's lofted pass caused a mix-up between Matija Nastasic and Hart, whose latest high-profile error allowed Torres in to score ahead of the covering Demichelis.
Mourinho leapt into the crowd amid the celebrations before Chelsea completed victory.

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

Star:

Chelsea 2 - Manchester City 1: Torres grabs winner with keeper all at sea
JOSE MOURINHO warned that Chelsea are clever sharks who know when and how to attack.
By Adrian Kajumba

nd they proved it by snatching a brilliant win from the jaws of a draw thanks to Fernando Torres.
Torres ended his Premier League goal drought with a final minute winner to settle a pulsating clash.
The Spaniard pounced with seconds to spare to bag only his second league goal of 2013 as Chelsea laid down a marker in the first meeting of this year’s title favourites.
Once they picked their gutted bodies off the floor, City were no doubt kicking themselves after gifting Chelsea all three points.
Torres’ first league goal since May came after a calamitous communication breakdown between Matija ­Nastasic and Joe Hart – and it was too late for City to reply.
It was totally deserved for Torres who looks born again under ­Mourinho.
He seemed set to be outshone in the scoring stakes by another in-form striker, Sergio Aguero, whose ­stunning goal brought City level after Andre Schurrle’s opener. Then came his big moment and he capped his best Blues display with his third goal of the week.
Mourinho was talking about Chelsea’s new approach to their transfer dealings compared to City when he ­described his club as clever sharks.
Days after that description, Torres’ killer strike proved fatal for City.
For Mourinho there was the added satisfaction of beating the man he replaced at Real Madrid in 2010 and has enjoyed taunting ever since.
But City boss Manuel Pellegrini has larger concerns than his battle with his old sparring partner, like his side’s away form.
City have only won once on the road in the league this season and this was their third defeat.
Pellegrini’s cautious approach ­appeared to hand the initiative to Chelsea. The Chilean left out Alvaro Negredo in favour of an extra central midfielder and Yaya Toure was tasked with supporting Aguero.
Chelsea were only too happy to take control. Gary Cahill beat City’s shaky offside trap to volley over before Torres outjumped debutant defender Martin Demichelis but headed straight at Hart.
Aguero cut an isolated figure up front for City.
He was left feeding on scraps and on the two ­occasions he got a first-half sight of goal it was thanks to his own hard work.
In between the two ­efforts Aguero fired at Petr Cech, it was all about Torres.
First the Spaniard missed a sitter, slashing widely over from 10 yards with just Hart to beat after Ramires’ through ball exposed City’s defence.
Mourinho was as stunned as everybody else inside Stamford Bridge, a look of disbelief on his face, but he was much happier with Torres in the 32nd minute. The Spaniard gathered Cech’s big goal kick and put on the burners to spin away from Nastasic and leave Gael Clichy for dead.
Once he reached the byline, he had the composure to look up and pick out Schurrle who had an easy tap-in.
Torres had the bit between his teeth and almost made it 2-0 five minutes later when he cut in from the left and cracked a stunning effort against the bar.
City must have received a blast a Pellegrini’s ­answer to the hairdryer judging by their start to the second half.
Within three minutes of the restart they were level thanks to a stunning strike from the brilliant Aguero.
Samir Nasri played him in behind Cahill and, with nothing else on, ­Aguero caught out Cech with a bullet effort from a narrowing angle the Chelsea stopper could only wave into his top corner.
City had Chelsea on the rack and should have turned the game on its head. Javi Garcia headed straight at Cech before the keeper stuck out a foot to repel a through-on-goal David Silva.
Aguero then curled a clever chip inches wide as City kept pushing.
Mourinho chucked on Samuel Eto’o as Chelsea chased a winner but it was Torres who was the hero.
Sub Willian pumped one last hopeful ball forward which Nastasic headed past Hart as the keeper rushed out, leaving Torres with an open goal to tap the winner into.


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

Times:

Manuel Pellegrini’s charm fades after Fernando Torres punishes mishap

Matt Dickinson.
Chelsea 2 Manchester City 1

No one saw this storm coming, though perhaps we should have done given Joe Hart’s repeated nightmares and Manchester City’s defensive mishaps away from home.
“Everyone was expecting a draw,” José Mourinho said. That was until the most costly blunder of Hart’s season in the last minute of normal time gave Chelsea a late, dramatic winner gleefully seized by the reborn, revitalised Fernando Torres.
Suddenly Chelsea physios, kit men and fitness trainers were on the pitch. Mourinho was clambering into the stands behind the City dugout. Bedlam.
A seething Manuel Pellegrini was soon deriding his team for “losing stupid points” and demonstrating that his urbane, Chilean charm finds its limits when his players self-destruct against title rivals.
The City manager’s anger was mostly aimed at his side’s failings but he was also furious at Mourinho’s celebrations, stalking off down the tunnel to avoid his counterpart. Another day, another handshake row.
“I didn’t want to shake hands,” Pellegrini said. As for Mourinho climbing into the seats? “I didn’t expect anything else. It is a different way to celebrate from me,” he said, pointedly.
Mourinho came out to say that no disrespect was intended. He explained that his son has a season ticket behind the away dugout, and he was simply seeking out the 14-year-old José junior.
Pellegrini is unlikely to be appeased, but then there is history between the pair.
Mourinho followed the Chilean at Real Madrid, where he called his predecessor’s second place “first loser”. It is unlikely they will ever be friends.
The Premier League has its latest dugout feud, but by far the greater ramifications are in a title race that grows more intriguing with every week, with the two Manchester clubs in seventh and eighth places.
Early days, of course, and both sides had periods of dominance yesterday — but there are recurring themes in Chelsea’s perfect home form and City collapsing defensively.
Make that four points out of 15 away from home for Pellegini’s side who have lost from winning positions against Cardiff City and Aston Villa, and handed over the points yesterday in farcical circumstances.
In place of the injured Vincent Kompany, and Joleon Lescott who did not make the bench, Martin Demichelis and Matija Nastasic had never fully convinced when Willian knocked a ball over the top and Torres hunted down the young defender.
Hart sprinted out of his penalty area as though pursued by a swarm of wasps, a fateful misjudgment. It was too far to come. Had he stayed back, Nastasic would have nodded the ball safely back rather than past the onrushing goalkeeper. Torres pounced for a tap-in.
It was reward for the Spaniard’s perseverance after a shocking miss shortly before the half-hour mark. The Spaniard had a gaping goal to aim at but lashed his shot high over the bar. The cameras cut to the Chelsea bench where there were looks of disbelief. Torres tried to excuse himself by saying he thought he was offside.
In another time, Torres might have sunk into depression. Not under Mourinho. Four minutes later, his burst down the right flank made Gael Clichy look leaden-footed. Torres crossed low for Andre Schürrle to stab in his first goal for Chelsea.
Torres struck the crossbar soon afterwards with an audacious curling shot. “It was a fantastic performance by Fernando,” Mourinho said. “When a striker misses an easy chance, he can be affected for the rest of the game. But it was like that was the moment he decided he would be man of the match. The fans saw how hard he worked for the team. They saw his heart.”
Chelsea’s main weakness was always likely to be the lack of a No 9, but not if Torres can keep up this form.
According to his manager, it is less a matter of motivation than physical training; short, intense sessions that have also helped John Terry (shame it never worked for Andriy Shevchenko).
“We believe our methodology improves players’ sharpness and speed in the first 15 to 20 metres,” Mourinho said. “But Fernando is responsible. He’s worked very hard since I saw him.”
Chelsea could have had victory in the bag, with Yaya Touré having an unusually quiet game for City. Sergio Agüero was carrying City’s attack as a lone striker.
Mourinho called the Argentina player “a tank” for the power he packs into a compact body, and there was an astonishing demonstration when he ran off Gary Cahill and on to Samir Nasri’s through-ball just after half-time.
Petr Cech did not envisage that Agüero would even try to shoot from near the corner of the box. The goalkeeper barely lifted an arm as the ball arrowed past him into the near, top corner.
Suddenly it was City’s time to dominate. Javi García should have done better with a free header and Cech saved well from David Silva’s low shot.
Mourinho’s double substitution, John Obi Mikel and Willian on for Frank Lampard and Schürrle, showed his anxiety and the need for fresh legs.



Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Schalke 3-0



Independent:

FC Schalke 0 Chelsea 3
Two-goal Torres leads Chelsea all the way to the top
By SIMON JOHNSON

Fernando Torres used to be associated with a good sense of timing and he chose his 100th start for Chelsea to score a vital two goals that now put them on a much smoother path to the last 16 of the Champions League
Manager Jose Mourinho may have his grudges towards Cardiff City and perhaps the Football Association after being charged with improper conduct, but he can have no complaints about his team’s form or the way Torres is now playing. In fact this is just the kind of result to improve his mood, as the opening defeat to Basel becomes a distant memory with successive away victories lifting them to the top of Group E.
Despite Torres being something of an enigma since he joined Chelsea for a British record £50m from Liverpool in 2011,  something certainly seems to happen to him the moment he gets on a plane to participate on the continent. The Spaniard’s nerves evaporate and the prolific marksmen returns.
There was nothing special about his strike which put Chelsea in front inside five minutes, calmly steering the ball in at the far post after Branislav Ivanovic flicked on Frank Lampard’s corner at the near post. What was so extraordinary is that he now boasts a remarkable record of scoring seven goals in his last eight European games for Chelsea.
Torres was very much the hero as Chelsea coasted past mediocre opposition last term to claim the Europa League, netting six times, including in the final against Benfica.
In contrast, his record in England’s top division continues to be woeful, with one solitary effort to his name in the past 10 months, however Chelsea won’t care if his midas touch can continue in Europe’s premier club competition.
He certainly provided an early justification for Mourinho’s decision to select him ahead of Samuel Eto’o, even though the Cameroonian who scored his first goal for the club at the weekend.
It was one of five changes Mourinho decided to make to his starting XI, including David Luiz, following Saturday’s gaffe against Cardiff, being dropped in favour of Gary Cahill, who was making his first start for Chelsea in four weeks.
Despite the rotation, Chelsea were quick to find their stride, although the early goal from Torres was always going to help ease the tension.
Schalke were sluggish in comparison, letting Chelsea have all the time and space they wanted in the opening quarter to dictate terms. They had already looked like generous hosts by allowing Chelsea to play in their blue home kit, which meant they had to switch to a jade number instead.
Perhaps it was the reason why Schalke keeper Timo Hildebrand cleared the ball in bizarre fashion straight to Frank Lampard in the eighth minute, but fortunately for him the England international fired a tame effort back at the empty net from 40 yards out and he had plenty of time to recover.
One of the more eagerly anticipated match-ups was on Chelsea’s right flank between two of Europe’s most exciting wingers, Eden Hazard and Julian Draxler. It looked a deliberate ploy by Mourinho to distract the thrilling Draxler by making him worry about Hazard running in the opposite direction. If so, it had the desired effect.
The Germany international showed only the odd flash of the skill that has led many of Europe’s top clubs to cast admiring glances in his direction. One sublime pass through to Dennis Aogo led to keeper Petr Cech being forced into a fine save, although the assistant referee flagged for offside anyway.
The incident still galvanised the home side, with Atsuto Uchida firing one shot over, while Cech was forced into two saves before the break from Kevin Prince Boateng and Roman Neustädter.
Ironically, given Mourinho’s rant about Cardiff’s time-wasting tactics, Chelsea suddenly seemed more than happy to take an age to restart the game from one throw-in and then a free-kick as they struggled to keep their lead intact until the break.
In many ways, Chelsea’s display was in keeping with much of their early season form, namely somehow winning a game without looking entirely convincing. The home side continued to show promise having bounced back from the psychological blow of conceding their first goal in the competition, but were still handicapped by the absence of main striker Klaas-Jan Huntelaar due to a knee injury.
Boateng was leading the line instead and Torres certainly compared favourably to the former Tottenham and Portsmouth midfielder. Indeed, the 29-year-old was unfortunate not to double Chelsea’s lead six minutes after the restart when a fine header from Lampard’s free-kick rebounded off the crossbar. Chelsea certainly needed a second goal to kill the game off, yet they remained sloppy in possession and ensured Schalke remained firmly in the contest.
But Chelsea always had the resources to capitalise on the counter-attack and they finally secured the three points with a thrilling break 21 minutes from time. Eden Hazard, who outshone Draxler, charged from the edge of his own penalty area and Torres was able to double his tally after Oscar squared the ball to him in the area.
Hazard then got the goal his display deserved just before the end, slotting the ball into the far corner after Torres’s clever run opened up the Schalke defence for him.
“He scores when he wants”, the Chelsea fans chanted to Torres. Perhaps still not enough for the club’s liking but they will be happy enough if he keeps making the difference in Europe.

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

Guardian:

Chelsea's Fernando Torres scores two to sink Schalke in Champions League
Dominic Fifield at Veltins Arena

The last time Chelsea ventured on to German soil they had clinched their first European Cup. If they had been waiting since then to re-establish credentials at this elite level, last season's toils in the group section having damaged their reputation, then this resounding victory in the Ruhr valley will serve as a statement of renewed intent.
Schalke were well beaten here, wounded by neatly taken goals from Fernando Torres, a striker revived as he revels under new management, and denied the last vestiges of hope by a late third from Eden Hazard. Chelsea cut the locals to pieces every time they sprang at them at pace and José Mourinho took as much satisfaction in keeping the first clean sheet by a visiting side here in this competition in 11 matches.
There was strength as well as bite to a display that has thrust the Londoners to the top of the group.
The manager has been scarred by each of his previous matches away to German opposition, six trips to the country with three different clubs having ended in defeat. This was an emphatic way to break that duck. "I know about that [record] but I also knew that, if anyone asked me, they'd only talk about half the story," said the Portuguese. "That record is just about defeats in Germany but I've never lost at home against a German team either. But this game was good for us. We controlled the match and were dangerous. We deserved the points."
It was the revival of Torres that truly caught the eye. This was the Spaniard's 100th start for this club and his tireless industry was rewarded with a double to take his Chelsea tally to 38. He might have celebrated a hat-trick had a thumped header early in the second half not cannoned down from the angle of the post and bar with Timo Hildebrand helpless, although that mattered little.
A player who has managed only a solitary Premier League goal this calendar year still finds Europe to his liking, his improvement under Mourinho clearly not overly affected by the untimely knee injury suffered at Steaua Bucharest three weeks ago.
His goals here were pilfered cannily. The visitors had already threatened twice in the opening five minutes when charging from deep – Oscar, Hazard and André Schürrle gliding at pace against back-tracking opponents – when Schalke ignored Torres's presence at the far post from Frank Lampard's corner. The delivery was flicked on by Branislav Ivanovic to confound the German back line and the striker duly nodded into the unguarded net from close range.
There was a vulnerability to the home side throughout, a reflection of the 19 goals shipped in nine Bundesliga matches this term and recent injuries that have disrupted them.
Chelsea might have added a second long before their rivals surrendered possession sloppily, not for the first time, in central midfield, allowing the visitors to break at pace. Oscar held off Jermaine Jones, who eventually pulled up in the duel, and slid the ball inside for Torres to collect. The 29-year-old took his time to wrong-foot the goalkeeper before guiding in his second and, even with 21 minutes remaining, the contest seemed settled. Hazard's third, the Belgian having waltzed with Torres into the German half with only a panicked Joël Matip to thwart them, was his first for the club in this competition and fine reward for his own excellence. Chelsea have registered 14 times in four matches, their form having clicked since half-time at White Hart Lane late last month. That seems an age ago.
"We can still improve, though," said Torres. "The first half was tight but in the second the individual quality made the difference. As a team we are feeling much better. Individually, too. I've felt sharp and well in the last few games but we have three very good strikers and we all need to be ready, every one of us. The competition is healthy." Samuel Eto'o and Demba Ba have also impressed on occasion in recent weeks. There are suddenly options for Mourinho in a position that, not long ago, looked to be this team's achilles heel.
Yet just as satisfying for the management was the ability to blunt Schalke, even with the Germans weakened by injury. They had recovered their poise from the early concession to threaten in the period up to the interval, only for Petr Cech to save well from Kevin-Prince Boateng and Roman Neustädter and his back line to suffocate almost everything flung at them.
César Azpilicueta, employed at left-back in preference to Ryan Bertrand and in the absence of Ashley Cole, blocked smartly from Max Meyer and Julian Draxler. John Terry and Gary Cahill were committed and imposing, Ramires and Lampard busy as a further shield. This was a collective show of strength. Life looks rosier from the top of Group E.

http://www.theguardian.com/football/gallery/2013/oct/22/champions-league-schalke-chelsea-pictures

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

Telegraph:

Schalke 0 Chelsea 3
Double trouble: Fernando Torres had his scoring boots on as he grabbed two goals
By Jason Burt, at the Veltins Arena, Gelsenkirchen

Jose Mourinho laid a ghost to rest. And Fernando Torres no longer looked a shadow of his former self.
Torres scored twice — on his 100th start for Chelsea — and this was the man for whom Roman Abramovich paid £50 million, the man Sir Alex Ferguson said had “borderline Machiavellian” cunning, rather than the pale version of one of Europe’s most lethal strikers.
The Chelsea manager was so content that he announced he would not be fighting the Football Association charge levelled at him for being sent to the stands during last Saturday’s match against Cardiff City. Pre-match and Mourinho had railed against what had happened but said afterwards that he would simply cough up the £8,000 fine.
“There are two important things,” he explained. “One thing is what the referee [Anthony Taylor] wrote in his report, which I read. And he is honest and fair. What he wrote is exactly what happened and is exactly why I didn’t understand why I went to the stands, and exactly why the punishment is justified and not to be suspended from the next match.
"I was not offensive or aggressive; I didn’t use offensive words. I just had a bit of a disagreement so I accept the fine and, against Manchester City, I can work.”
City at home is next up for Chelsea and it will be interesting to see if Torres retains his place.
Records and achievement have tumbled before Mourinho throughout his career but there is one strange anomaly: he has never before won in theChampions League on German soil. In six previous visits, he had six defeats with Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real Madrid.
Unsurprisingly Mourinho saw it differently. When reminded of his record, he said: “I knew if someone asked me, it’s only about half the record. The record is only about defeats in Germany, but I’ve never lost at home against a German team. So if anyone asked me it would only be half the story.”
This victory, with a home game against Schalke to come next, meant that Chelsea are now halfway through the group campaign, having turned around their opening round home defeat with two away wins.
“Because of my experience I was not in hell after the first game and I’m not in heaven today,” Mourinho said. “We have two matches at home, and normally we are going to get enough points to qualify.”
There was a debt, as so often, to Petr Cech who was at his formidable best in the Chelsea goal repelling Schalke, for whom the highly-rated and coveted Julian Draxler was a constant threat in possession, and who have scored in their last 11 Champions League ties.
But this Chelsea side is coming together with a burnishing resilience. It may not have been a squad that Mourinho would have selected, rather one he largely inherited, but it is beginning to appear in his image with Ramires a powerful midfield runner and Oscar the quicksilver playmaker aided by Eden Hazard’s trickery and André Schürrle’s directness.
For Juan Mata, again, it was the bench but there can be few complaints when the return is so resounding and the machine is starting to purr quite so efficiently although it helped that Schalke — hit by injury — spluttered and stuttered and, at the start, stalled.
From the first five minutes, to be precise. By the time the clock ticked round they were behind with Torres stooping to head home at the far post after Branislav Ivanovic had flicked on a Frank Lampard corner. It was not just the goal but the ease of scoring that shocked Schalke who had to work hard to manage their way back into the contest.
Draxler pulled the strings and opportunities came with Cech denying Dennis Aogo, clear on goal and turning away his shot, before turning over Kevin-Prince Boateng’s fierce shot and tipping away Benedikt Höwedes’ header and an effort from Roman Neustädter while goal-bound shots by Draxler and Max Meyer were blocked.
After Torres hit the crossbar with a fine header from Lampard’s free-kick, the Spaniard struck again. Schalke pushed and Chelsea broke with Hazard finding Oscar who showed pace and strength to hold off Jermaine Jones and roll the ball to Torres.
Calmly he rounded goalkeeper Timo Hildebrand and scored. It was a dazzling counter and then there was another. This time, Ramires found Hazard inside his own half but he ran unopposed. Torres made the decoy run and Hazard easily beat Hildebrand with a low shot.

Schalke (4-2-3-1) Hildebrand; Uchida, Howedes, Matip, Aogo; Jones (Kolasinac 70), Neustadter; Clemens, Meyer (Goretzka 78), Draxler; Boateng (Szalai 70). Subs Fahrmann (g), Hoogland, Santana, Fuchs. Booked Neustadter, Jones.

Chelsea (4-2-3-1) Cech; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Azpilicueta; Lampard, Ramires; Schurrle (Mikel 72), Oscar (Luiz 83), Hazard (Eto’o 88); Torres.Subs Schwarzer (g), Bertrand, Willian, Mata.Booked Cahill.
Referee V Kassai (Hungary).

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Mail:
Schalke 0 Chelsea 3: Torres brilliance sends Mourinho's men to top of the group

By MATT BARLOW

For a manager with a lust for victory, it will not have amused Jose Mourinho to lose his first six Champions League games against German teams on their own turf, but on Tuesday night there was so much to enjoy.
Top of the list was the form of Fernando Torres, back from injury in irresistible style to score twice and come within inches of a hat-trick when he hit the woodwork.
It was not, however, simply his finishing. Torres put in a brilliant shift up front,  leading the line. His touch was good, his movement sharp and he combined smoothly with those around him.Since half-time at Tottenham at the end of September, his team have been mightily impressive, fighting back to salvage a point at White Hart Lane before plundering 14 goals in four games, split either side of the international break.
Goals against Norwich, Cardiff and Steaua are one thing but becoming the first team in 11 Champions League games to stop Schalke scoring at home and winning in Gelsenkirchen is all together more eye-catching.
In the city of a thousand fires, Torres had one burning in his belly. ‘In the last few games I feel very sharp and well,’ said Torres, starting for the first time since  damaging knee ligaments in Bucharest three weeks ago.
When the injury struck, he was in a groove of fine form and it was as if he had never stepped away when he appeared unmarked at the back post to head in a simple chance in the fifth minute.
It came from a corner swung in by Frank Lampard and touched on at the near post by Branislav Ivanovic with the Schalke defenders nowhere to be seen.
Torres did not complain, stopping to head in his 37th goal on what was his 100th start for the club. However, the much-maligned £50million man has made 40 appearances as a substitute, which makes the figures rather less striking.
No 38 was converted 21 minutes from time as Schalke were sliced open on the break. Oscar provided the final pass and Torres skipped around keeper Timo Hildebrand before scoring.
The travelling fans sang: ‘He scores when he wants.’ In between those two goals, Chelsea fought and scrapped to protect their lead.
Cesar Azpilicueta, possibly chosen at left back ahead of Ryan Bertrand for his pace, has hardly forged a reputation for heroic defending since arriving from Marseille, yet he made two vital blocks in his goalmouth inside a few minutes before the interval.
First he denied Max Meyer then hurled himself in front of a sweet drive by Julian Draxler. When the back four were beaten, the goalkeeper stood firm.
Petr Cech, making his 96th appearance in the Champions League, turned over a  well-struck effort from the edge of the box by Kevin Prince Boateng then thwarted Roman Neustadter from the resulting corner.
Another untidy scramble ensued from the next corner, ending with centre half Benedikt Howedes attempting a backheel, which he caught well but the ball finished a yard wide of the target.
The second half unfolded very much as the first had ended. Schalke dominated possession but Torres escaped his marker to head a Lampard free-kick against the frame of post and bar.
Hungarian referee Viktor Kassai rejected two noisy appeals for penalties, both for handball against Gary Cahill, the first far more convincing than the second, and Cech saved from Christian Clemens.
Perhaps the best chance dropped to Howedes, who planted his header wide, and once Torres made it 2-0, the win was never in doubt.
Hazard capped another direct counter-attack with his first Champions League goal for Chelsea to add a little gloss.
Mourinho didn't mention winning the 2004 Champions League with Porto in Gelsenkirchen but said with a smile: ‘The record was only defeats in Germany. I’ve never lost at home against a German team.’

Schalke: Hildebrand 6, Uchida 6, Höwedes 6, Matip 6, Aogo 6, Neustadter 7, Jones 6 (Kolasinac 70, 5), Clemens 7, Meyer 6 (Goretzka 79), Draxler 6, Boateng 5 (Szalai 70, 6).

Subs not used: Fährmann, Hoogland, Felipe Santana, Fuchs.
Booked: Jones, Neustadter.
Manager: Jens Keller 6

Chelsea: Cech 7, Ivanovic 7, Cahill 6, Terry 7, Azpilicueta 7, Ramires 7, Lampard 7, Schurrle 6 (Mikel 72, 6), Oscar 7 (David Luiz 84), Hazard 6 (Eto'o 88), Torres 8.

Subs not used: Schwarzer, Bertrand, Willian, Mata.
Goals: Torres 5, 69, Hazard 87.

Booked: Cahill.
Manager: Jose Mourinho 7

Ref: Viktor Kassai (Hungary).
Att: 54,442
Man of the Match: Fernando Torres


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Mirror:

Schalke 0-3 Chelsea
Fernando Torres scores twice as Blues cruise to win in Gelsenkirchen
By Neil McLeman

The Spaniard was in fine form in Germany, notching twice and playing a part in Eden Hazard's third
Jose Mourinho won his first Champions League match in Germany on Tuesday night with an efficiency of which his hosts would have been proud.
While Fernando Torres scored in each half, Petr Cech and the gritty Chelsea back four successfully defended the lead amid the intimidating noise in the Veltins Arena.
The decisive second goal came on a deadly counter-attack led by Oscar after another period of German pressure was withstood. And Eden Hazard’s late goal capped a classic away performance to suggest this Premier League club will fight the Bundesliga's best for the Champions League this season.
Chelsea’s second away win in Europe this season puts them top of Group E and continues their good form ahead of clashes with Manchester City and Arsenal.
Since losing at home to Basel on September 18, Chelsea are now unbeaten in seven matches, wining six.
Mourinho also won his seventh match on German soil last night after losing his previous six with Real Madrid - including the last two Champions League semi-finals - Inter Milan and Chelsea.
“I knew if someone asked me, it’s only about half the record,” smiled the delighted Mourinho. “The record is only about defeats in Germany, but I’ve never lost at home against a German team. So if anyone asked me it would only be half the story.”
Last night was also a better result in Gelsenkirchen for John Terry and Frank Lampard, two England players who suffered World Cup quarter-final defeat to Portugal on penalties here in 2006 after Wayne Rooney was sent off.
And Mourinho picked out both of their performances in a fine team effort.
“I think normally you go to the goalscorers as the star performers, and Fernando and Eden played a very good game,” he said. “But I think everything started with the way we defended and I think my goalkeeper, my four defenders and Ramires and Lampard gave us fantastic stability.”
Going into the third round of Champions League matches, Group E leaders Schalke and Barcelona were the only teams not to have conceded a goal. Both teams lost that record last night with the German defence breeched after only five minutes.
Lampard’s cross was flicked on by Branislav Ivanovic and Torres headed home at the back post.
But the fifth-placed team in the Bundesliga dominated the rest of the half with former Arsenal target Julian Draxler in impressive form. Cech made saves from Dennis Aogo, Kevin-Prince Boateng and Roman Neustadter while Cesar Azpilicueta made a brave block on a Max Meyer shot.
After the break, Torres hit the bar with a header from a Lampard free kick. Butthe Spaniard sealed the three points after 69 minutes when Oscar surged down the inside-right channel to Torres to round keeper Timo Hildebrand and tap home.
Torres also had a hand in the third goal as his decoy run allowed Hazard to run free and score after 87 minutes.
Chelsea, who failed to get out of the group stages last season, will now progress by winning their two remaining home matches.
“After the first game we were last because we lost at home,” Mourinho said. “Now we are top of the group. Because of my experience, I was not in hell after the first game, and I’m not in heaven today. I’m calm.
"We were under pressure after the first game. We found a balance after the second game. After this victory, we are in a good situation.”
Mourinho has accepted the FA charge of improper conduct following Saturday’s victory over Cardiff and will pay an £8,000 fine.
“The referee (Anthony Taylor) was honest with what he wrote, so I accept the fine and, against Manchester City, I can work.”

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Express:

Schalke 0 Chelsea 3: Deadly Fernando Torres strikes twice for Blues

FERNANDO TORRES put Chelsea’s Champions League campaign firmly back on track with a superb double strike.
By: Tony Banks

The much-criticised Spaniard celebrated his 100th start for the club by netting a goal in each half to give Jose Mourinho’s side their second successive victory in the competition and took them to the top of the Group E on goal difference, after the upset of their opening game defeat by Basle.
Torres was simply unstoppable on the night, nodding home after five minutes and then striking again as Mourinho’s team withstood large periods of Schalke pressure, but pounced with deadly intent on the break.
Eden Hazard put the icing on the cake with a third goal three minutes from time. It wasChelsea’s fourth win in a row, and it came as a result of a masterfully disciplined display in northern Germany.
Mourinho sprang a surprise before kick off as he named Cesar Azpilicueta at left-back instead of the injured Ashley Cole. The Spaniard, normally a right-back, was one of five changes from the side that beat Cardiff on Saturday.
The Chelsea manager stemmed a wretched record in Germany. In six previous Champions League games, with Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real Madrid, he had lost every one – including two semi-finals.
Against a Schalke side hit by injuries but still with wins in their opening two group games and 14 goals in their last five matches, the Special One knew a second defeat would be a massive setback.
Instead, Chelsea got off to a perfect start. Frank Lampard’s near-post corner in the fifth minute saw Branislav Ivanovic outfox the Schalke defence with a flick-on and there was Torres, unmarked at the far post, to nod in to the roof of the net.
Fernando Torres, Chelsea, Schalke, Champions LeagueFernando Torres's teammates were delighted with the Spaniard's efforts [LARS BARON/GETTY IMAGES]
It was the first time the £50 million man had netted twice in a game since April
It was the Spaniard’s third goal of the season, all in cup games, but it was exactly what Chelsea needed in a tricky game.
After that, Chelsea sat deep, with Oscar playing off Torres as their most attacking players.
It was Blues skipper John Terry’s first game back in Gelsenkirchen since he was a member of the England team that crashed out of the World Cup against Portugal on penalties in 2006.
Atsuto Uchida finally broke through down the left for the Germans, but then shot over from an angle.
It was mostly though disciplined stuff from Chelsea, but they were coming under increasing pressure. With key striker Klaas-Jan Huntelaar injured, Schalke had ex-Tottenham man Kevin-Prince Boateng up front, but he made little early impression.
From longer range though, Boateng forced keeper Petr Cech to tip his 25-yard shot over the bar. The resulting corner led to Cech coming to Chelsea’s rescue again, as he palmed Benedikt Howedes’ header over.
Azpilicueta then blocked Julian Draxler’s shot as Schalke began to build up a head of steam. Chelsea almost added to their lead five minutes into the second half, and it was Torres again, causing Schalke problems.
Fernando Torres, Chelsea, Schalke, Champions LeagueSchalke's defence could only watch as Fernando Torres cooly finishes for his second goal [LARS BARON/GETTY IMAGES]
Lampard’s chipped free-kick saw the Spaniard glance in a brilliant header that left keeper Timo Hildebrand utterly stranded – but the ball thudded against the angle of post and bar and came out.
Torres headed another Lampard corner just wide at the far post as Chelsea broke quickly again. At the other end Howedes nodded just wide from close in – but then Chelsea struck on the break again.
This time Hazard won the ball and beat his man before sending Oscar racing away.
The Brazilian held off a challenge and squared the ball for Torres to coolly round Hildebrand and slide the ball home for an excellent goal.
It was the first time the £50 million man had netted twice in a game since April.

Schalke (4-2-3-1): Hildebrand; Uchida, Howedes, Matip, Aogo; Jones (Kolasinac 70), Neustadter; Clemens, Meyer (Goretzka 78), Draxler; Boateng (Szalai 70). Booked: Jones, Neustadter.
Chelsea (4-4-1-1): Cech; Ivanovic, Terry, Cahill, Azpilicueta; Hazard (Eto’o 88), Ramires, Lampard, Schurrle (Mikel 72); Oscar (Luiz 83); Torres. Booked: Cahill. Goals: Torres 5, 69, Hazard 87.
Referee: V Kassai (Hun).
NEXT UP: Chelsea – Sun: Man City (h) league.

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Star:

Schalke 0 - Chelsea 3: Fernando Torres strikes twice to sink Germans

FERNANDO TORRES finally gave Jose Mourinho a decent night out in Germany.
By James Dobson
The rejuvenated Spanish striker bagged a goal in each half in an awesome display by the Blues.
Torres was simply unstoppable on the night, as he ­nodded home after five minutes and then struck again as Mourinho’s team withstood any Schalke pressure.
He also had a hand in the third, his dummy run giving Eden Hazard the space to fire low into the corner in the 87th minute.
And the Torres super show, on his 100th Chelsea start, allowed his manager to improve his wretched record in Germany.
In six previous Champions League games, in charge of Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real ­Madrid, Mourinho had lost the lot – including two semi-finals.
Mourinho sprang a ­surprise before kick-off as he named Cesar Azpilicueta at left-back instead of the injured ­Ashley Cole
The Spaniard, normally a right-back, was one of five changes from the side that beat Cardiff on Saturday.
Chelsea were facing a Schalke side hit by injuries but still with wins in their opening two Group E games and 14 goals in their last five matches.
And The Special One knew that a second defeat would be a massive setback.
Instead, Chelsea got off to a dream start.
Frank Lampard’s near-post corner in the fifth minute saw Branislav Ivanovic outfox the defence with a flick-on and there was Torres, unmarked at the far post, to nod into the roof of the net. All three of the Spaniard’s goals this season have come in cup games, but it was ­exactly what Chelsea needed in a tricky tie.
After that the Blues sat deep, with Oscar playing off Torres as their most ­attacking players.
And it was Blues skipper John Terry’s first game back in Gelsenkirchen since he was a member of the England team that crashed out of the World Cup against ­Portugal on penalties in 2006.
Atsuto Uchida finally broke through down the left for the Germans, but then fired an angled shot over.
It was mostly disciplined stuff from Chelsea, but they were coming under increasing pressure.
With key striker Klaas-Jan Huntelaar injured, Schalke had ex-Tottenham man Kevin-Prince Boateng up front, but he made little early impression.
From longer range though, Boateng then forced Petr Cech to tip his 25-yard shot over the bar.
From the corner Cech had to come to Chelsea’s rescue again, as he palmed over a header from Benedikt Howedes.
Azpilicueta then blocked Julian Draxler’s shot as Schalke began to build up a head of steam.
Chelsea almost added to their lead five minutes into the second half and it was Torres again causing Schalke problems.
Lampard’s chipped free-kick saw the Spaniard glance in a brilliant header that left goalkeeper Timo Hildebrand stranded – but the ball thudded against the angle of post and bar and came out.
Torres then nodded ­another Lampard corner just wide at the far post as Chelsea broke quickly. Schalke had lots of possession in and around the penalty area, but Cech was not being forced to make any real saves as Terry and Co stood strong in front of him.
Howedes nodded just wide from close in as Schalke kept probing – but then Chelsea struck on the break again.
This time Hazard, who had had a quiet game until then, won the ball and beat his man before sending ­Oscar racing away.
The Brazilian held off a challenge and squared the ball for Torres to coolly round Hildebrand and slide the ball home for an excellent goal.
It was the first time the £50m man had netted twice in a game since April.
The third came three minutes from time.
Ramires cleared upfield and the ball was collected by Hazard. Torres’ run took the defender away and the Belgian raced on to fire home a low shot.