Wednesday, December 10, 2008

morning papers cluj home 2-1


The TimesDecember 10, 2008
Chelsea escape Champions League meeting with Jose MourinhoChelsea 2 CFR Cluj 1Martin Samuel, Chief Football Correspondent
If you want anything done properly, do it yourself is the adage, and Chelsea spurned the need of a helping hand from Roma yesterday to make their own way into the last 16 of the Champions League. They will not enter the draw on December 19 as group winners, which is a source of embarrassment, but tournament veterans such as Sir Alex Ferguson regard the order of qualification as pretty much irrelevant these days. As if to prove it, by coming second, Chelsea have avoided the possibility of an early meeting with the Inter Milan side now coached by José Mourinho. Inter somehow contrived to finish short of Panathinaikos in group B.
It is not time to pass round the cigars just yet, however. As it stands, Chelsea’s opponents could include the league leaders in Spain and France and a team that are joint top on points in Germany. A tie against Barcelona would renew old rivalries, although with Mourinho and Frank Rijkaard, the former coaches, now replaced, there will be no incendiary spark, while a pairing with Panathinaikos, of Greece, will be considered fortunate, considering the way Olympiacos from that country were brushed aside last season. Chelsea could also face one of Lyons and Bayern Munich, and one from Juventus and Real Madrid, although the Italian side are likelier to win the group, bringing the possible return to Stamford Bridge of Claudio Ranieri. Had Chelsea won the group, Inter, Atlético Madrid and Sporting Lisbon would already be lined up as potential opponents. Bread and bread, really. Ferguson probably has a point.
This was barely a return to form for Chelsea, although Yssouf Koné’s equalising goal in the 55th minute gave the tie a brief air of tension, before news came in that Roma were beating Bordeaux, meaning that Chelsea could lose and still progress. In the circumstances, then, perhaps the most pleasing factor was the return to the side, and to scoring form, of Didier Drogba, who was on the field for only seven minutes as a substitute before he relieved the pressure with a sublimely taken winner.
Drogba has not had the best year — sent off in the Champions League final, injured, banned by the FA for throwing a coin into the crowd against Burnley, fingered for allowing his agent to meet representatives of Inter — but beggars cannot be choosers and right now Chelsea followers, concerned that their season may be unravelling, will take a favour even if they are suspicious of its motives. Drogba, on his day arguably the finest striker in Europe, is capable of turning this campaign around almost single-handedly and, as such, received a welcome generally reserved for the sort of player who has been selfless and unassuming, not a royal pain in the neck.
It was a fantastic move that won the match and Drogba completed it with a flourish. John Obi Mikel carried the ball through the middle and fed Joe Cole, whose chip put Drogba in to bring the ball down and strike a stunning shot past Nuno Claro, the CFR Cluj goalkeeper, in one seamless move. “Welcome back, we’ve missed you,” a voice boomed through the Tannoy. It might not have been what Nicolas Anelka, the man who has done a creditable job filling Drogba’s boots, wanted to hear, but it was the truth.
As it was, Chelsea were the only team in the top eight seeds not to be through with a game to spare. It took a desperately fickle campaign to deliver this predicament, a boulevard of banana skins stretching out from what should have been a walk in the park. Luiz Felipe Scolari, the manager, went into the game denying claims, some from inside the club, that he is feeling the pressure. He did a fine job of hiding it if he was, although that might have changed had Cluj done more with two early chances.
Cluj are Champions League novices, but they deserve credit for making a game of this and in the seventh minute, Alvaro Pereira, the full back, broke down the left flank and struck a low shot that Petr Cech, the Chelsea goalkeeper, parried and then gathered at the next attempt. If that was too close for comfort, from the next attack, Hugo Alcântara headed the ball down and Eugen Trica almost forced it over the line, thwarted by desperate defence from Mikel.
From there, Chelsea enjoyed the bulk of possession and should have scored after 12 minutes when a free kick from Deco was met by Alex, unmarked, at the far post, heading the ball into the turf with such force that it bounced over the bar. Cluj looked vulnerable in the air, though, and in the 40th minute, so it proved.
Trica clumsily fouled Michael Ballack on the right of midfield, Deco’s free kick was deep and dangerous and the defence was more interested in dealing with John Terry, who has scored twice in the Champions League this season, bundling him to the floor but leaving Salomon Kalou unmolested. On his own in the six-yard box, he forced the ball past Nuno Claro.
Chelsea then made harder work of this than was necessary, conceding a goal when Koné — a member of the Rosenborg team who did for Mourinho last season — headed in a cross from Cristian Panin, but results elsewhere meant that they spent little time outside the comfort zone, mainly in the first half when the scores in both group A games were level.
It is this absence of surprise that is the great weakness of the Champions League group stage. Chelsea have not impressed in Europe this season, but that have not needed to and not one of the reforms designed by Michel Platini, the Uefa president, and implemented next season will make a damn bit of difference. If anything, as more minnows swim in the big pool, what Uefa terms match-day six (and who said romance was dead in football) will increasingly cease to matter.
Chelsea (4-1-2-2-1): P Cech — J Bosingwa, Alex, J Terry, A Cole — J Obi Mikel (sub: W Bridge, 87min) — M Ballack, Deco — J Cole (sub: J Belletti, 74), S Kalou (sub: D Drogba, 64) — N Anelka. Substitutes not used: C Cudicini, B Ivanovic, P Ferreira, M Stoch. Booked: Belletti, Mikel Obi.
CFR Cluj (4-2-3-1): Nuno Claro — C Panin, Cadu, H Alcantara, Alvaro Pereira — Dani, G Muresan — Juan Culio, E Trica (sub: S Peralta, 71), S Dubarbier (sub: E Kone, 59) — Y Koné. Substitutes not used: L Hirschfeld, Sanchez Prette, C Deac, De Sousa, Diego Ruiz. Booked: Trica.
Referee: P Frojdfeldt (Sweden).
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Telegraph:
Didier Drogba scores winner to send Chelsea into knock-out stages of Champions LeagueChelsea (1) 2 CFR Cluj (0) 1 By Henry Winter at Stamford Bridge Chelsea are a qualified success. Luiz Felipe Scolari’s side have reached the knock-out stages of the Champions League but know they must raise their game if they are to continue on the road to the Rome climax.
Chelsea must get Ricardo Carvalho back in action, pray that Frank Lampard avoids injury and suspension and keep Didier Drogba fit and focused. Chelsea will need Carvalho’s positional nous and knack of the well-timed interception. Missing the banned Lampard on Wednesday night, Chelsea lacked direction in midfield.
In attack, Chelsea seemed a far more assertive unit with Drogba, giving them a real variety, allowing them to take a more aerial approach at times. Drogba scored the winner, after Salomon Kalou and Yssouf Kone had traded goals either side of half-time.
At least Chelsea’s presence in next week’s draw will end the ludicrous questioning of Scolari’s capabilities. The Brazilian has masterminded a successful World Cup campaign, so he knows how to shape formidable teams, and clearly has the intelligence and experience to mould Chelsea into a trophy-winning force.
Until Drogba’s fine goal midway through the second half, Chelsea had been far from convincing. Kalou’s goal late in the first half had briefly eased the tension around the Bridge but Yssouf Kone’s equaliser 10 minutes after the interval made it a nervy time for Chelsea until Drogba muscled his way into the game, emerging from the bench to score a terrific goal.
Before Kalou’s goal, Scolari’s men had been particularly poor. Michael Ballack was constantly outmanoeuvred in midfield while Petr Cech was less than convincing in goal. Amazingly for a competition that prides itself on organisational detail, Champions League officials had failed to notice that Cech’s fluorescent top clearly clashed with that adorning the Swedish referee, Peter Frojdfeldt.
Chelsea had hoped that Cech would see little of the ball, but Cluj’s enterprise indicted they were not visiting London simply for the bargains on Oxford Street. The last time Frojdfeldt had been in London 13 months ago, Croatia’s players had gone shopping and then humiliated England at Wembley.
John Terry’s side had been warned. Out of contention for continued European involvement, Cluj had pride to play for, as well as a chance to impress watching scouts, and their 4-2-3-1 formation exuded a counter-attacking threat that hinted at an embarrassing evening for Chelsea.
Prior to Kalou’s goal, Chelsea had been forced to weather a brief storm: not a real Beaufort Scale-buster, but a significant buffeting none the less. Cech was by far the busier keeper in the opening exchanges, dropping to his left to scramble away a shot from Alvaro Pereira, Kluj’s adventurous left-back. Not for the last time, Chelsea were cut open down the flanks.
Over on the right, the lively Juan Culio soon executed a series of step-overs that comprehensively bamboozled Ashley Cole. The Argentinian lifted over a steepling cross to the far-post met by Hugo Alcantara. The Brazilian’s nod-down would have reached Yssouf Kone but for an athletic interception by Mikel. These were worrying times for Chelsea.
Lacking the suspended Frank Lampard, the injured Ricardo Carvalho and with Drogba on the bench for an hour until replacing Kalou, Chelsea struggled to find their rhythm until Kalou’s well-taken strike six minutes from the break.
Ashley Cole and Jose Bosingwa tried to give them width, Deco sought to weave some magic in the middle while Joe Cole was always a threat, firing just wide after 25 minutes. Alex went close, rising powerfully to meet Deco’s free-kick, but heading over.
Chelsea needed inspiration, someone to take real responsibility in midfield. Ballack failed to impose his considerable talent in the first half, shooting badly over as the game nudged the half-hour mark. The German did not seem to relish the physical aspect of Cluj’s play, tumbling under a 40th-minute challenge from Eugen Trica that was hardly brutal.
Adding insult to iniquity, Chelsea scored from the free-kick. Deco hoisted the ball into the area where Cluj seemed more interested in blocking off Terry and Alex. Gabriel Muresan was most at fault, the Cluj captain allowing the ball to carry through to the unmarked Kalou.
The Ivory Coast attacker responded to this unexpected gift adroitly. His first touch was perfect, controlling the ball and nudging it into the ideal shooting position. Kalou’s right foot then slammed the ball past the exposed Nuno Claro.
Two of Kalou’s compatriots commanded the attention as the second half unfolded. Yssouf Kone began to run more menacingly at Chelsea’s defence while Didier Drogba’s warm-up drew huge applause from the Matthew Harding Stand. Kalou almost engineered a second for Chelsea, ushering Anelka through but Nuno Claro saved well from the Frenchman.
Cluj’s players, responding to the exhortations of their small but vocal support, stormed upfield, exploiting poor positioning by Chelsea’s defenders. As Ashley Cole struggled to deal with the white-shirted waves flooding his way, Juan Culio created space for Cristian Panin. The Romanian’s cross was magnificent, ideally weighted to clear Alex and reach Yssouf Kone, who headed joyously into the net.
Chelsea responded, Joe Cole denied by Nuno Claro at close range. Drogba charged on to a royal reception, scoring with 19 minutes remaining. His goal was a gem, majestically created and confidently taken. Mikel began the move, ghosting through the middle, lifting the ball through to Joe Cole. The England international saw Drogba’s run, and clipped the ball into his path. Drogba’s finish was terrific, the ball placed expertly underneath Nuno Claro.
Inspired by Drogba’s presence, Chelsea were a completely different proposition now, confidence flowing through them. Juliano Belletti tried his luck from range and almost caught out Nuno Claro. Ballack perked up, the midfielder bending in a shot that Cluj's keeper parried away. Chelsea need to start the knock-out stages as they finished on Tuesday night.
Qualifiers for Champions League first knock-out round
ArsenalAtletico MadridBarcelonaBayern MunichChelseaInter MilanJuventusLiverpoolLyonManchester UnitedPanathinaikosPortoRomaReal MadridSporting LisbonVillarreal
Draw to be made in Nyon, Switzerland, on Dec 19. Fixtures
1st knock-out round: 1st leg, Feb 24-25; 2nd leg, March 10-11.
Qtr-finals: 1st leg, April 7-8; 2nd leg: April 14-15.
Semi-finals: 1st leg, April 28-29; 2nd leg, May 5-6.
Final: May 27 (Rome).
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Independent:
Drogba and group therapy lift the Chelsea depression
Chelsea 2 CFR Cluj 1
By Sam Wallace at Stamford Bridge
Grumpy, rebellious, even irresponsible for getting himself sent off in that Champions League final in May, but once a goalscorer, always a goalscorer. Didier Drogba emerged from the longest sulk in history last night to score the winner for Chelsea which is just about the quickest way to earn forgiveness for all the sins of the modern-day footballer.
Not that it was all plain sailing for Chelsea, especially when the team from Transylvania, ahem, drew blood on 55 minutes with an equaliser which necessitated substitute Drogba's winner. His goal was the first he has scored in the Champions League since his two against Liverpool in the semi-final second leg in April and prompted a wistful "it's good to have you back" from the stadium announcer. He might be back, but for just how long?
The winner, after Salomon Kalou had initially given Chelsea the lead, was vintage Drogba. Given just the slightest sight of goal after a beautifully worked move the striker pounced. It was a glimpse of what Chelsea might be with a truly in-form centre-forward capable of taking advantage of all that power and experience in the team. Drogba must now be a candidate to start on Sunday against West Ham, which will be his first since 27 September. The striker is much more than just "an option" as Scolari describes him.
In the end Chelsea's result was academic as Bordeaux were defeated in Roma leaving the Italians top of Group A. Also defeated last night were Jose Mourinho's Internazionale which means they cannot face Chelsea when draw is made a week on Friday. Scolari could, however, find himself up against Panathinaikos or Barcelona, the form team of Europe who would flatten Chelsea on the basis of this performance.
As John Terry later pointed out, this is not Chelsea at their intimidating, single-minded best. They found themselves unsettled by Cluj's resilient little band of Africans, South Americans, Portuguese (and the occasional Romanian) who were anxious to make an impression. Alex also proved that it is not just Transylvania's most famous son who is uneasy around crosses when his misjudgment let Yssouf Kone in for the equalising goal.
To give Scolari his due, he did change the formation of his team at the start of the second half, pushing Kalou into attack alongside Nicolas Anelka and giving 4-4-2 a chance instead. This, perhaps, is the elusive Plan B which Chelsea have been searching for in recent weeks although no one seemed to fancy playing out on the left side of midfield which was the flank from which Cluj's equaliser originated.
In the end, it was the quality of many of Chelsea's players which told. John Obi Mikel was excellent, although the indifferent spell which Deco is experiencing is cause for alarm. They missed the suspended Frank Lampard in midfield, where Michael Ballack and Deco seemed only to drift in and out of the game. In the early stages, the lively Juan Culio, an Argentine who has pitched up in Romania's third biggest city, looked like he might even precipitate an upset.
This trip to London evidently offered much more to Cluj than swapping shirts with a famous Chelsea player or having a team photograph in front of Buckingham Palace. They had come to prove they were more than just cannon-fodder and came close to scoring in the 17th minute. Culio's cross was headed down by Hugo Alcantara and Mikel only just managed to nick the ball away in time from the Portuguese defender Cadu.
At least Cluj had resisted the temptation to put 10 men behind the ball but, ultimately, they paid the price for it. Alex and Joe Cole had missed chances when Deco's free-kick on 40 minutes looked to be falling to John Terry who was fouled by Gabriel Muresan. The Chelsea captain had barely had a chance to appeal for the penalty when the ball dropped at Kalou's feet and he had time for a touch before sweeping it in.
There were only three Romanians in the Cluj first XI, the same amount of Englishmen as there were in Chelsea's team and they came back well. After Anelka missed a chance to put Chelsea two goals ahead, the ball was worked to Cristian Panin who crossed to the far post, over the head of the out-of-position Alex, and right into the path of Kone. He picked the corner of Petr Cech's goal for the equaliser.
There was tension in Stamford Bridge, where the fans seemed oblivious to the fact that Bordeaux were losing to Roma. Scolari was experiencing one of those lonely moments on the touchline that has been the fate of his predecessors at this club and he sent Drogba to warm-up. In the meantime, Joe Cole had a shot from point blank range saved.
The day was saved by Drogba's winning goal, a brilliantly executed move that began with Mikel. He surged forward in midfield and chipped the ball to Joe Cole who in turn waited for Drogba to move ahead of his marker before dropping the ball into his path.
The Chelsea striker took one touch to kill it and then another, very quickly, to toe it past the goalkeeper Claro. It is what Drogba does best, although much too rarely of late.
Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Alex, Terry, A Cole; Mikel (Bridge, 88); J Cole (Belletti, 74), Ballack, Deco, Kalou (Drogba, 65); Anelka. Substitutes not used: Cudicini (gk), Ivanovic, Ferreira, Stoch.
cfr Cluj (4-2-3-1): Claro; Panin, Alcantara, Cadu, Pereira; Muresan, Dani; Dubarbier (E Kone, 60), Trica (Peralta, 72), Culio; Y Kone. Substitutes not used: Hirschfeld (gk), Prette, Deac, De Sousa, Ruiz.
Referee: P Frojdfeldt (Sweden).
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Guardian:
Drogba delivers Chelsea into last 16 and soothes Scolari's sufferingChelsea 2 Kalou 40, Drogba 71 CFR Cluj 1 Kone, Y 55
Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge
The sense of jeopardy was a figment of the imagination, but Chelsea were not to know that. With Bordeaux's defeat in Rome, they could have lost here and still advanced to the knockout phase of the Champions League. As it was, Chelsea showed why there have been uncomfortable times for them in this campaign.
Their play was laboured for much of the night. No one can underestimate just how disturbing it had been to experience even the smallest doubt about their survival in the competition. Premier League clubs are now expected to advance with ease, as Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal had done in the previous round of fixtures.
Still, there was a particular satisfaction for Chelsea here. Didier Drogba came on to score the winner, showing that, despite all the injury worries, he can still be decisive. His previous goals in the Champions League, against Liverpool in last season's semi-final, had more resonance, but this may have been a significant moment in Drogba's recovery.
His services will be needed because Chelsea, as runners-up, could very well be subjected to a gruelling tie in the last 16. Drogba showed what he can offer with an efficient finish from a pass that Joe Cole chipped over the defence in the 71st minute. By that stage Nicolas Anelka had been shifted to a slightly deeper role towards the left, but there will still be an air of danger about Chelsea if he and Drogba continue to be on the field together.
Luiz Felipe Scolari's team had been ill-at-ease for much of the night. Players and spectators alike were all too aware that Stamford Bridge, after defeats here by Liverpool, Arsenal and even Burnley, is no longer a stronghold. Cluj illustrated the fragility with their equaliser in the 55th minute. Under previous regimes, it would have been unimaginable both that the visitors would make such simple progress on their right and that the full-back Cristian Panin's deep cross would be headed home so comfortably by Yssouf Koné.
With their European campaign certain to end here, the visitors had nothing whatsoever at stake. However, a side in that situation also has nothing to lose and Cluj were far from apathetic. It was faintly disquieting for Scolari's line-up, who ostensibly had so much in their favour, and Salamon Kalou's goal, five minutes from the interval, was celebrated with relief.
Chelsea must have anticipated being in complete command. As if facing the bottom team in group A were not enough, there was further encouragement in the absence through injury of Cluj's first choice goalkeeper Eduard Stancioiu. Scolari, appreciating there was no need to gamble, had concluded that Anelka and Drogba should not start together for the first time in his tenure.
While suspension ruled out Frank Lampard, there was a renewal of vitality in midfield with the return from injury of Joe Cole. The latter also lowered the average age of a department of the team that included the veterans Deco and Michael Ballack. That is an entirely serious consideration since Chelsea, on occasion, have been pedestrian.
Cole had been unavailable for the defeats in the Premier League and his energy was ultimately important here, even it looked at first that he was slightly out of touch and might have been hurried back into premature service.
The first half was well advanced before there was any sense that the visitors had been pinned down. Nuno Claro's credentials as replacement goalkeeper had not been inspected. Cluj, indeed, had created a clear opportunity of their own. Following a 17th-minute corner, Juan Culio crossed deep from the right and the header from the centre-back Hugo Alcantara needed to be hoofed away by Mikel John Obi.
When Chelsea achieved their breakthrough, it came in curious fashion. Deco's 40th-minute free-kick was aimed at John Terry, who tumbled as his marker tangled with him. The ball flew on beyond a distracted defence and Kalou showed good control before crashing the ball home.
The goal had been scored with the team's first attempt on target. There is an efficiency to that, but it is not of the type to delight a manager or a home crowd. Chelsea are unaccustomed to playing for high stakes at this stage of the Champions League. There was sighting of liberation when Anelka shot against Claro, following build-up by Deco and Kalou, but within seconds Koné had cancelled out Chelsea' lead.
Thanks to Drogba, there was a reaction to adversity. Bordeaux were already slipping towards defeat in Rome by then, but it would be ignominious for Chelsea, last season's finalists, to depend on events beyond their control. In the end they had taken control of this match and, therefore, of their own fate.

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Mail:
Chelsea 2 CFR Cluj 1: Supersub Drogba seals it for Scolari's strugglersBy Matt Lawton
No wonder Luiz Felipe Scolari is looking tired. This was supposed to be an easy game. A case of no pressure, no problem and a passage to the last 16 of the Champions League so simple that Chelsea’s manager said he would return to Brazil if they failed to win. But a side who had not won at Stamford Bridge for more than five weeks made alarmingly hard work of this contest, stuttering to victory against an unfancied Romanian team who are already eliminated. In the end, Didier Drogba stepped off the bench to score a 71st-minute goal that even Burnley’s fans would accept was right on the money. From the first touch to the toepoked finish, it was a wonderful effort.
But Cluj made Chelsea sweat, very nearly turning this into a Transylvanian horror show with a determined performance that reflected well on them and embarrassed their illustrious hosts. The points available had no value to Cluj but they still had their pride — and it was wounded pride after Scolari’s ill-advised, not to mention dismissive, remarks. Yssouf Kone said Scolari would be in trouble if the visitors scored and the Brazilian must have almost died inside when the powerfully-built striker rose above Alex to meet Cristian Panin’s cross with a terrific header in the 55th minute. It cancelled out Salomon Kalou’s 40th-minute opener, put Chelsea at the mercy of events between Roma and Bordeaux and increased the pressure on the shoulders of Scolari and his players.
A sense of panic spread through Stamford Bridge, as it had done when John Mikel Obi cleared a Cluj header off Chelsea’s line in what proved a difficult first half, in which nervous Chelsea managed just that one Kalou effort on target. Scolari, understandably, was a more relaxed figure afterwards, even offering to translate for members of the foreign media. His mood has no doubt improved in the knowledge that Drogba has now made a welcome return and Ricardo Carvalho will soon be back to add some much needed solidity to a troubled defence. Their absence does not, however, explain the sudden loss of form at the Bridge. Chelsea’s away form, after all, has been impressive and their position in the Barclays Premier League highly promising. But they have become rather like England prior to their revival under Fabio Capello. Afraid, seemingly, to play at home.
It is extraordinary when this ground has for so long been a fortress. A ground that, until Liverpool and Arsenal — not to mention Burnley in the Carling Cup — had not witnessed a home defeat in the league for more than four years. Now, however, Chelsea look formidable only when they take to the road. Well the English road anyway, because in Europe they have also been experiencing problems. A far cry from the side that came within a missed penalty of lifting the European Cup last season. From the very start last night, Chelsea seemed anxious. Scolari might have dismissed any talk of pressure but anxiety spread through Chelsea’s ranks the moment goalkeeper Petr Cech made a mess of what amounted to a weak effort from Alvaro Pereira and had to rely on John Terry to clear.Alex’s failure to then convert a teasing free-kick from Deco appeared to prove similarly stressful for Chelsea’s animated manager, as did a jinking run down the left flank by Sebastian Dubarbier. The Romanians might have had nothing to play for but they were doing rather well, very nearly scoring when Hugo Alcantara met a fine cross from Juan Culio with a header that Obi did well to clear off the line. Again Cech was beaten, again Scolari seemed concerned. While Chelsea enjoyed much of the possession, they were struggling to muster a response. Joe Cole unleashed a shot that whistled wide but the decision to leave Drogba on the bench was already starting to look like a mistake. A disagreement between Scolari and a pedantic fourth official followed, with the Brazilian objecting to being told that he had to remain within the confines of the technical area.
Scolari cursed then and he cursed every time his players cheaply lost the ball. An exasperated figure, he would spin towards his assistants in disgust before spinning back to bark out further orders. Only when Kalou made the breakthrough did he even begin to relax. The goal owed more to good fortune than good football, Deco floating in a free-kick that somehow eluded the Cluj defence — although this perhaps had something to do with the disruptive presence of John Terry — and fell to Kalou, who controlled the ball with his right foot before driving it home from close range. It was to Chelsea’s credit that they did not crack when Kone struck. Even Scolari waited a further 10 minutes before finally swapping Kalou for Drogba, which was a courageous call when some managers would have resisted the temptation to take off the goalscorer. Ultimately, it proved an inspired substitution. Joe Cole had already forced a fine save from Nuno Claro and when he delivered a delightful chip in front of Drogba, Chelsea’s striker first brought the ball under control before guiding his shot beautifully past the Cluj goalkeeper. Payback time. Match facts CHELSEA (4-3-3): Cech 7; Bosingwa 6, Alex 6, Terry 7, A Cole 7; Ballack 7, Obi 8 (Bridge 87), Deco 6; Kalou 7 (Drogba 64, 7), Anelka 6, J Cole 7 (Belletti 75). Booked: Belletti, Obi. CFR CLUJ (4-4-2): Nuno Claro 6; Panin 6, Cadu 6, Alcantara 5, Alvaro Pereira 6; Juan Culio 6, Dani 5, Muresan 5, Dubarbier 5 (E Kone 59, 6); Trica 6 (Peralta 72), Y Kone 6. Booked: Trica, Culio. Man of the match: John Mikel Obi. Referee: Peter Frojdfeldt (Swe).
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Sun:
From SHAUN CUSTIS at Stamford Bridge SO Big Phil can rest easy for the time being and put his passport back in the bedside drawer.
Scolari had jokingly vowed to flee home to Brazil in shame if he could not get past Cluj and qualify for the Champions League last 16.
But though Chelsea were far from convincing, sub Didier Drogba made certain there was no need for his manager to book a late-night flight out of the capital.
Drogba netted the winner on 71 minutes, seven minutes after coming on for Salomon Kalou, who had given Chelsea a first-half lead.
Yssouf Kone caused some anxiety around Stamford Bridge with his headed equaliser 10 minutes after the interval — but the Romanians could not hold on for a surprise point.
Scolari claimed before this game that there was minimal pressure on him compared to being manager of Brazil.
That could not hide the fact that the Blues, as skipper John Terry admitted, have been well below par in recent weeks.
It has been a difficult period for Scolari — but the fact Chelsea got the job done here is an important step forward.
Seeing Drogba back in full flow after injuries and suspension is also a major plus.
Even if he has been talking to Inter Milan behind his manager’s back, the fans will forgive him so long as he does the business in a Chelsea shirt.
While Nicolas Anelka has been banging in the goals in the Ivorian’s absence, Chelsea are a much more dangerous proposition when Drogba is leading the line.
The moment Count Drogula bared his fangs as he entered the field as a 64th-minute substitute, the visitors from Transylvania backed off.
They were visibly intimidated until Drogba put them out of their misery with a stake through the heart.
Although Joe Cole lost the ball initially, John Obi Mikel was in quickly to intercept and he lobbed the ball back to the England midfielder.
Cole spotted Drogba’s powerful burst through the middle and measured a marvellous chip into the Ivorian’s path.
Drogba did not have to break stride as he prodded the ball under the diving Nuno Claro and Cluj were finally buried.
Scolari’s quip had cranked up Cluj with their two star men Juan Culio and Kone vowing to make him pay.
It gave an extra edge to a match which, at the start of play, the Blues had to win to be sure of going through.
Yet in the end they could have lost and still qualified because Roma beat Bordeaux in the other Group A encounter.
Chelsea were edgy and nervous, their vulnerability all too apparent. The crowd were just as twitchy and Cluj could sense it.
They rattled the home side early on, pressing them into the corners and not allowing ball-players like Joe Cole any freedom.
Without the suspended Frank Lampard, Chelsea were struggling to pick holes in the defence and too often they were being robbed of possession in the final third. Even the normally reliable Petr Cech was far from convincing when he went down in instalments to shovel away a speculative long shot from Alvaro Pereira.
A curling free-kick by Deco gave Chelsea their first chance but Alex’s downward header bounced over.
Yet Cluj caused more trouble as Culio picked out Hugo Alcantara and his header into the six-yard box required an excellent clearance from Mikel, otherwise Cadu would surely have put the Romanian side ahead.
Cole found some freedom at last after chesting down Michael Ballack’s pass — and the wideman unleashed a right-foot drive which rattled the advertising boards beyond the post.
And Ballack was party to Chelsea finally getting their noses in front five minutes before the break.
The German international had his legs taken away from him to earn a free-kick.
Deco’s delivery was right in the mixer and, as Terry went down in the area, there were loud appeals for a penalty. However the ball dropped to the feet of Kalou, who had time to control and rifle a close-range shot high into the net.
That seemed to put Chelsea well on their way to the knockout phase. And when Kalou put Anelka in on goal on 54 minutes, the French frontman had the chance to wrap it up in a big, fancy bow. But he delayed a split second too long and Nuno Claro smothered.
That was the prelude to Cluj’s shock equaliser a minute later, which was remarkably simple in its execution.
Cristian Panin got away down the right and crossed deep for Kone, who climbed above Alex to head home.
The Burkina Faso striker — Cluj’s record signing at £700,000 — had played for Rosenborg at Stamford Bridge in Jose Mourinho’s last game as Chelsea boss when the Norwegians earned a shock draw.But that was not to be the result on this occasion.
Cole should have put the Blues back in front but his shot was well saved by the inspired Claro.Then Drogba entered the arena and showed him how it should be done.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

sunday papers bolton away 2-0


TimesDecember 6, 2008
Nicolas Anelka fires ChelseaBolton 0 Chelsea 2
Pete Oliver at Reebok stadium
DIDIER DROGBA is likely to return for Chelsea when they look to secure their passage from the Champions League group stages on Tuesday night and chief executive Peter Kenyon says he will not be sold in the January transfer window. But with Nicolas Anelka continuing his prolific scoring to lead Chelsea to an eighth successive away league win this season, who is the main man of Stamford Bridge?
Injuries have badly disrupted Drogba’s season, not to mention the suspension incurred for throwing a coin into the crowd during the Carling Cup defeat by Burnley that sidelined him here, but the fact remains he is yet to score a Premier League goal this season.
In his absence Anelka has carried Chelsea’s attack and when it comes to commitment to the cause it is the Frenchman, hardly renowned for such a quality during his nomadic career, who appears to have the edge. While Drogba has been linked with a reunion with Jose Mourinho at Inter Milan, Anelka has got his head down and blossomed.
Drogba at his best may have helped Chelsea avoid potentially costly home defeats by Liverpool and Arsenal and his return will obviously give Luiz Felipe Scolari welcome options but when the Brazilian badly needed a result yesterday after three games without a win and the first murmurings of discontent, Anelka was the one who delivered, to keep Chelsea within a point of leaders Liverpool.
“The spirit in the camp is different class,” said first-team coach Ray Wilkins. “You don’t perform like that if there is dissent in the camp. Where that came from, I don’t know. At this stage of the season we are in a fantastic position and we will get back on track at home.”
Anelka scored 23 goals for Bolton in an 18-month stint at the Reebok stadium before moving to Chelsea in January. When he found the net on his return it was for the ninth time in seven league games, taking his Premier League career tally to 99. The ton would probably have come up in the second half but for an incorrect offside flag but the 29-year-old is still the top flight’s leading scorer, with 15 in all competitions. “If I was a Bolton fan I wouldn’t take it personally because the form he’s in, he would have scored against anybody,” Wilkins said.
Anelka’s pace and ease of movement add a wonderful fluency to Chelsea’s attack, which, augmented by the forward runs of Deco, Frank Lampard and Salomon Kalou, again threw off the shackles away from home and was too much for Bolton to deal with.
Bolton’s plan was to starve the Blues of time and space. Unfortunately for them it didn’t work until the game had gone. “We really needed to be more intense in the first half. Only a few were playing with the tempo we wanted,” said Bolton manager Gary Megson.
Had Kevin Davies scored with a close-range header from Gavin McCann’s early corner Bolton might have harboured hopes of building on a run of four wins in five games but his effort went too high. Within 90 seconds Anelka had swooped to dive and head in a Jose Bosingwa cross after stealing a yard from marker Andy O’Brien.
“I wasn’t surprised, given the opportunity he had. Any centre-forward in the Premier League would have scored that. I was a bit disappointed in the manner it came about,” said Megson.
After five successive wins on this ground Chelsea were never likely to lose after that. A second goal from Deco after 21 minutes, acrobatically volleyed in, guaranteed it. Despite some concerted Bolton pressure in the second half, Chelsea should have added to their lead on the break through Deco, Lampard and Bosingwa.
BOLTON WANDERERS: Jaaskelainen 6, Steinsson 6, Cahill 6, A O’Brien 5, Samuel 5 (Smolarek 80min), Davies 5, Muamba 6 (Gardner h-t, 5), McCann 6, Nolan 6, Taylor 5, Elmander 5
CHELSEA: Cech 5, Bosingwa 7 (Ivanovic 90min), Alex 6, Terry 8, A Cole 7, Mikel 6, Kalou 6 (Ferreira 83min), Lampard 7, Ballack 6, Deco 7, Anelka 8
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Telegraph:
Deco and Nicolas Anelka keep up Chelsea's winning run on the roadBolton Wanderers (0) 0 Chelsea (2) 2 By Derick Allsop
When your game is supposedly faltering and you are confronted by the Premier League's in form team, you could be excused a sense of trepidation. Chelsea, palpably, had no such concerns.
They restored the old order with an economy of endeavour and purpose that suggested the defeat by Arsenal inflicted near flesh wounds.
Chelsea were doubtless content to be back on the road. This was their 11th consecutive league win away from home, a record in the top division, and appropriately attained on the ground where they secured their first title of the Abramovich regime.
The making of this season's champions will, of course, demand sterner examination. Bolton had failed to score against Chelsea here in six years and must have feared the die was cast again when Kevin Davies squandered an early opportunity.
Instead the familiar conviction of Nicolas Anelka came back to torment Bolton and set the match on its irresistible course. The centre forward sold to Chelsea for £15 million 11 months ago registered his 15th goal of the campaign and his former club, having racked up four wins in five matches, was suddenly deflated.
Bolton's cause was all but lost by the 21st minute, when Deco acrobatically despatched Chelsea's second.
The Brazilian-born Portugal international ought to have given his side a third, early in the second half, but in the main Chelsea appeared satisfied with what they had and although Bolton mustered the occasional menace, an air of inevitability descended on the Reebok.
Even on a day when Petr Cech appeared ill at ease, he still managed to snuff out the last prospect of a Bolton revival with an excellent stop from Gary Cahill.
Luiz Felipe Scolari, the Chelsea manager, deputed his assistant, Ray Wilkins, to field questions about alleged dissention in the camp.
"The spirit in the camp is different class," Wilkins maintained. "You don't perform like that if there's dissent in the camp. It hurts these lads when they lose. Where that story comes from I don't know.
"It was a fantastic performance. It was always going to be tough coming here, but you have to respect the way people play and match them. Our lads were up for a scrap and they showed that. Once we do that our football comes through."
Wilkins was equally adamant the club's apparent vulnerability at home was no cause for alarm. "Teams come and block up the midfield and put 10 men behind the ball. Overall we're delighted where we are, we're in a fantastic position. We'll get back on track at home."
Bolton should have ended that long search for a home goal against Chelsea when Gavin McCann's corner kick invited the fabled aerial attack of Davies. To the disbelief of everyone in the stadium, he headed over.
Barely two minutes later Chelsea led and this time the predictable materialised. Anelka, back in the environment where he resuscitated his Premier League career, met Jose Bosingwa's cross with a lunging header and the ball went in off the inside of the near post.
Salomon Kalou wisely ignored Anelka, drifting into an offside position, as Chelsea hunted a second. Jussi Jaaskelainen blocked Kalou's low shot but Michael Ballack headed the ball back into the area and Deco executed the perfect bicycle kick to beat the Bolton goalkeeper.
Bolton recovered sufficient composure to mount a more concerted threat in the second half yet rarely tested the reflexes of Cech. Deco skipped clear, only to miscue embarrassingly with his attempted chip and Frank Lampard shot straight at Jaaskelainen.
Bolton's plight committed them to an open match and they might have been rewarded when Johan Elmander made an excellent connection with his volley. Alas for the Swede, the ball cannoned away off John Terry.
Davies, persistently muscling his way into Chelsea's area, clicked on for Cahill to head goalwards and Cech responded splendidly. He was also alert enough to defy McCann from the rebound.
Gary Megson, the Bolton manager, acknowledged his team were always swimming against the tide after those two early goals.
He said: "I was bitterly disappointed with our defending for the first goal. Any centre forward in the Premier League would have scored that, not just Nic. We needed to be more intense but too few players gave us what we needed in the first-half.
"In the second-half we were better but by then we were two down."
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Mail:
Bolton 0 Chelsea 2: Anelka returns to haunt WanderersBy Daniel King
Another strange week for Chelsea ended in another convincing away victory, thanks to returning anti-hero Nicolas Anelka and Deco.
If a measure of a team's quality is its ability to recover from setbacks, then Luiz Felipe Scolari's Chelsea are a resilient lot.
Six days after another numbing home defeat and performance, it was business as usual away from Stamford Bridge.
Anelka, whose ineffectiveness in the three home games against the other members of the Big Four has not gone unnoticed, scored early on to ease any hangover from the Arsenal disappointment and Deco added a spectacular second.
Bolton, for all their endeavour and penalty claims in the second half, never really looked like recovering. For those who believe that all is not well at Chelsea, this match had all the makings of something symbolic.
On the ground where they won their first title for 50 years under another Portuguese-speaking coach, would Scolari's team falter and hand the title initiative back to Liverpool? No.
Because, on their travels, Scolari's team are a different animal from the side struggling at home recently and who, according to the boss, need reinforcements if they are to maintain a challenge on domestic and European fronts.
So the only landmarks reached yesterday were two more footnotes in the record books. This 11th successive away victory broke the top-flight standard set by Tottenham as long ago as 1960-1 and a fifth consecutive away clean sheet also earned Chelsea a share of the Premier League best.
Statistics can be damned lies, of course, but a run of eight away wins, 21 goals for and only one against is undeniably impressive. Scolari's theory is that teams are under more of an obligation to attack Chelsea at home, but are more content to sit deep at Stamford Bridge.
Romanian side Cluj will probably be no exception on Tuesday in a match which could yet force Chelsea out of the Champions League before the knockout stage and put Scolari under immense pressure less than four months into his first season.
It took Anelka less than nine minutes to settle the early Chelsea nerves yesterday.
The Frenchman and Jose Bosingwa have been Chelsea's players of the season so far and they combined for the crucial opening goal.
With the left foot which beat Scott Carson a few weeks earlier at West Bromwich, Bosingwa curled in a beautiful cross from the right which Anelka headed in via the far post from the edge of the six-yard box.
It was Anelka's 15th goal of the season and his 13th in the league, a tally which has been anything but unlucky for Chelsea in the frequent absence of Didier Drogba.
Moments earlier, Kevin Davies had headed over from Gavin McCann's corner to give Bolton fans a glimpse of an upset, but thereafter it was only a strangely erratic performance from Petr Cech which gave the away team any cause for concern.
A poor clearance gave Kevin Nolan a chance from 20 yards, but Chelsea were soon further ahead.
Salomon Kalou should have scored after a flowing break, but when Jussi Jaaskelainen saved, Michael Ballack headed sideways to Deco, who scored with a fabulous overhead volley.
Almost immediately, Anelka was on the end of another swift move but side-footed wide after Jaaskelainen's poor palmed clearance.
As Chelsea threatened to score from virtually every attack, the Bolton keeper had to cut out Bosingwa's cross after a sumptuous pass from Deco. Cech continued to offer Bolton hope and was almost robbed by Johan Elmander when two previous poor kicks made him think twice about clearing first time.
But the nearest the home team came to scoring was a Davies effort which Terry blocked. The second half was more of a contest, and more entertaining as a result.
Bolton threatened first, claiming a penalty when Alex seemed to push Davies, but Deco should have killed the game but shot embarrassingly wide when through on goal.
Frank Lampard shot straight at Jaaskelainen and then Bolton were appealing for another penalty, this time because they felt John Terry had blocked Elmander's fierce volley with his hands.
Cech finally did something constructive, keeping out Gary Cahill's diving header and recovering in time to gather McCann's weak follow-up.
After that flurry of excitement, the game petered out into what was essentially another routine Chelsea victory. Scolari will hope for something equally straightforward against Cluj.
BOLTON (4-5-1): Jaaskelainen; Steinsson, A O'Brien, Cahill, Samuel (Smolarek 80min); Davies, Muamba (Gardner 46), Nolan, McCann, Taylor; Elmander. Subs (not used): Al Habsi, Shittu, Riga, Basham, Obadeyi. Booked: Davies, A O'Brien.
CHELSEA (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa (Ivanovic 89), Alex, Terry, A Cole; Mikel; Kalou (Ferreira 83), Ballack, Lampard, Deco; Anelka. Subs (not used): Cudicini, Sinclair, Mineiro, Stoch, Woods. Booked: Ballack.
Referee: H Webb (S Yorkshire).
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Independent:
Deco crowns Chelsea kings of the road
Bolton Wanderers 0 Chelsea 2: Bolton proves a happy hunting ground once again for Blues who beat top-flight record for successive away victories
By Steve Tongue at the Reebok Stadium
If this venue has occasionally been a graveyard for Arsenal over recent years, Chelsea have always looked forward to the ride up the M61 and enjoyed the trip home all the more. Yesterday, they took all three points with them for the sixth successive season, without having conceded a single goal in that time. It was an 11th successive away victory, beating Bill Nicholson's Tottenham double team of 1960-1, and the only disappointment after a comfortable win was reaching the dressing-room to discover that Liverpool had also won, maintaining their one-point lead at the top of the table.
Stumbling at home recently against Newcastle and Arsenal had caused Chelsea to slip behind, but on their travels they have been unbeatable for almost a year. John Terry kept Bolton comfortably at bay with a typically solid display, the midfield dominated possession and there were goals in the first quarter of the game from Nicolas Anelka, against the club he left in January, and Deco with a superb volley. Anelka may have achieved little or nothing for Chelsea before the end of last season but he is a new man now with 15 goals to prove it.
"Our lads were well up for a scrap and once we combated that our football will come through," said their assistant manager Ray Wilkins. "At home, opponents have worked out a plan against us. But it was a fantastic performance." Now for Cluj in a decisive Champions' League game on Tuesday, when they must make home advantage count.
For Bolton it was back to cold reality after four wins in five November matches had propelled them from 19th place to ninth and should earn Gary Megson the Manager of the Month award. A shame it had to be Chelsea next, against whom they had not scored anywhere in seven encounters. There were only two real chances to do so all afternoon, the first arriving after only eight minutes play; but when Kevin Davies placed a free header over the bar from Gavin McCann's corner they paid a heavy price. Within two minutes Chelsea's Jose Bosingwa, an impressive presence at right-back all season, turned inside for a left-footed cross to the far post that caught Andy O'Brien watching the ballinstead of Anelka. The striker lunged forward to head in off a post.
If the visitors had needed settling down against a team in confident mood, that moment allowed it and much of the passing from then on was excellent. There was even the bonus of a second goal in the 21st minute. A fine, flowing move ran from Deco on the left to Michael Ballack in the centre, then Salomon Kalou, whose shot was beaten out by Jussi Jaaskelainen. Fatally, Bolton appeared to relax and Ballack headed the rebound down to Deco, who performed an exquisite mid-air volley to score his first goal since August and erase memories of a particularly disappointing performance against Arsenal.
Now Chelsea could keep things tighter and break out at speed, which they did to good effect. Anelka might even had added a third goal, shooting wide after Frank Lampard's free-kick was punched out to him. By the interval Petr Cech had not been required to make a save, although he once invited trouble by trying to dribble past Johan Elmander, who almost dispossessed him.
Elmander, running in to form now that he is fully fit, has been demonstrating his potential for the first time since signing from Toulouse, and had scored three times in the excellent victories at Middlesbrough and Sunderland. Instead of having Davies up alongside him, however, he was effectively on his own while Davies hugged the touchline. The intention was presumably to prevent Ashley Cole foraging forward, which worked to an extent but it was an essentially negative strategy.
Megson waited until half-timebefore changing anything, moving Davies into the middle and replacing his most defensive midfielder Fabrice Muamba with Ricardo Gardner.
With the backing of a supportive home crowd, Bolton pressed hard but should have been punished more than once on the counterattack. First two home defenders collided, allowing Kalou to send Deco clear for a chip that he played carelessly wide. Then Lampard burst into the penalty area, as is his wont, but could find no power as he met Anelka's pass. Two appeals for handball against the excellent Terry – the second might have been given – were all Bolton had to show for their pressure until the 72nd minute, when Davies nudged on a long throw and Gary Cahill's header at close range required Cech to produce his first and only save. "Against the top four you can stifle the life out of the game or try to play at a higher tempo," Megson said, "but in the first half we only had a few doing that."
Attendance: 22,023
Referee: Howard Webb
Man of the match: Terry
Match rating: 6/10
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The Observer
Sublime art of Deco keeps Chelsea winning awayBolton Wanderers 0 Chelsea 2 Anelka 9, Deco 21
Duncan Castles at the Reebok Stadium Luiz Felipe Scolari welcomes dialogue with his players, but there has been too much explaining to do of late.
It starts with explaining that his team have to play quick-passing, short-ball football because they have neither the power of Didier Drogba nor the longed-for trickery of Robinho in attack; that the squad are beset with so many chronic injuries that fitness training is better tempered; that there is no one in the youth team worthy of promotion and no cash from the owner to acquire new recruits.
Scolari was not up for talking yesterday, sending Ray Wilkins to straight-bat queries about dressing-room dissent. 'None whatsoever,' said the assistant manager. 'If you're looking at an angle then that team today might have fallen apart. The spirit in the camp is different class. You can't perform like that if there is dissension about.
'The training that they do is absolutely first class. They love it, they enjoy it and you can see today they don't need anything more intense. Their workrate is first class and they've been well up for every game they've played. No, unfortunately in football sometimes you get beat. Over the last couple of years that's been quite a rare occurrence and it hurts deeply when the lads are beaten. But there is certainly no dissension in the camp.'
What cannot be questioned, what requires no explanation is Chelsea's Premier League away form. Yesterday brought a record 11th consecutive top-flight victory; Scolari's eighth of a season in which his team have scored 21 goals on their League travels and conceded one.
When opponents are forced on to them by the expectations of the home support, Nicolas Anelka has room to run into as his team-mates trade passes and launch the counterattack. Goals flow freely, generally early, and the game is dead before energy levels ever become an issue.
Here Bolton were killed off before the floodlights were needed. Deco strung a ball across the penalty area, José Bosingwa gathered it with time to pick out Anelka. Unmarked but played onside by Andy O'Brien, the Frenchman headed in off an upright. 'I think any centre-forward in the Premiership would have scored that,' bemoaned Gary Megson.
His team responded with a clutch of corners and long shots without truly straining Petr Cech. Chelsea simply extended their lead. More precise passing around the home area teed up Salomon Kalou for a strike Jussi Jaaskelainen did well to parry. Unfortunately for the goalkeeper, his save rebounded to Michael Ballack, who headed square for Deco's clinical overhead.
Tongue-lashed by Megson, Bolton brought more conviction to the second half yet created little of note until John Terry followed his own header off the line with an upper-arm block of a Johan Elmander drive. 'Bigger teams get the decisions,' Megson said. 'I don't think that kind of decision would ever go our way today.'
If the defender's arm was close enough to his body to escape a penalty, Chelsea should have been four to the good by that point, Deco and Lampard both spurning one-on-ones with Jaaskelainen.
The game meandered on, Cech foiled Gary Cahill and Gavin McCann with an immaculate double save, full-time came, and Scolari headed for the bus. 'Sometimes he gets extremely tired,' Wilkins explained. 'He's just having a day off.' Fortunately, his problems did the same.
THE FANS' PLAYER RATINGS AND VERDICT
Aaron Haley, WorldwideWanderers.co.uk There's no disgrace in losing a game like that. They came out strong and went two goals up, and they were two goals that we really couldn't do much about. They have great quality in the final third and that showed. We weren't awful by any means. It was a fair result – unfortunately it was a good, even game that we lost. Deco showed what a special player he is with the overhead kick for a goal – they showed what a class side they are as a whole. In fact, they could have had more goals, but we didn't fall apart like maybe we would have previously. I'm really happy with the way we played. Elmander is putting himself about and has confidence after scoring a few goals, so he seems to be fitting into the side really well.
The fan's player ratings Jaaskelainen 6; Steinsson 8, Cahill 7, A O'Brien 7, Samuel 7 (Smolarek n/a); Davies 7, McCann 7; Nolan 7, Muamba 7 (Gardner 7), Taylor 7; Elmander 8
John Baines, Observer reader It wasn't our best performance – it looked a bit more like Chelsea of old than the new – but it was a good result away from home and the kind of match that's valuable to take the points from. With Bolton you expect a good physical game and I think we handled that well. We've still got that resolve when it comes to it, with Terry marshalling the defence and Cech played really well today. We'd been looking impotent recently, with difficulty breaking down the best defences. There's been some murmuring that we were lacking a bit on the wings. It helps to have an extra bit of inspiration – Deco seems to provide that and he played really well today and, of course, had that goal. He was my man of the match.
The fan's player ratings Cech 7; Bosingwa 7 (Ivanovic n/a), Terry 7, Alex 7, A Cole 6; Mikel 6; Kalou 5 (Ferreira 5), Lampard 6, Ballack 6, Deco 8; Anelka 7
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NOTW:
Deco ensures it's done and dusted By ROB BEASLEY, 06/12/2008
CHELSEA fans marked the record-breaking occasion with a chorus of Christmas favourite Jingle Bells.
And no wonder they gleefully sang: “Oh what fun it is to see Chelsea win away.”
For this was an 11th successive win on the road, the best ever in the top flight.
And with five clean sheets in a row to boot!
So while their long, proud unbeaten home record may have been shattered by league leaders Liverpool last month, their away days are still plain sailing.
Truth is, this match was done and dusted the moment Deco’s 21st-minute strike made it 2-0 for the Londoners.
After that, Bolton huffed and puffed, kicked and snarled, bullied and battled — but never seriously looked like saving the day.
Yet, for all of that, it could have been different. For Kevin Davies had the perfect opportunity to exert extra pressure on the Blues after their recent fragility — last weekend’s home defeat to Arsenal coming quickly after their lame Champions League draw in Bordeaux.
A seventh-minute Gavin McCann corner picked him out superbly, slap bang in front of goal and all Davies had to do was deliver a trademark header into the back of the net.
Incredibly, he failed to even hit the target — wastefully directing his effort over the bar and allowing Chelsea off the hook.
Two minutes later Chelsea made Davies and his Trotters’ team-mates pay the price for that profligacy.
Jose Bosingwa swept in a cross from the right, Bolton’s defending was all awry and former Reebok hero Nicolas Anelka ghosted in at the far post to steer a header in off the near post.
Bolton desperately appealed for offside but in vain, as the Frenchman had timed his break perfectly to notch his 15th goal of the season — and now it was the home side who were under examination.
Could they respond?
Petr Cech’s eccentric goalkeeping certainly gave them hope.
The Czech miskicked one attempted clearance into touch and another straight at Kevin Nolan, who failed to capitalise on his surprise opportunity for a quickfire equaliser.
And Bolton were certainly ruffling Chelsea’s feathers with their no-nonsense approach and keenness for the challenge.
Bosingwa, Salomon Kalou and Michael Ballack were all on the receiving end, although the home fans derided their reactions as merely those of a bunch of “Southern softies”.
But the softies increased their lead after ripping the home side apart with a classy attack.
Twice Ballack provided the assist — first for Kalou, who blazed straight at Jussi Jaaskelainen.
However, the Germany captain rescued the situation, taking charge of the rebound to tee up Deco, who did not miss.
And Anelka almost made it three just moments later.
Frank Lampard’s free-kick was helped on by skipper John Terry and fell to Anelka, who was again lurking beyond the far post.
This time, though, the in-form forward could only stab his first-time shot wide.
Bolton boss Gary Megson had clearly geed his side up for the second half and they gave Chelsea a much sterner test after the break.
The Blues survived a strong penalty appeal within six minutes of the restart when Alex looked to have eased Johan Elmander out of the way. Unfortunately for Megson’s men, referee Howard Webb’s whistle stayed silent.
Chelsea were looking decidedly uncomfortable, especially the nervy Cech, whose error-strewn display saw him completely miss a routine cross, leaving the alert Ballack to clear up the mess. But then the Blues should have wrapped up the three points with a third goal. Kalou’s quick-thinking saw him send Deco clear. Yet although there was no one near him as he sped toward goal, he never looked confident.
And three terrible touches later he was firing at least 10 yards wide.
Bolton battled back but they had another penalty appeal ignored by Webb.
The ball hit Terry’s arm yet the ref decided it was ball to hand. It was a close call.
No wonder Megson moaned: “The big teams get the decisions. I never felt that kind of decision was ever going to go our way.
“So it was no surprise it wasn’t given, it would have been more of a surprise if it actually was.”
And when Cech then saved well from Gary Cahill’s point-blank header it only confirmed that it was not going to be Bolton’s day.
So Chelsea completed yet another victory on their travels to top the great Tottenham Double-winning side of 1960-61 and go into the record books.
Assistant-boss Ray Wilkins said: “It is a tremendous record by anybody’s standards, our away performances have been first class.”
But he spent more time trying to explain away growing talk of discontent in the ranks.
He added: “There’s no problem whatsoever, it is not part of our club. If those reports were true then the team would have fallen apart — but the spirit is first class.
“You can’t come to a place like Bolton and perform as we did if there’s dissent.”
Methinks he does protest too much.
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Monday, December 01, 2008

morming papers arsenal home 1-2


The TimesDecember 1, 2008
Robin van Persie gives Arsenal new sense of beliefChelsea 1 Arsenal 2
Martin Samuel
At the end, they celebrated in warrior style, shirts off and thrown to the crowd, chests out, muscles rippling, straining against the material of sweat-soaked undergarments. We have seen this emotion from Chelsea before, marking big victories in the battlefields of the north; but this was Arsenal, delivering against the odds once again this season and relishing the moment, extracting every last drop of adrenalin from it.
Arsène Wenger, the Arsenal manager, said to win at Stamford Bridge showed the character of his team, and he meant it as a positive. Yet, equally, it could be argued that players capable of beating Manchester United and Chelsea this season but unable to get the better of Stoke City, Aston Villa and Manchester City are showing character of a more worrying sort: that of the big-time Charlie. Wenger, at all times a thinking man, had an answer for that, too. “Sometimes part of the learning process is to find out how to win when you are not on the edge,” he said. “We were there today and, in other matches, it will not be the same. I have an intelligent group, though, and they must learn how to win every type of game. Just to turn up is not good enough.”
Arsenal turned up yesterday, though, certainly after half-time. Not necessarily in the style expected of them, all dash and panache, passing Chelsea off the pitch, but in the manner of one of those admirable, battling teams who get an advantage, not entirely on merit, and defend it. This was an Arsenal seldom seen, eye-catching players doing grimly determined jobs. Samir Nasri, wide on the left, barely featured in an attacking move, but he boxed José Bosingwa in the right-back position, when his wing game has been such a feature of Chelsea’s forward play this season.
Arsenal’s back line was magnificent, save for Johan Djourou’s own goal after 29 minutes, with William Gallas the star. His reception at Stamford Bridge was as hostile as could be expected, yet he rose above it to deliver — irony of ironies — the captain’s performance that was so often missing when he wore the armband. His celebrations were particularly passionate at the end. Only time will tell if this was too little, or too late.
The result propelled Arsenal back to fourth place, but they are not re-established as title contenders yet, trailing Chelsea by seven points. The club should prepare for a few sackloads of fan mail from Merseyside, however, for what Arsenal most certainly are this season are Liverpool’s allies. Their past five league results have been of perfect benefit to Rafael Benítez and his players, with wins against Liverpool’s title rivals, Chelsea and United, and three soft defeats neatly undermining their own cause.
Luiz Felipe Scolari, the Chelsea manager, blamed the officials for the defeat and hoped for an apology this morning, but if Mike Dean, the referee, and his assistants do express regret, they should add that they are also sorry that Chelsea had only one shot at goal all match, did not create a chance after Arsenal’s first goal, had their best striker in the stands because of his own foolishness and have only one way of playing, which the rest of the Premier League would appear to have worked out. This result went far deeper than a shout for offside when Robin van Persie equalised, and it did Scolari scant credit that he was prepared to join the ranks of the disgruntled now that his luck has changed.
Yes, Van Persie did look offside when he scored his first goal after 58 minutes, but there were another 36 minutes, including stoppage time, left to play when this occurred and Chelsea’s failure to create a single scoring opportunity in that period is not the fault of the officials. Chelsea lost yesterday because they lacked imagination and were little threat to Manuel Almunia in Arsenal’s goal. They lost because Deco has gone completely off the boil, Michael Ballack is feeling his way back after injury, and Frank Lampard cannot do it all on his own. They lost because, without Ricardo Carvalho, they are defensively vulnerable. They lost because Scolari is in desperate need of plan B. They lost because, with Didier Drogba suspended, there was no impact to be made from the bench. They lost because Van Persie and his striking partner, Emmanuel Adebayor, presented more of a challenge than Nicolas Anelka and Salomon Kalou and, now they are reunited, perhaps Arsenal will, too.
Arsenal are not out of these woods yet and when chaos crowded in on what should have been a simple transition from defence to attack in the first half, it appeared the downward spiral was to continue. Almunia collected a corner from Lampard, but threw the ball wildly, turning what should have been an Arsenal counter into more Chelsea pressure. Bosingwa collected the loose ball, fed Anelka, made a good run for the return pass and his cross was turned into Arsenal’s net by the hapless Djourou, stretching at the near post.
So Chelsea did get the odd good break, and had Lampard not snatched at a chance set up by Anelka in the 51st minute, shooting wide, it might have been different. Instead, Chelsea paid for failing to impose their game and, with such a slim margin between the teams, were exposed by a combination of an assistant referee’s inert flag and Arsenal’s highly ert* Dutchman, Van Persie, who struck twice in three minutes to win the game.
Adebayor won a header against Branislav Ivanovic, who looks no replacement for Alex, let alone Carvalho, and Denilson fed the ball through to Van Persie, who made the most of an assistant referee’s error to finish smartly past Petr Cech. From Arsenal’s next attack, a free kick by Cesc Fàbregas, Adebayor rose above John Obi Mikel and Van Persie lost Lampard to strike an excellent shot on the turn. In recent weeks, Chelsea have looked susceptible to aerial attack, a poor show considering the size of the team.
Arsenal must hope normal service is not resumed against Wigan Athletic at home on Saturday, while Chelsea can only ask for a favour from their old boys, Gianfranco Zola and Steve Clarke, who take their West Ham United team to Anfield to face Liverpool this evening. Much like waiting on that apology from Dean, Scolari would not be advised to hold his breath.
* Yes, I know, but there should be.
Chelsea (4-1-3-1-1): P Cech 7 - J Bosingwa 6, B Ivanovic 5, J Terry 6, A Cole 6 - J O Mikel 5 - M Ballack 6, F Lampard 6, Deco 4 - S Kalou 6 - N Anelka 5. Substitutes: F Malouda 4 (for Mikel, 69min), M Stoch (for Deco, 80). Not used: Hilário, W Bridge, P Ferreira, Mineiro, Alex. Next: Bolton (a).
Arsenal (4-4-1-1): M Almunia 6 - B Sagna 7, W Gallas 8, J Djourou 6, G Clichy 7 - Denilson 6, F Fàbregas 7, A Song 6, S Nasri 6 - R van Persie 8 - E Adebayor 7. Substitute: N Bendtner (for Adebayor, 86). Not used: L Fabianski, C Vela, A Ramsey, M Silvestre, J Wilshere, K Gibbs. Next: Wigan (h).
Referee: M Dean Attendance: 41,760
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Telegraph:
Robin van Persie double gives Arsenal victory over Chelsea at Stamford BridgeChelsea (1) 1 Arsenal (0) 2 By Henry Winter at Stamford Bridge
As the final whistle concluded this extraordinary derby collision, William Gallas stared at the Chelsea fans, saw their hand signals, heard their abusive cries, and a smug smile flickered across his face. Once again, the Frenchman was leaving the Bridge under acrimonious circumstances. Hell hath no fury like a fan scorned and Gallas revelled in the discomfort of those who once lauded his name.
Gallas wandered across to the referee, shook hands, and strolled on to the Arsenal fans leaping around joyously in the Shed. He ripped off his shirt and launched it into the heaving mass. How fortunes change. A week ago, those same supporters would probably have thrown it back, following his critical comments about team-mates like Robin van Persie, but the memory of all manner of misdemeanours was forgotten in the adrenalin rush of a famous derby triumph.
Arsenal's deposed captain pumped up the fans even more, punching the air as they sang his name in praise. As Gallas walked along the touchline, a lone Chelsea fan applauded him but the reception turned ugly as he neared the tunnel. A group of 10 Chelsea supporters gave him fearful abuse, leaning over the hoardings to gesticulate their disapproval. Gallas remained stoic, smiled and ambled on. Only in the tunnel, did he let rip, screaming "yes''.
The joy of football is that it provides regular shots at redemption, so that Gallas could try – successfully – to win back the affection of the Arsenal fans. He may not get on with Van Persie, and hardly played a prominent part in celebrating the Dutchman's two goals, but victory, more than time, is the great healer in football.
Now the debate over dressing-room harmony switches from Arsenal to Chelsea. Now the spotlight will turn on the training-ground methods of Luiz Felipe Scolari. A World Cup-winner with Brazil, Scolari is new to coaching a European club full of stars who enjoy variety in their daily drills.
In the mad world of modern football, someone is always under scrutiny yet the increasingly harsh focus on Scolari appears ludicrously premature. Chelsea remain top of the Premier League, certainly until Liverpool host West Ham on Monday, and have scored more and conceded fewer than anyone else. Some crisis.
Yet Chelsea's chief executive, Peter Kenyon, faces some lively questions when announcing a sponsorship deal on Monday morning. For a club wanting to take over the world, Chelsea must take over London first. This shock derby defeat highlighted certain concerns. At a time when the pound seems to be losing value, the coin that Didier Drogba threw at Burnley fans becomes ever more expensive. How Chelsea missed the suspended striker yesterday.
Nicolas Anelka rarely seems to trouble the bigger sides, and the Frenchman certainly did not alarm Gallas or Johan Djourou unduly. Scolari's other attacking options, Florent Malouda and Salomon Kalou, also failed to impress.
Arsenal were hardly over-blessed with attacking talent, particularly with Eduardo and Theo Walcott still returning from injury and Emmanuel Adebayor wandering around one of west London's more famous sights like a tourist for an hour, but they had Van Persie.
His contribution, striking twice either side of half-time, making Djourou's earlier own goal a distant memory, was vital as Arsenal's usual source of succour, Cesc Fabregas, again played within himself. No one knows whether the captaincy is truly inhibiting him, but the usually dynamic Spaniard disappeared for long periods of a compelling game yesterday.
News that the Premier League are close to putting out tenders for the next TV deal may seem strangely timed, given the global recession, but the appetite for spectacles like this will never dim. Derbies are rarely demure tea parties, unless of the Boston variety, and this one heaved with passion.
The match itself was rarely nasty, barring a filthy two-footed lunge by John Terry on Bacary Sagna that deserved a red but received only yellow. Mainly, the enmity swirled around the terraces. Arsene Wenger was forced to endure a particularly poisonous chant, one he usually hears only at Old Trafford. When taking corners in the first half, Frank Lampard received endless invective from a group of Arsenal fans, who also vilified Ashley Cole.
But it was a former Chelsea player who stirred most vitriol. "And welcome back – William Gallas'', the Bridge announcer had ventured rather ambitiously. The race to drown out his words was won narrowly by the Matthew Harding Stand fractionally ahead of the East Stand.
Chelsea's dislike of Gallas nearly deepened further within a couple of minutes. In pushing out a Fabregas shot, Petr Cech almost diverted the ball onto Gallas, who was unmarked 10 yards out. Worryingly for Chelsea, Arsenal had settled the quicker, Fabregas gliding around John Obi Mikel but shooting straight at Cech.
For those who question whether Scolari can tweak his tactics during a match, a slightly surprising criticism of a coach who has masterminded a World Cup triumph and tipped England out of three tournaments, the Brazilian acted impressively midway through the half, pushing Kalou further forward and urging Jose Bosingwa to provide all the width down the left.
Bosingwa immediately whipped in a magnificent cross that Frank Lampard, timing his run with typical precision, headed powerfully goalwards. Having saved smartly then, Manuel Almunia erred badly on the half-hour. He rolled the ball out towards Samir Nasri but Bosingwa nicked it. Mikel took charge, finding Anelka, who released Bosingwa in down the right. He drilled in a cross that was low and hard and designed to cause carnage. Djourou panicked, attempting to clear but managing only to divert the ball past Almunia.
Fortunately for Arsenal, Van Persie never stopped showing for the ball, never stopped believing that some reward could be eked from unpromising circumstances. Just before the hour, Adebayor woke up, heading the ball to Nasri, who found Denilson. As the Brazilian slipped the ball through, Van Persie was clearly offside. Mike Dean waved play on, mysteriously, allowing the Dutchman to beat Cech with a strong right-footed finish.
Having lost their lead, Chelsea lost their composure. Terry stormed into Sagna and another Chelsea indiscretion gifted Arsenal a free-kick on the left. Fabregas lifted the ball into the box where Adebayor outjumped Mikel, heading down to Van Persie. Arsenal's No 11 swivelled and swept a low shot between Lampard's legs and in. Drogba cannot return soon enough.
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Independent:
Van Persie double stuns Chelsea
Chelsea 1 Arsenal 2
By Sam Wallace
It was not so long ago that Stamford Bridge was regarded as the kind of stadium where all away teams – famous or humble – came to lie down and die. But yesterday it was the Arsenal players who took their leave bare-chested and belligerent, tossing their shirts into the crowd and generally swaggering about the place as if they owned it, which, for one afternoon, you could say that they did.
Their victory was something of a miracle, thanks in no small part to a bizarre decision by the referee Mike Dean to allow Robin van Persie's first goal to stand despite it being offside. But let us lay that aside for a moment and draw an early-season conclusion: Big Phil is not doing very well in the big games. Luiz Felipe Scolari can complain about the referee as much as he likes – and he certainly did his best on that score yesterday – but the record against his three big rivals does not make happy reading
Under Scolari this season, Chelsea have lost at home to two of their three big rivals – Liverpool and now Arsenal – and they managed only a draw against Manchester United at Stamford Bridge. At times like this it is easy to forget that Scolari's team are still top of the Premier League – until tonight at least – but this season the terms of engagement are different. Fortune changes in an instant. Form is temporary. And amid all this chaos Chelsea find themselves in a period of difficulty that we still hesitate to call a crisis.
That indomitable 86-game unbeaten league run at home feels like a distant memory when they toss games away like this. Chelsea were in control, ahead through Johan Djourou's first-half own goal, when they lost their grip in a three-minute period on the hour during which Van Persie scored twice.
This irresponsible crashing from triumph to disaster is what we expect of Arsène Wenger's side, not the shock troops of Scolari's squad who, in two title-winning seasons with Jose Mourinho, dropped only 12 points at home.
As for Wenger's side, it is impossible now to gauge whether to take them seriously: they succumb to Stoke, Hull and Fulham but bring on Chelsea and United and the story is different. Even William Gallas threw his shirt into the away fans at the end of the game and did not have it tossed back into his face.
The former Arsenal captain was impressive, nonetheless, but no one in a red shirt was more competitive and as uncompromising as the match-winner Van Persie.
For periods, Wenger was consumed by rage, not towards the opposition or the referee, but his own team. There were even times when he seemed to be sulking in protest at another erratic, unpredictable performance from Arsenal, yet he was on his feet with clenched fists at the final whistle. But as a football man he will know his side found an unlikely escape yesterday against a Chelsea team who simply neglected to close this game out when they had the chance.
It is rare for Deco to play as poorly as he did yesterday and stranger still that a Chelsea manager should look around him for an attacking substitute and find a kid from the academy as his only option on the bench.
Miroslav Stoch looked like the mascot when he came on, the only card Scolari had to play as his team struggled to find their rhythm after Van Persie's second goal. In the meantime, Didier Drogba sat in the stands listening to his iPod, watching another fine mess in his absence.
It was not a result that looked on the cards when Wenger's side enraged their manager by sloppily conceding the first goal. A bad throw from Manuel Almunia to Samir Nasri was anticipated by Jose Bosingwa and possession was turned around quickly. The ball went from Jon Obi Mikel to Nicolas Anelka and back to Bosingwa whose cross to the near post was put into his own net by Djourou under pressure from Salomon Kalou.
Chelsea had easily the better of the first half. Their dominant player was Mikel who would later lose Emmanuel Adebayor at the free-kick that brought Arsenal's winner. Van Persie created the only half-decent Arsenal chance of the first half when his shot was saved by Petr Cech and fell just behind Gallas. The abuse from the Chelsea fans for their old boy was pretty unrelenting; ditto that from the Arsenal fans to Ashley Cole. The most repugnant of all, however, was the chant directed from Chelsea fans at Wenger.
There was an appalling dive from Denilson in the Chelsea area when he was being tracked by Ashley Cole, which the referee was wise to ignore, and it was difficult to see from where the revival would come. It came from referee Dean's oversight when Van Persie was played in by Denilson.
The striker was not just a knee or a shoulder offside; there was clear daylight between the Dutch striker and the last Chelsea defender. So much so that when Van Persie hit his shot past Cech, Denilson looked long and hard at the linesman before he decided it was worth joining the celebrations.
It was barely credible and Chelsea reacted badly. Rampaging forward, John Terry lost control of the ball and was booked for a two-footed lunge on Bacary Sagna. Then Arsenal scored for the second time in three minutes. Cesc Fabregas hit a free-kick from left to right that was headed down by Adebayor and, despite running away from goal and under pressure from Frank Lampard, Van Persie swivelled and hit his shot first time past Cech.
Chelsea failed to react. Deco's replacement by Stoch told the Portuguese midfielder all he needed to know about his own performance. Florent Malouda miscued dreadfully with a volley and there was a sense of foreboding about the place. It will be no consolation here that this result only serves to make this season's title race even more absorbing.
Goals: Djourou og (og30) 1-0; Van Persie (59) 1-1; Van Persie (62) 1-2.
Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, A Cole; Mikel (Malouda, 70); Kalou, Lampard, Ballack, Deco (Stoch, 81); Anelka. Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Bridge, Ferreira, Miniero, Alex.
Arsenal (4-4-1-1): Almunia; Sagna, Gallas, Djourou, Clichy; Denilson, Fabregas, Song, Nasri; Van Persie; Adebayor (Bendtner, 83). Substitutes not used: Fabianski (gk), Vela, Ramsey, Silvestre, Wilshere, Bendtner, Gibbs.
Booked: Terry, Ivanovic.
Referee: M Dean (Wirral).
Man of the match: Van Persie.
Attendance: 41,760
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Guardian:
Van Persie finds killer touch as Arsenal prove it takes the best to bring out their finestGuardian report Min-by-min Match facts Premier LeagueChelsea 1 Djourou (og) 30 Arsenal 2 van Persie 59, van Persie 62
Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge
Robin Van Persie, right, celebrates after scoring Arsenal's first goal at Stamford Bridge. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
This is proving an unforgettable season for Arsenal. Fans would prefer not to be carrying around recollections of losses to Hull and Stoke, but there are also memories to cherish. This victory is a companion piece to the win over Manchester United at the Emirates three weeks ago. The mightier the opposition the better the prospects for Arsène Wenger's squad.
If Arsenal were in crisis then the anguish has now passed to Luiz Felipe Scolari. The Brazilian does have his grievances since the visitors' equaliser, the first of Robin van Persie's goals, should have been ruled offside. Scolari's Chelsea had already seen Liverpool take three points at Stamford Bridge, to say nothing of defeat by Burnley in the League Cup, before the arrival of Arsenal. All the same, there is sympathy for the manager. In part, he is a victim of changing times. This is no longer a club of unlimited resources. So long as the fitness of the presently suspended Didier Drogba is in question, Scolari has, in Nicolas Anelka, a single proven striker at his disposal.
He would have no complaints about the presence here of Michael Ballack, Deco and Frank Lampard as his attacking midfielders, but the Englishman, at the age of 30, was the youngest of them. If there was to be zest, it had to emanate from the overlapping right-back Jose Bosingwa. The January transfer market commonly proves barren for managers but it also appears, in any case, that Scolari would have to raise funds by offloading players.
It is a little while since Arsenal's circumstances were enviable, but the energy of youth was an asset here. Although they are not yet at the same standard as some streamlined predecessors, it is this batch that has delivered their club's first win on this ground since the 'invincible' season of 2003-04. The circumstances in which that was achieved rankle with Chelsea.
Scolari is normally gracious and he embraced Wenger at the end, but he also deplored the officials. With the score at 0-0, a tight call after five minutes went against Salomon Kalou wrongly and there would have been less sympathy with a linesman's erroneous verdict on Van Persie in the 59th minute. He was behind the defence when Denilson set him up in a move that had also involved Emmanuel Adebayor and Cesc Fábregas. The Dutchman kept his mind fixed on the task and lashed a shot home with his weaker right foot.
Chelsea were dismayed and fragile. Three minutes later, Adebayor knocked down a Fábregas set-piece and Van Persie drilled the ball past the left hand of Petr Cech. For all we know, the deposed captain William Gallas could conceivably develop a soft spot for the Dutchman.
Van Persie's execution had been unanswerable at each goal, but the opposition's concentration did wobble at the clincher. While that would hitherto have been classified as an aberration for Chelsea, minds currently seem to have a habit of wandering. During the midweek draw in Bordeaux, Lampard and John Terry lost concentration at critical moments.
Yesterday, Arsenal had superior endurance. They bore the concession of a markedly stupid opener in the 31st minute. Manuel Almunia, attempting a quick throw-out, hurled the ball too far. The visitors, unexpectedly, were at immediate risk. With devastating fluency, Chelsea's Bosingwa linked with Mikel John Obi and Anelka before having possession returned to him. His lethal low cross was turned into his own net by Johan Djourou.
After all that has afflicted Arsenal in this campaign, they could have slithered into defeatism. It is to their credit that there was no such despair, but Chelsea also nursed the revival by being so colourless. Anelka drew a blank here as the realisation grew that his prolific efforts until now have masked limitations. Scolari did not have another credible finisher in attack.
That accounts, in some degree, for the fact that, at home, they have a solitary point to show for their three home fixtures against English representatives in the Champions League. Even that draw had come when Manchester United were in sight of victory at Stamford Bridge. Arsenal closed off all the escape routes here.
Both clubs have their injury problems, but it was Chelsea who were compelled to give a debut to a 19-year-old when the Slovakian Miroslav Stoch took over from Deco. That was a desperate step for a manager, yet Scolari felt it worth taking.
It was notable that Almunia had very little to do over the course of the afternoon. Cech had more to concern himself with even though Chelsea looked the sounder team. There were saves to make then, with a possibility that Gallas might break the deadlock in the 14th minute. The centre-back did not connect when Cech beat out a Samir Nasri attempt in his direction.
The former Chelsea player, though, carried out his regular duties perfectly. Perhaps it will suit Gallas that he no longer bears the armband, because he has always seemed too quirky and erratic figure for that role. Many things fell into place for Wenger yesterday.
Man of the match Robin van Persie (Arsenal)
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Mail:
Chelsea 1 Arsenal 2: Superb Van Persie brace puts Gunners back in title raceBy Matt Lawton
After more than four years without losing a Premier League game at Stamford Bridge, here was a second defeat in four weeks and what amounted to yet another worrying performance for this stuttering Chelsea side.
The fourth such performance, in fact, after they stole a draw against Manchester United, lost to Liverpool and then travelled to Rome for what proved a chastening Champions League experience.
And that's not to mention the Carling Cup exit to Burnley.
No wonder the alarm goes off when the home side are beaten here, as it did during Rafa Benitez's press conference last month and did so again shortly before Arsene Wenger appeared for his postmatch briefing.
Wenger would still swap this result for Chelsea's points total and that is worth remembering before Luiz Felipe Scolari joins Roy Keane as the Barclays Premier League manager now most likely to lose his job. He side remain top, at least until Liverpool meet West Ham at Anfield tonight, and are only a victory against CFR Cluj from the last 16 of the Champions League.
But this will concern Scolari when Arsenal did not have to play terribly well to beat a side who, although suffering in the absence of Didier Drogba and Ricardo Carvalho, are looking rather too predictable.
For reasons even Scolari says he cannot explain, they seem to have lost the ability to adapt to the demands placed upon them by the better opponents. In 10 games they have won just four times.
Scolari did his best to divert attention from his players' shortcomings on to the the match officials. To a degree he was right.
They did allow Robin van Persie to score the first of his goals, and so equalise, by failing to spot that Arsenal's Dutch striker was offside when Denilson delivered the ball to his feet. But the statistics do not reflect well on Chelsea when they managed just one effort on target, Frank Lampard's 24th-minute header.
Their goal would come seven minutes after that when Johan Djourou showed his relative inexperience by turning a Jose Bosingwa cross into his own net.
After that, however, Chelsea offered almost nothing in attack, as a watching Drogba no doubt noted from beneath his hat.Arsenal were not a great deal better, it has to be said, but they did display the kind of qualities that Petr Cech foolishly accused them of lacking in the build-up to this game.
William Gallas was right, he suggested. They have no fight and they have no bottle. Well, battling back from a goal down at Stamford Bridge to win 2-1 was quite a riposte.
Gallas went to shake Cech's hand afterwards, and one can imagine what he might have said. Thanks, Pete, for the support as well as the inspiration. Cech still has a point, though, and so does Gallas.
Arsenal have secured some impressive results this season, beating United at the Emirates as well as this win here. But what does it say about them when they lost three of their four League games prior to this encounter and have lost to Fulham, Hull, Stoke, Aston Villa and Manchester City?
'It is part of a learning process,' insisted Wenger, even if the same excuse was used last season, and the season before that. For Arsenal, this was an impressive response.
Gallas, as Wenger was so keen to point out, has responded admirably to being stripped of the captaincy. He did well against Dynamo Kiev in the week and yesterday, in the words of his manager, was 'outstanding'.
And if Van Persie was central to the controversy that was sparked by the outspoken Gallas, the incident has done nothing to dull his enthusiasm.
If his first goal was fortuitous, it remained a fine finish that was then followed by another marvellous effort three minutes later. While Chelsea count the cost of the suspended Drogba's coin-throwing antics, they had nobody in Van Persie's class.
Nicolas Anelka was disappointing, Deco desperately poor. Even Lampard and Michael Ballack lacked their usual attacking verve. Arsenal were the more dangerous of the sides from the very start, with Cesc Fabregas and Van Persie both forcing fine saves from Cech in theopening 45 minutes.
But when Manuel Almunia's poor throw was won by Bosingwa in the 31st minute, a swiftly-executed move ended with the Portuguese fullback delivering a cross that Djourou, in an effort to stop it reaching Salomon Kalou, guided past his goalkeeper.
An outrageous dive from Denilson also escaped the attention of Mike Dean, but Scolari was complaining only about the failure of the referee and his assistant to identify Van Persie's position when Arsenal's Brazilian midfielder delivered his 59th-minute pass.
Scolari said it 'killed' his team, which does not say a lot for their ability to cope with adversity.
But it appears it did, judging by the way they then conceded Van Persie's second.
After Fabregas floated a free-kick forward it was the ease with which Emmanuel Adebayor won the first header that would have disappointed Chelsea's manager, even if the quality of Van Persie's shot on the turn was truly breathtaking.
How They Lined UpCHELSEA (4-1-2-2-1): Cech 7, Bosingwa 6, Ivanovic 5, Terry 6, A Cole 6, Mikel 5; (Malouda 70min 5), Ballack 6, Lampard 6, Deco 3 (Stoch 81 5), Kalou 6, Anelka 5.Booked: Terry, Ivanovic.
ARSENAL (4-4-2): Almunia 6, Sagna 7, Gallas 8, Djourou 5, Clichy 7, Denilson 6;Fabregas, 7, Song, 6, Nasri 6;,Van Persie 8, Adebayor 6 (Bendtner 83).
Man of the match: William Gallas.
Referee: Mike Dean.
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Sun:
From SHAUN CUSTIS at Stamford Bridge
Published: 30 Nov 2008 ARSENAL love Robin’ from the rich at football’s top table.
If only they could stop giving to the poor they would be right in the Premier League title race.
The Gunners added Chelsea to the scalp of Manchester United in a baffling start to the season which has also seen them lose to the likes of Hull, Fulham and Stoke.

It was their very own Robin Hood, Robin van Persie, who plundered the spoils from a shell-shocked Blues.
The Dutchman scored twice — the first clearly offside — in the space of three minutes around the hour mark to turn this game on its head after Chelsea had apparently been on their way to victory when Johan Djourou put through his own goal in the first half.
Not many expected this result, especially the bookies who were quoting Arsenal at odds as long as 5-1 to win.
But with the return of Emmanuel Adebayor after a lengthy injury absence and Van Persie finding his way back to form this was a reinvigorated Gunners.
Adebayor has been badly missed and he figured in both goals.
You feel Chelsea could do with their most potent attacking weapon, Didier Drogba, back too.
Love him or hate him, Drogba gives Chelsea an extra aggressive edge which was lacking here.
When he hasn’t been off talking to Inter Milan about a transfer, Drogba has been either injured or suspended and, while Nicolas Anelka has discovered the route to goal, there is no substitute for the Drog.
The Blues have only lost two Premier League home games in 4½ years but both have come under new boss Phil Scolari in the space of just over a month — the other being against Liverpool.
Jose Mourinho did not lose a single league game at Stamford Bridge in his entire reign.
And Scolari is developing an unwanted reputation for failing to do the business against the big boys, having also slipped up with a home draw against Manchester United.
They could not make the most of the comedy of errors from Arsenal which gifted them the lead.
Keeper Manuel Almunia caught the ball and bowled it out into no-man’s-land to the surprise of right-back Jose Boswinga, who collected and stormed forward.
The Portuguese defender exchanged passes with Anelka and fired in a low cross which was turned in at the near post by the unfortunate Djourou — a Swiss with particularly bad timing.
It was a goal symptomatic of the Gunners’ troubles this season where they have been guilty of numerous defensive errors. But Van Persie signalled Arsenal were not going to simply accept another defeat and his shot on the turn tested Petr Cech, who saved well to his left.
Chelsea lost their way and their finishing was none too clever, either, with Anelka putting a diving header well wide and the usually reliable Frank Lampard shooting badly wide from 20 yards — a position where he invariably buries the ball in the bottom corner.
Arsenal were back in it on 59 minutes when Adebayor leapt to win a header and Samir Nasri fed Denilson.
The midfielder chested down and played in Van Persie, who was offside, but the flag never came and he rattled the equaliser high into the net.
Scolari did some moaning about that one afterwards and about another decision when Salomon Kalou was through on goal only to be given offside when he was onside.
The Brazilian insisted: “We lost today because one goal was not a goal — and it was a goal which changed the result.”
So at least one thing is clear — he may not be getting Mourinho’s results but he is starting to whinge like him.
A stunned Chelsea crowd were rocked again when Adebayor climbed high once more to find Van Persie, who spun round brilliantly and smacked a low drive between Lampard’s legs and just inside the post.
Manager Arsene Wenger, who has kept faith with his beleaguered troops throughout this difficult campaign, was off the bench celebrating — which is a rare sight this season.
And he had little cause for concern as the clock ticked down and Chelsea ran out of ideas.
William Gallas, making his return to the Bridge, won praise from Wenger for his part in keeping Chelsea at bay.
But the behaviour of Gallas, who was sacked as Arsenal captain for criticising his team-mates, was as curious as ever.
On each Arsenal goal he merely trotted back to his position for the kick-off while his team-mates engulfed Van Persie.
Then, at full-time, he strolled to the match officials to shake their hands while his team-mates jumped all over one other.
But then Gallas walked towards the corner where the Arsenal fans were congregated and threw his shirt into the throng while half of his team-mates followed suit in an apparent display of unity.
“William Gallas is a red, he hates Chelsea,” sang the ecstatic Gunners fans.
Could it be that Arsenal are on the way back, all pulling together in the same direction?
The acid test will come next week when the small fry are back in town — it’s Wigan at home.