Wednesday, March 11, 2009

morning papers juventus away 2-2


The Times
Michael Essien helps Chelsea see off Claudio Ranieri and JuventusJuventus 2 Chelsea 2 (Chelsea win 3-2 on aggregate)
Matt Hughes, Deputy Football Correspondent, Turin
On the eve of this match Guus Hiddink offered only platitudes when asked what qualities a team required to win the Champions League, but his players provided a far more eloquent answer. In a performance of bravery, resilience and no little luck, Chelsea booked their place in the quarter-finals by doing just enough to draw a spellbinding match, in doing so demonstrating that they have what it takes to return to Italy for the final on Wednesday, May 27.
Chelsea have become experts in navigating their way through the latter stages of this competition, reaching the semi-finals in four of the past five years, and this latest group of players have shown that they are equally tournament-savvy.
As with Liverpool, Chelsea’s main men seem to raise their games on the biggest of European nights, with Petr Cech, the goalkeeper, outstanding and Didier Drogba arriving in the nick of time to score the 83rd-minute goal that sealed their passage. Even those boys in blue short of their best, such as Michael Ballack, dug in to contribute when it mattered, the sign of a side who have yet to peak.
Chelsea were second best for long spells against a Juventus team whose energy belied their advancing years, but such is the self-belief instilled by Hiddink that they never looked like losing, even when the home side were laying siege to their goal midway through the second half. The transformation since that supine surrender at Old Trafford two months ago has been simply extraordinary. What a difference a manager makes.
Chelsea’s modus operandi does them few favours, though any lingering doubts that the club were correct to dispense with Luiz Felipe Scolari can now be dispelled. It is certainly difficult to imagine that these players would have absorbed so much pressure before striking on the counter-attack under the likeable Brazilian, but they are a different proposition under Hiddink. Were it not for the fact that he made such a spectacularly bad appointment in the first place, it would be time to lavish some praise upon Roman Abramovich, the owner.
In a little more than a month, Hiddink has turned a collection of unhappy, self-centred individuals into a team. Before last night his main contribution had been hard work and organisation, but even allowing for a perfectly good goal from Drogba being disallowed, another ingredient was added to the mix — luck. The Dutchman rolled the dice with an outrageously bold team selection and his numbers came up.
Hiddink’s gamble on Michael Essien’s fitness initially backfired as Chelsea were overrun in the first half, but it was eventually vindicated as the Ghana midfield player showed remarkable stamina to follow up Frank Lampard’s shot to tap in an equaliser on the stroke of half-time. Essien’s brain may have been scrambled by being played out of position on the right of midfield, but his legs, lungs and heart remain strong.
Hiddink’s removal of Essien just after an hour was also well judged, as by that stage even he was tiring and his replacement, Juliano Belletti, played a crucial part in seeing Chelsea over the line. The Brazil player was one of few players to distinguish himself under Scolari and he confirmed his status as an invaluable squad player, shoring up the midfield and getting into an advanced possession to square the ball for Drogba to score his team’s second equaliser of the night.
Chelsea would have gone through on away goals even without Drogba’s fourth goal in five matches, but were never comfortable and several obvious weaknesses remain. Given the lack of creativity elsewhere in his squad, Hiddink has little option but to persevere with Drogba and Nicolas Anelka up front, leaving them vulnerable against opposition able to attack with width.
Juventus did just that in an opening 45 minutes in which they dominated, Cristian Molinaro providing José Bosingwa and Essien with all sorts of problems down the left before Vincenzo Iaquinta gave the home side a deserved lead. The Italy striker, playing in a midfield role, drifted in from the left to play a beautifully judged one-two with David Trezeguet, bisecting Alex and John Terry with his run to shoot past Cech. Three minutes later, Ballack gave the ball away to Alessandro Del Piero, whose shot was tipped over.
Cech also had to be at his best during the second half as Juventus pushed for a second, even after being reduced to ten men when Giorgio Chiellini was sent off for a second booking. The Czech Republic goalkeeper denied Trezeguet from point-blank range, but he was powerless to prevent Del Piero giving Juventus the lead for a second time, from the penalty spot, to set up a thrilling finish. The return of Ricardo Carvalho from a hamstring injury should solve some defensive problems, as Cech cannot always be relied upon to save them.
Chelsea somehow found an extra gear to leave the Old Lady lamenting their fate as the fat lady sang, but will need to add greater quality to undoubted character if they are to take part in the Roman carnival in May.
Juventus (4-4-2): G Buffon — Z Grygera, O Mellberg, G Chiellini, C Molinaro — V Iaquinta (sub: S Giovinco, 61min), Tiago, C Marchisio, P Nedved (sub: H Salihamidzic, 45) — D Trezeguet (sub: Amauri, 78), A Del Piero. Substitutes not used: A Manninger, J Zebina, C Poulsen, L Ariaudo. Booked: Salihamidzic, Chiellini, Del Piero. Sent off: Chiellini.
Chelsea (4-1-3-2): P Cech — J Bosingwa, Alex (sub: R Carvalho, 89), J Terry, A Cole — J Obi Mikel — M Essien (sub: J Belletti, 66), M Ballack, F Lampard — D Drogba, N Anelka. Substitutes not used: Hilário, F Malouda, Deco, S Kalou, M Mancienne. Booked: Cech, Drogba, Cole, Anelka.
Referee: A Mallenco Undiano (Spain).
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Telegraph:

Chelsea beat Juventus to reach Champions League quarter-finalsJuventus (1) 2 Chelsea (1) 2: Agg: 2-3 By John Ley in Turin
Michael Essien made a triumphant return in Italy last night, the midfielder scoring the goal that takes Chelsea into the quarter-finals of the Champions League in his first start for six months following knee surgery.
Guus Hiddink decided to gamble by recalling Essien, but if it was a risk, then Essien did not disappoint, his lungs and legs lasting admirably before being substituted midway through the second half. Once again, the Dutchman displayed an ability to do no wrong. He may be insistent that his tenure at Chelsea will last only until the end of the season but, with each success, he is making it increasingly harder for Roman Abramovich not to offer him the world to stay at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea look to Roberto Mancini and Frank Rijkaard to replace Luiz Felipe ScolariIt was not all plain sailing here, however. When Vincenzo Iaquinta gave Juventus an early lead, restoring aggregate parity, Chelsea were under pressure highlighting a poor first half performance. However, Didier Drogba, whose goal in the first leg was to prove so important, saw an effort clearly cross the line just before the 45th minute goal, but referee Alberto Mallenco, unaided by his assistant, failed to give it.
Essien responded seconds later to regain the aggregate lead but drama followed with Juventus reduced to ten men, Giorgio Chiellini walking for two yellow cards before Alessandro Del Piero converted a controversial 70th minute penalty to make for a nervous ending. Chelsea were heading for the last eight on the away goals rule but Drogba, with his fourth goal in five games, ensured a numerical advantage.
Perhaps it was the full moon that affected the poor performance of the Spanish referee, but Chelsea can feel happy with a job well done. It was no frills football, but a performance, nethertheless, of determination and intelligence. And it gives England a 1-0 advantage in a three-game rubber, with Manchester United and Arsenal now charged with completing what could be a memorable hat-trick of successes over Italian opposition.
When the first chance was created it came from a blue shirt, with Michael Ballack venturing forward strongly before unleashing a half volley off target. And then Anelka was only narrowly offside as he tested Juve’s defence.
But just when Chelsea appeared to be settling, Juventus restored aggregate parity with a masterclass in finishing. Iaquinta fed Trezeguet then continued his run, accepting the return pass and finishing with style, right-footed into the bottom corner.
The goal was designed to measure Chelsea’s resolve but when Del Piero tested Petr Cech, his swerving effort had to be punched over by the goalkeeper. Another Del Piero attempt, a dipping free kick, was held comfortably by Cech.
Chelsea’s formation meant that they effectively lacked a presence on the left side of midfield, though Anelka did drift wide, as shown shortly before half time when the Frenchman delivered a healthy cross, only for the Juventus defence to clear easily.
But a poor attempt from Anelka only highlighted the poor first half performance, easily the worst during Hiddink’s tenure.
But with just 30 seconds of normal time remaining Chelsea appeared to have a perfectly good goal ruled out. Former Chelsea player Tiago handled and Drogba’s free-kick was met by Gianluigi Buffon, but unconvincingly, and the ball appeared to cross the line.
Chelsea’s players were clearly furious but within seconds they did score and this time it counted. Frank Lampard shot from 25 yards, it took a slight deflection and was pushed onto the cross bar but Essien was on hand to bundle the ball home, right on the stroke of half time.
Television replays confirmed Drogba’s attempt did cross the line so the value of Essien’s goal could not be over-stated. The away goal meant that Juventus now needed to score twice to halt Chelsea’s passage but with Buffon looking erratic – he had to punch clear another Lampard effort early in the second half – is was the Italians who seemed more vulnerable.
Chelsea were now in control, frustrating both Juventus and their boisterous fans with good, sensible possession. This was no frills football, engineered by strong defending, good running off the ball and a solid midfield.
When Chelsea did come under pressure, Terry made a telling clearance from Salihamidzic, while Cech saved easily from Del Piero. Cech then saved well was Trezeguet on a night when he produced one of his finest performances for some time.
The referee, who had a poor game, created confusion in the 72nd minute. Play was halted by more than a minute as Chelsea argued with the Spaniard as it became apparent that he had awarded a penalty, against Chelsea, after spotting a handball in the defensive wall, with Belletti guilty of illegally halting Trezeguet’s free kick.
When play resumed, Del Piero converted the kick, almost nonchalantly, to the left of Cech.
But to make their task harder, Juve were reduced to 10 men for the final 20 minutes when Giorgio Chiellini, already cautioned, received a second yellow card for shoving Drogba in the back.
The referee was losing control and caused confusion when he halted play before awarding Juventus a penalty, converted by Del Piero. That made the remaining 20 minutes nervous, for Chelsea at least. However, Drogba converted Belletti’s cross in the 83rd minute to make certain of their passage.

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Independent:
Drogba seals Chelsea passage
Juventus 2 Chelsea 2 (Chelsea win 3-2 on aggregate)
By Glenn Moore at Stadio Olimpico
Didier Drogba, whose disaffection was symbolic of Chelsea's mood under Luiz Felipe Scolari, underlined his rejuvenation, and subsequent status as the key player in Guus Hiddink's successful start, with the crucial goal in Piedmont last night.
Two-one down on the night Chelsea were in jeopardy of an early departure from the Champions League when Drogba, whose goal separated the sides in the first leg, stole his fourth in five games with seven minutes of the game remaining.
That finally killed off a brave performance from Claudio Ranieri's Juventus who had drawn level on aggregate after just 18 minutes through Vincenzo Iaquinta. Chelsea struggled to assert themselves but Michael Essien, making his first start after six months out with injury, scored a precious away goal in first-half stoppage time. That seemed enough, especially when Giorgio Chiellini was dismissed with 20 minutes left, but the evergreen Alessandro del Piero converted a penalty four minutes later to put the tie in doubt once again. Drogba, however, had the last word, stealing a goal which will make his 31st-birthday today all the sweeter. "Drogba's form is very important to us," said Hiddink. "What is important for us is he shows his commitment and is always busy. He does not give a central defender an easy night, and it is even better when he scores. He is doing very well, the goal showed he is sharp."
As well as the jolt of conceding early Chelsea also had what looked a good goal ruled out though the ball had crossed the goalline. Chelsea did score almost immediately after, and their response to such adversity cheered Hiddink who added: "A team which shows a reaction like that can win seven or eight times out of 10."
The Dutchman had approached the tie cautiously, dropping Salomon Kalou in favour of Essien and deploying a four-man midfield in which John Obi Mikel was in the anchor role and the left side was left unstaffed.
It was Essien's first start since suffering a knee injury playing for Ghana in September and it soon became apparent his role was to stifle Pavel Nedved. This quickly became irrelevant as Nedved suffered a knee injury. Ranieri must have despaired. He already had four midfielders injured, which was one reason for playing Iaquinta alongside David Trezeguet with Del Piero, a veteran of four Champions League finals, three of them lost, in the hole.
Nedved's departure seemed to unsettle Chelsea more for Iaquinta struck as they adjusted to Juve's new shape. It was a poor goal to concede. The Italian international played a simple pass into Trezeguet and kept going, Trezeguet flicking the ball into his path for Iaquinta to drive past Petr Cech's left hand.
The crowd erupted. Suddenly the banner they unfurled before the match, which copied Barack Obama's slogan, "Yes we can", seemed realistic. Yet Juventus failed to build on their advantage, Chelsea stifling them before striking back.
In the circumstances the equaliser was richly deserved. The circumstances were that two minutes from the break Tiago handled and Drogba's free-kick appeared to be clawed back from behind the line by Gianluigi Buffon. The goal was not given, prompting both managers to add their voices to the clamour for the introduction of goalline technology, but it mattered not. Within two minutes Buffon was again stretching for the ball after Frank Lampard tried his luck from 30 yards. Buffon pushed the shot against the bar, it bounced down, possibly over the line. Essien settled all arguments by winning the foot race with two defenders to stab the ball in. The Ghanaian had not looked match-fit, but he was sharp enough when it mattered.
"We started sloppily," added Hiddink. "We lost too many duels and they could play easy passes into our defence. We were not marking well and they scored. But we knew we must not panic as we can score at any moment, which we did. In the second half we controlled the game more."
Juve's frustration at Chelsea's control, of the tie and of the play, manifested itself on the pitch, where Chiellini was booked for ploughing through the back of Michael Ballack, and off it as the crowd were moved to jeer both a mis-directed pass, and Ranieri's decision to withdraw Iaquinta.
However, the game was not yet safe and Chelsea's own nerves were exposed when Cech got in a scramble on the edge of his box, and handled outside it. He was booked and though the free-kick came to naught Juventus were encouraged.
The Italians then pressed again and Cech redeemed himself by tipping over a Trezeguet header following a Del Piero cross. Hiddink's response was to replace the tiring Essien with Juliano Belletti. More significantly Anelka was moved to wide left in a 4-5-1 formation.
Juventus' task became mountainous when Chielli was dismissed with 20 minutes to go for scything down Drogba from behind, his second yellow card. But the drama was not finished. Belletti handled a Trezeguet free-kick in the area. After what seemed an age, with the Spanish referee besieged by Chelsea protests, Del Piero calmly rolled in the spot-kick.
Juve, roared on, pushed forward, leaving gaps which Chelsea exploited when the tireless Ballack released Belletti on the right and Drogba slid in to convert the cross. Chelsea are through to their fifth quarter-final in six years but they will have to play better if they are to finally realise Roman Abramovich's dream.
Juventus (4-3-1-2): Buffon; Grygera, Mellberg, Chiellini, Molinaro; Marchisio, Tiago, Nedved (Salihamidzic, 13); Del Piero; Iaquinta (Giovinco, 61), Trezeguet (Amauri, 79). Substitutes not used: Manninger (gk), Zebina, Poulsen, Ariaudo.
Chelsea (4-1-3-2): Cech; Bosingwa, Alex (Carvalho, 88), Terry, A Cole; Mikel; Essien (Belletti, 65), Ballack, Lampard; Drogba, Anelka. Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Deco, Kalou, Malouda, Mancienne.
Referee: A Undiano Mallenco (Spain).
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Guardian:
Essien and Drogba draw the sting from 10-man JuveJuventus 2 Iaquinta 19, Del Piero (pen) 74 Chelsea 2 Essien 45, Drogba 83
Dominic Fifield at the Stadio Olimpico
Chelsea have their quarter-final and scars aplenty to show for this skirmish with the Old Lady. A frenzied evening marked by a flurry of goals and cards, a timely reward for a player whose season had appeared wrecked by injury, and some bizarre decisions from the officials ended with Guus Hiddink's side safely ensconced in the last eight. They may not have sent shockwaves across Europe, but at least there is evidence that the resilience is back.
It took a goal against 10 men finally to deflate Claudio Ranieri's side. Juliano Belletti, whose handball had presented Juventus with an unlikely late lead, eked out space down the right and crossed low for Didier Drogba, capitalising on the space left by the dismissed Giorgio Chiellini, to slide in the second equaliser. That was fine reward for the Ivorian, though it was Michael Essien's name that was chorused at the end, the midfielder having scored on his first start in over six months. There is more to come from the Ghanaian, and the same might be said of this team.
Chelsea had known this was likely to prove an uncomfortable occasion. Juve had overcome first-leg deficits to force progress in the knock-out phase of this competition four times in the past, and had shown flashes of class in thrusting the home side back in the first leg despite conceding an early goal. Hiddink must have feared seeing his side subjected to a scorching start and his selection was nothing if not bold, handing Essien a first start since August and with Nicolas Anelka, absent from training all last week nursing a toe injury, beginning up front.
The pair had an immediate impact, if not in the way their manager had envisaged. Both clattered Pavel Nedved in the early exchanges, forcing the Czech from the field before the quarter-hour mark clutching his ribs and leaving Juve apparently shorn of creativity. Even so they had forged level in the tie before, with the interval approaching, Essien proved his worth in more legitimate manner.
The visitors were still coming to terms with a linesman's insistence that Drogba's near-post free-kick, bent round the wall, had not crossed the line when, within seconds, Frank Lampard emerged from the midfield stodge to crash a shot from distance on to the underside of the crossbar via Buffon's touch. The ball cannoned down near the goal-line again with Buffon prone for Essien, marauding through the centre, to knock it into the net.
The Ghanaian has been through so much on the sidelines this season that he deserved the reward – celebrated with gusto and the coaching staff – and it was a dagger to Juve's hopes. For so long they had appeared destined to prosper, their midfield runners disturbing Chelsea's rhythm and the clever inter-play of their front trio threatening to expose the frailties which had surfaced too often before Hiddink's arrival.
The game had taken almost 20 minutes to erupt. Then David Trezeguet collected Vincenzo Iaquinta's pass and flicked an exquisite ball inside John Terry and Ashley Cole for the Italy forward to gather. His finish was emphatic and the Premier League team quivered.
In the aftermath of that goal the contest had appeared Juve's for the taking. Alessandro Del Piero, losing Mikel John Obi at will, had prompted and provided to make up for Nedved's absence. It was the veteran's free-kick that had Petr Cech palming up and away with little conviction, the goalkeeper gathering another swerving attempt as the home side, sensing vulnerability, toyed with befuddled opponents. Yet the manner of the riposte just before the interval knocked the belief from the Italians' approach.
Thereafter it was Chelsea who threatened further reward, conceding possession in the centre and waiting for Juventus's frantic players to over-elaborate before pouncing on the counter. Lampard, his influence restored, glided into dangerous areas. There was outrage in the Curva Sud when Cech handled outside his area, sliding out near the touchline to gather but was shown only yellow, the locals taking their ire out on the officials who had denied Drogba the first-half goal.
The tone of the tie had been transformed, the urgency all Italian but Chelsea restored to their dogged best, though the officials were not done influencing affairs just yet. Chiellini's second yellow card, this one for dissent, had appeared to have settled matters, but the Spanish official penalised Belletti for handball as Del Piero's free-kick veered into the area to present the Italians with an unlikely route back into the game. Del Piero calmly stroked in the penalty and Chelsea, so dominant, were fretting again.
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Mail:
Juventus 2 Chelsea 2: The Train is on time with vital goal as Juve fall
Chelsea win 3-2 on aggreagateBy Matt Lawton from Turin
Amid the chaos and confusion of an enthralling Champions League encounter, Michael Essien, known to his team-mates as The Train, arrived on time and so, more crucially, did a goal from Didier Drogba. Chelsea are through to yet another Champions League quarter-final but they made hard work of it here, almost contriving at one stage to succumb to a spirited Juventus side that had actually been reduced to 10 men. It was absorbing stuff. A bumptiously-executed penalty from the forever-young Alessandro Del Piero and suddenly the Italians had 16 minutes to score what would have been a decisive goal.
But from Juliano Belletti came a cross that made amends for the needless handball that had led to Del Piero's spot-kick; and from a rejuvenated Drogba came the goal that had Guus Hiddink shaking his fist in celebration at the final whistle. In fairness to the Old Lady, she probably felt as if she had been mugged, given how she dominated much of this contest. Chelsea were disappointing last night, as even Ray Wilkins admitted in his half-time verdict to the television cameras. 'We were poor,' he said. In fairness to Chelsea they did, however, have what replays suggested was a perfectly good goal disallowed when Gianluigi Buffon failed to stop Drogba's bullet free-kick from crossing the line in the 43rd minute.
Chelsea, down to what amounted to a wonderful opening goal from Vincenzo Iaquinta in the 19th minute, were struggling and the sight of the match officials signalling for play to continue in the wake of Buffon's controversial save only worsened their mood. Little more than three minutes later, though, in first-half added time, and Essien had demonstrated why his comparison to a locomotive goes beyond that awesome combination of pace and power.
Mussolini once made the trains run on time in Italy and even he would have admired the sheer perfection of Essien's arrival after seeing Buffon push a deflected effort from Frank Lampard against the bar. In the second or so Buffon spent trying desperately to regain his balance and possession of the ball, Essien had pounced ahead of Juve's central defenders to mark his long-awaited return to Champions League football in style. It must have been tough for Claudio Ranieri to take, especially when he had proved to his former employers that his tinkering is sometimes based on sound tactical thinking. The loss of Pavel Nedved to injury after only 13 minutes amounted to a major disruption but Ranieri reshuffled his side impressively, deploying Del Piero in Nedved's playmaker role, pushing Iaquinta alongside David Trezeguet in attack and sending on the excellent Hasan Salihamidzic to sit in central midfield.
Only six minutes later and the switch had produced a goal. A backheel from Iaquinta was followed by a great pass from Trezeguet that in turn was rewarded with a sublime finish from his new partner. If they made John Terry and Ashley Cole look rather foolish, it was as much down to the sheer quality of their football as it was the static nature of Chelsea's defending. It was exactly what both sides deserved, Juve for their invention and industry, Chelsea for naively believing they could sit back and protect the one-goal advantage they had brought from Stamford Bridge. Hiddink said it would be dangerous to sit so deep but that was exactly the approach his side employed, inviting Juve to extend their lead, forcing Petr Cech to make the first of a series of fine saves to deny Del Piero. Not once in those previous five games under Hiddink had Chelsea gone a goal behind but here they were in such a position and they appeared to be in trouble, albeit in a tie that was now perfectly balanced. Frustration began to surge through those blue Chelsea veins. Essien was incensed when a decision was given against him. Michael Ballack shook his head when a pass went astray. They seemed bereft of ideas. Sadly lacking in inspiration. Until, that is, they suddenly earned a free-kick shortly before the interval. A free-kick that would lead to a goal that would not be given but would succeed in injecting some life into this stuttering Chelsea side.
Hiddink said they might need a bit of good fortune as well as good football and it did eventually come in the form of the deflection that suddenly made Lampard's shot that much more difficult for the brilliant Buffon. A goal for Essien. Disaster for Juve. Thanks to the away-goal rule, Juve now needed to score twice to progress to the last eight but my how hard they worked in trying to trying to perform what appeared the impossible. After the break and the fluent football had given way to a more frantic approach but one that in some ways was more effective. Cech had to produce a world-class save to guide a Trezeguet header to safety and the Chelsea goalkeeper excelled again when he held a searching free-kick from Sebastian Giovinco. When Giorgio Chiellini was then dismissed in the 71st minute for a second yellow card for what seemed to be dissent, Chelsea must have thought they were home and dry. That, however, was before Belletti - on as a replacement for the exhausted Essien - decided in a moment of madness to raise a hand in stopping a free -kick from Trezeguet. This Del Piero did not miss, ignoring the disgraceful protests of an angry Chelsea mob and inviting Juve to make the final 16 minutes all the more compelling.

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Sunday, March 08, 2009

sunday papers coventry fa cup 2-0




















Sunday Times

Chelsea on a Sky Blues cruise Coventry 0 Chelsea 2
Joe Lovejoy at Ricoh Arena

CHELSEA moved routinely into the semi-finals of the FA Cup with their fifth win in as many matches under Guus Hiddink, but the new manager’s 100% record is sure to come in for a much sterner test than this in Tuesday’s Champions League tie against Juventus. Nicolas Anelka, absent yesterday with a foot injury, may be fit for the trip to Turin.
Coventry’s Chris Coleman said beforehand that the Premier League team would need to be at their best to win at the Ricoh Arena, which was sold out for the first time since it was opened in 2005. He was wrong.
Chelsea hardly had to change out of second gear to dispose of disappointingly poor opposition, whose performance reflected their status in the bottom half of the Championship. Coleman’s post-match complaint that the referee, Steve Bennett, had been “too smug and friendly” with the Chelsea players and had “talked down” to the home team had the sour-grapes taste of a bad loser.
Coventry have lost to Sheffield United, Derby and Cardiff recently, and how they accounted for Blackburn in the last round of the Cup is a mystery after this performance. Hiddink was spot on when he spoke of “a very good end to a normal day’s work”. He added: “I thought we controlled the game well and made a beautiful second goal which killed it.”
The outcome was never in doubt from the 15th minute, when Scott Dann, Coventry’s centre-half and captain, feebly surrendered possession to the resurgent Didier Drogba, whose powerful, driven finish provided him with his third goal in the last four matches.
Drogba immediately ran to Michael Essien, whose return, after a six-month absence, was Chelsea’s post-match focus. Essien, who replaced John Obi Mikel after 64 minutes, is a more accomplished option for the midfield anchor role, and Hiddink intends to restore him to the starting line-up sooner rather than later. Chelsea’s second goal, which removed any lingering hopes the home crowd may have entertained, came in the 72nd minute when Ricardo Quaresma’s break and cross from the right enabled the charging Alex to score with an emphatic finish at the far post.
Coventry were tediously reliant on the long ball and their most dangerous weapon was Aron Gunnarsson’s long throw, so it was not without irony that the second goal started from one of these howitzer hurls from the Icelander, cleared by Michael Ballack for Quaresma to break away and centre to the onrushing Alex. Much was made by Coleman of the fact that Alex and Drogba had been off the field receiving treatment for a clash of heads and were allowed back on too early when Gunnarsson took the throw. It was a moot point, and not one of major consequence.
The two goals apart, the best chance saw Frank Lampard’s dipping free kick from distance tipped over the bar by Kieran Westwood for the save of the match. Coventry’s outstanding opportunity came midway through the first half when Leon Best, playing in a protective mask, left Alex on his backside and evaded John Terry, only to shoot as if the mask was a blindfold. Clinton Morrison’s finishing was similarly woeful late on.
Hiddink said that he had fined Ashley Cole for being drunk and disorderly in the early hours of Thursday morning but, after “assessing all the facts”, he had not considered dropping him. It had been “a little thing we had to cope with” and the issue was now closed. The manager preferred to discuss the return of Essien and Ricardo Carvalho, who was an unused substitute here, which had brought his squad back up to something approaching full strength. Of Drogba’s improved form, Hiddink said: “From the first day, when I saw him in our Cup tie at Watford, and after that in training, he has been working very hard. I don’t know what happened before I came, but I haven’t had any complaints about his attitude or his commitment.
“I have devised a specific programme for him to work on his positioning. I don’t have to force him to do that extra work, he does it willingly.”
Last night, Hiddink had already turned his attention to Tuesday evening, arriving back at his west London home in time to watch the Turin derby between Juventus and Torino. No doubt he was pondering a starting role return for Essien. “I have many hours between now and the start of the Juve game to make a decision,” he said. “It is very good to have him back. You could see today he played 30 minutes but he has to pick up the game rhythm. The other players in the team you can see have the game rhythm.”
Coleman said: “This was the biggest game for the club at this new stadium, but we need to move on. It is going to be difficult against Bristol City on Tuesday, but we’ve got to get back on it. We will have to get back to reality.”
COVENTRY: Westwood 6, Wright 5, Dann 4, Turner 5, Hall 5, Henderson 6, Doyle 5 (Beuzelin 59min, 5), Gunnarsson 7, Eastwood 5, Best 5, Morrison 5
CHELSEA: Cech 6, Bosingwa 6, Alex 6, Terry 6, A Cole 6, Ballack 6, Mikel 5 (Essien 64min), Lampard 6, Kalou 5 (Quaresma h-t, 6), Drogba 7 (Di Santo 80min), Malouda 4

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Telegraph:

Chelsea too strong for Coventry and ease in to FA Cup semi-finals
Never mind Cardiff’s heroics last year, when the cream of the Premier League take the FA Cup seriously there can, sadly, only be one outcome. Hence, there was never much likelihood of Coventry upsetting Chelsea, let alone threaten the class of ’87’s unrivalled place in Sky Blues history. By Clive White
Now it’s back to the long shot of Championship promotion and a match at Ashton Gate for Chris Coleman’s side while Guus Hiddink’s team moves on to the San Siro on Tuesday, dreaming of European glory. As a preparation for their match with Juventus this tie was next to useless – unless, of course, Claudio Ranieri is of a mind to get his Italian all-stars to start pumping it long like Coventry.
The ingredients for an upset yesterday were all there on Coventry’s side: they have been in good form at home recently, beating the Championship’s top two Wolves and Birmingham, not to mention Blackburn Rovers in the previous round. Coleman was confident and it wasn’t difficult to see how the Ricoh Arena could become a cauldron for the opposition if Coventry’s tails were up. Perhaps they just needed a lucky break, say, a deflection into Petr Cech’s goal off someone’s knee, a la Gary Mabbutt in ’87. No, on second thoughts, perhaps not.
Chelsea were just too good, which is not to say they were great, even if Hiddink did punctuate his post-match comments with liberal use of the word “beautiful”, as the Dutch tend to do. They gave the impression they had an extra engine in reserve never mind extra gears had Coventry come up with something special. Coleman admitted as much, but did have one or two gripes afterwards.
Firstly, he criticised referee Steve Bennett’s decision to allow two Chelsea players – Didier Drogba and Alex – back onto the field of play prematurely after sustaining injury, from which point Chelsea broke upfield and scored the match-clinching second goal – through Alex - and secondly, he objected to what he saw as Bennett’s smugness.
“He was too smug towards us,” said Coleman. “Talking to my players – my senior players – they were saying he was very, very friendly with some of the Chelsea boys. I understand it’s Chelsea and sometimes you can be in awe of great players – and they are great players – but he had to do a job. They [the Coventry players] weren’t happy with him, they weren’t happy with his attitude.”
Instead of the flying start, which City so desperately needed, they got a false one. A backward header by Ben Turner to Scott Dann after 15 minutes should have presented no difficulty to the Coventry captain, but instead of dealing with it emphatically, he dallied and was dispossessed by Drogba. The Chelsea striker is in the mood these to make his own chances without being handed one on a plate and he nonchalantly took the ball wide of Keiren Westwood in goal before wellying home his sixth goal of the season.
“He is dangerous,” said Hiddink, who does a nice line in understatement, “and it is good for the whole group that we have him back. He still makes little mistakes, but he can improve. For me he is a guy who has been working hard from day one. I don’t want to judge what happened before.”
Coventry’s back four never really recovered from that and the insides of an old central defender like Coleman must have been churning on the touchline. Coventry didn’t want for effort but the quality just wasn’t there. Once in the first half Leon Best, the hero of their win over Blackburn, went on a winding run that his namesake would have been proud but then finished with a shot that was more Clyde Best than George Best.
At times in the first half it was as much as Coventry could do to get out of their own half never mind threaten Cech’s goal; perhaps it was his lurid orange outfit that repelled them. About the closest Coventry came to making a game of it was when Clinton Morrison came within inches of connecting with a speculative overhead kick to a long throw from Aron Gunarsson after 66 minutes.
Four minutes later the game was up for them. Drogba and Alex banged heads in the Chelsea area – not that they needed to – and had to wait on the touchline for permission to return to the fray after treatment, which they did a little too promptly for Coleman’s liking. To make matters worse, Drogba was the one who sent substitute Ricardo Quaresma on his way with a right-wing break and from his cross Alex powered home like the goalscorer he isn’t.

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Mail:

Coventry 0 Chelsea 2: Coventry give up without a fight as Hiddink's men stay on the trophy trailBy PATRICK COLLINS
A few moments after the final whistle, Guus Hiddink was asked for his reaction to reaching an FA Cup semi-final. He said he was pleased with the result and satisfied with the performance. He added: 'Coventry are not a difficult team to play.'The Chelsea coach realised his error immediately. He winced, apologised for his English and insisted that Coventry had, in fact, been extremely difficult opponents. And although Hiddink seems an honest man, nobody believed him.For Chelsea's progress to the last four was almost indecently simple. They went through their paces, ticked their boxes, completed their chores and accepted their reward without spilling a drop of surplus sweat.
The anticipated gap in class was revealed as a chasm. They have surely experienced more arduous examinations on the training ground. Even those of us who still detect a dusting of magic in the oldest Cup competition in the world cannot begin to defend such palpable mismatches at the quarter-final stage.It is traditional to console the underdogs by claiming that they gave it a real go, never conceded an inch, did themselves proud. In reality, none of those cliches rings particularly true.
Coventry were unduly cautious, indifferently organised and utterly devoid of guile. Take away the odd, vaguely neanderthal long throw from Aron Gunnarsson and they offered nothing to hurt Chelsea.Not until the game was dead and buried in the last 15 minutes did they even contemplate genuine enterprise as opposed to dour containment.
Coventry's manager Chris Coleman, while admitting that his men had been beaten out of sight by a vastly superior football team, erected a daft little smokescreen by suggesting that the referee Steve Bennett had been on overly friendly terms with the Chelsea stars, that he had spoken dismissively to the honest yeomen of Coventry.In short, that he had been a trifle 'smug'. It was a curious distraction, almost Warnockian in its paranoia, and the best we can say is that his heart was not really in it.He had been rather more frank in his programme notes, where he announced: 'We have always said that the League is the most important thing.' Which is rather sad, if undeniably true.The Coventry public were rather more enthusiastic. They maintained the noise from start to finish, bawling their support for a lost cause and cheerfully abusing their Chelsea player of choice.
Frank Lampard was lightly burned and Didier Drogba energetically derided. But, inevitably, the heaviest flak was reserved for Ashley Cole. Throughout the 90 minutes, his every touch was greeted with a barrage of boos.He affected indifference, but on occasion he looked quite hurt. For Ashley knows, better than most, just what boos can do to a man.Yet these diverting sideshows could not divert the inevitable course of the game. Within two minutes of a dire first half, Drogba was whipping a self-made opportunity past the far post.After 15 soporific minutes, an innocuous ball came drifting towards the Coventry back line. Scott Dann had two chances to clear, and declined both. Drogba seized the subsequent chance with punitive efficiency.
From there on, it became a lesson in pass and move, with Chelsea possession secure beyond challenge and the odd half-chance emerging from their total domination.The wonder was that half-time arrived with only a goal's difference between the sides, the more so since Coventry's central defenders were the football equivalent of 'walking wickets'.Chelsea brought on Ricardo Quaresma for Salomon Kalou at the interval, and later felt sufficiently at ease to involve the massively influential Michael Essien for the last 25 minutes. Six minutes later, the game was put to bed.It was a curiously assembled goal. Drogba and his central defender team-mate Alex clashed heads inside the Chelsea box. After treatment, they demanded to return as Gunnarsson wound himself up for yet another throw.
Referee Bennett held them back, then waved them on as the ball was contested. It was knocked clear to Quaresma, who made urgent strides down the right, saw the pass early and played it perfectly.Alex, careering forward, met the cross with a striker's precision. Poor old Coleman worked hard to find something sinister in Bennett's conduct at that throw but, once again, his heart was not in it.So Chelsea came sauntering home, with a Wembley semi-final secure and Juventus appearing on their radar for a Champions League collision on Tuesday.Their season could yet be memorable, as they continue to fight on several fronts. But one thing is certain: the next few weeks will offer all manner of tests. And every one will be infinitely more demanding than yesterday's gentle stroll in the Warwickshire sunshine.
COVENTRY (4-3-1-2): Westwood; Wright, Dann, Turner, Hall; Henderson, Doyle (Beuzelin 59min), Gunnarsson; Eastwood; Morrison, Best. Subs (not used): Marshall, Ward, Osbourne, McPake, Simpson, Thornton. Booked: Beuzelin.CHELSEA (4-3-3): Cech; Bosingwa, Alex, Terry, A Cole; Ballack, Mikel (Essien 65), Lampard; Kalou (Quaresma 46), Drogba (Di Santo 80), Malouda.Subs (not used): Hilario, Carvalho, Quaresma, Belletti, Mancienne.Referee: S Bennett (Kent).

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Indy:

No romance for Coventry as Hiddink's honeymoon goes on
Coventry City 0 Chelsea 2
By James Corrigan at the Ricoh Arena
Five out of five and at least one visit to Wembley booked in for the fans. Guus Hiddink's first four weeks in charge must now be credited as being the start of dreams. Of a billionaire's dream at that. In truth, though, anything but advancement from this rather dull FA Cup quarter-final would have been disappointing for Guy the Gorilla, never mind Guus the Genius; particularly as Hiddink fielded his strongest XI. With the Champions' League return leg at Juventus looming on Tuesday, it was, as the Coventry manager, Chris Coleman, called it, "the greatest compliment".
Perhaps Hiddink was thinking back to the club's humiliating exit at the same stage against Barnsley last year; or perhaps he was expecting rather more from a Coventry side who never truly managed to raise themselves above their Championship standing. Then again, maybe Hiddink truly does hold the old competition in such high esteem. "We don't have priority for the Champions' League," he said. "The FA Cup is not just respected in England but worldwide."
Certainly it would have been no surprise to see him "rest" Ashley Cole after his arrest outside a West End nightspot in the early hours of Thursday morning. Hiddink maintained that after "addressing the issue" with the England defender he did not think about dropping him – "not for a single moment". As it was, Cole's performance was both sober and orderly; a description that neatly summed up Chelsea.
Coleman billed it as "the biggest game in the history of this stadium", which seeing as it has been in use since August 2005 was not the grandest of statements. Nevertheless, this was the first time the Ricoh Arena had been at capacity. Well, that is not strictly true, as Oasis had also managed to raise the sold-out signs. Coleman was certainly looking back in anger about the referee's display.
"I was disappointed with [Steve] Bennett," said the Welshman. "He was too smug towards us. Some of my players said he was very friendly to the Chelsea players. They weren't happy with his attitude."
Coleman admitted Coventry did not exactly help themselves; especially with the first goal. Just 15 minutes had gone when a boot upfield was first allowed towards their area by Ben Turner, where it was then miscontrolled by Scott Dann as the bulk of Didier Drogba was bearing down on him. The Ivorian's finish from a rapidly diminishing angle – Drogba's third goal in four games – was one of the game's two moments of class.
The other came with the lightning-swift break which led to a second goal that Coleman was to dispute vehemently and Hiddink was to label "beautiful". Alas, in between the fare was all too ugly as Chelsea struggled to find the killer ball and Coventry embarked on their wild Guus chase.
Leon Best created the home side's finest chance with a jinking run before shooting over, and Frank Lampard and the rejuvenated Drogba both went close. The game was made to wait until the 72nd minute for the second goal. Coleman's ire was again directed towards Bennett, whom he believed waved on Alex and Drogba too quickly when the pair had been forced to leave the pitch after receiving treatment for a clash of heads.
Chelsea were down to nine men as they tried to defend one of many Aron Gunnarsson long throw-ins. But before the ball had bounced the two Blues were running back on, and within 30 seconds Alex had side-footed into the net up at the other end following a cross by the substitute Ricardo Quaresma. It was a bizarre passage, which probably stemmed from a bizarre law. Even Hiddink admitted: "That rule needs to be reconsidered."
For now he has more pressing concerns. Nicolas Anelka is doubtful to figure in Turin, where Chelsea will seek to convert their 1-0 advantage, while he has a quandary about whether to start Michael Essien. Yesterday the midfielder came on with 25 minutes remaining for his first action in six months following an anterior cruciate ligament injury. It was a pleasing sight for the Blues. Indeed, everything looks that much rosier now.
Attendance: 31,407.
Referee: Steve Bennett.
Man of the match: Drogba.
Match rating: 5/10.
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Observer:

Drogba strikes as Coventry go out with a whimper
Coventry City 0 Chelsea 2 Drogba 15, Alex 72
Paul Wilson at the Ricoh Arena Didier Drogba scored, Ashley Cole was booed, Michael Essien made his first appearance for six months and Alex rounded things off with one of the stranger goals of the season. Oh... and Chelsea ended up in the FA Cup semi-finals. This was another occasion when the fabled drama and romance of the competition were somewhere else. ITV might have had more luck screening a Tic Tac commercial.
Perhaps that is a little harsh on Coventry City, who tried hard without ever looking remotely in Chelsea's class, though the underdogs hardly helped themselves by conceding a soft early goal that allowed the Premier League side to take it easy. "Chelsea are good enough to make their own goals," Chris Coleman said. "They don't need any help from us. That was a bit of nerves on our part."
The Coventry manager had promised he did not want to go out of the Cup with a whimper and felt his team might be able to match their opponents if one or two of the Chelsea players had an off-day, but whimper it was and it was the City ­players who had the off-day, ­particularly the centre-back pairing of Scott Dann and Ben Turner. Dann had already had a lucky escape as early as the second minute when he let the ball bounce and saw Drogba whisk past him to shoot wide. But when he repeated the error 13 minutes later the Ivorian striker was less forgiving.
Turner put his fellow defender under pressure with a weak and misdirected clearing header, yet even so Dann had time to deal with the situation but instead allowed Drogba to push him off the ball. Once goalside the rejuvenated striker expertly rounded Keiren Westwood and scored from a narrow angle.
That goal killed the game as a contest. Leon Best put Coventry's best chance of the first half high over the bar and Chelsea came close to another goal when ­Westwood had to tip over Frank ­Lampard's 25-yard free-kick. Chelsea operated at half pace for the rest of the game, perhaps with an eye on their Champions League game in Turin on Tuesday, and felt comfortable enough to send on Essien for the last half hour, to feel his way back to match fitness after knee-­ligament surgery. According to Guus Hiddink, the Ghanaian is unlikely to start against Juventus and Nicolas Anelka is rated doubtful as well.
By that stage of the second half Coventry were pinning most of their attacking hopes on long throws from Aron Gunnarsson, rather an odd sight to behold as the tight sidelines of the Ricoh Arena necessitate a round-the-corner run-up, a bit like a high jumper approaching the bar. When Gunnarsson reached the touchline one did not quite know whether to expect a throw or a Fosbury flop, though one of his lobs was almost turned in by Clinton Morrison after 70 minutes. His next one led directly to Chelsea's second goal.
The visitors were forced to defend it with Drogba and Alex off the field receiving treatment after an accidental collision. Referee Steve Bennett waved them on as the throw came in, Michael Ballack cleared, Florent Malouda made space in the middle and found Ricardo Quaresma on the right, and when the cross came in Alex was on the end after running the length of the pitch. More bizarre still was Coleman moaning about it.
"The referee shouldn't have let them back on the pitch so quickly," he said. "He's supposed to see where the ball bounces first. But my players weren't very happy with his attitude. He was on very friendly terms with the Chelsea players and smug towards us."
Unsurprisingly, Hiddink failed to see the logic in that argument. "We scored a beautiful goal on the counter," he said. "But I do think the rule needs looking at. We were at a disadvantage, having to defend a throw with two of our tallest players off the field. Referees should be able to wait until the teams are equal."
On this evidence, even Coleman must accept that might be a very long wait.
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NOTW:

COVENTRY 0, CHELSEA 2 Didier Drogba is cooking for Guus From ROB BEASLEY at the Ricoh Arena, 07/03/2009
WHO let the Drog out? Guus Hiddink of course — and Chelsea are now reaping the richest of rewards.
It’s five wins in row for the Dutch boss and three goals in four for the infuriating Ivorian. Drogba has been reborn under Chelsea’s ‘interim coach’. The sulky, brooding, malcontent has become a silky, barn-storming, marauder.
He’s scored as many goals in the last fortnight as he had all season under the axed Big Phil Scolari. A cynic would say he’s playing to get away — and Drogba’s certainly hinted at it often enough in recent times.
But it might just be that a bit of love and comfort from Hiddink has done far more than the hardline approach of the Brazilian, who famously banished the Blues striker to train with the youth team after a 3-0 thrashing at Manchester United.
At the Ricoh arena the ‘old’ Drogba turned up and there’s no doubting that, at his brilliant best, Drogba is a massive asset for Chelsea, a tormentor of even the best of defences. Which is why he had so much fun here in the Midlands.
Because, on this performance, Coventry skipper Scott Dann and poor old Ben Turner could never be described as top-drawer defenders.
There they were with one man to mark between them and still City’s centre-backs couldn’t cope. Turner was in turmoil as early as the second minute when Drogba taunted and teased him to escape in the area before dragging his shot disappointingly wide. But Drogba was not so wasteful with 15 minutes gone.
Again he terrorised Turner before committing keeper Kieren Westwood with a clever feint followed by a fearsome left-foot shot to convert an early goal and dampen the excitement and expectation of the first full house at the Ricoh for a football match.
There were 31,407 packed into the ground, including 5,500 travelling Chelsea fans, who noisily contributed to the atmosphere.That attendance has been topped only by a concert here by American rockers Bon Jovi last summer.
Drogba was delighted with his second goal in a week and he ran down the touchline to the Chelsea bench to share the moment with fit-again team-mate Michael Essien.
The Ghana international, who has played just two games for the Blues this season, was back in the squad for the first time since rupturing knee ligaments playing for his country way back in early September.
It was a demonstration of team togetherness and unity, something Chelsea have been accused of lacking this term. But the Blues now look back in business for the business end of the season.
Not that Coventry rolled over and lay down. Boss Chris Coleman would not allow that. In fact, masked raider Leon Best embarrassed Alex and Chelsea captain John Terry with a searing 24th-minute run into the box but then ruined it all by blazing wildly over.
Frank Lampard’s free-kick 10 minutes later was a better lesson in accuracy. The England star’s drive was arrowing for the top corner when highly-rated City goalkeeper Westwood threw himself full-length to his left to touch it past the angle with his fingertips.
That let-off sparked an instant reaction from City — with Freddie Eastwood smashing a fierce shot. It was Coventry's first on target but it flew straight into the arms of Petr Cech. Mind you, Chelsea were labouring to add to their early lead, with Drogba and Salomon Kalou both off target just before the break.
After the interval City began to hope they could rescue the game. They began to get a territorial foothold in the Chelsea half and the long throws of Aron Gunnarsson were the biggest danger to a Chelsea defence that’s had trouble this term dealing with high balls into the middle. It raised the noise to unprecedented levels that even Bon Jovi would have struggled to match but it was from one such long throw that Chelsea actually killed the game.
Both sides were unhappy with events in the lead-up to the Londoners’ crucial second goal.
Chelsea’s Alex and Drogba clashed heads trying to clear an aerial assault and crashed to the turf. It looked serious enough for both Chelsea and Coventry’s physios to race on to the pitch to offer first aid to the stricken pair. But once they were recovered, referee Steve Bennett ordered them off the pitch. That left Chelsea to defend a Gunnarsson special with only nine men — and they were not happy about it.
But it was soon City’s turn to moan as Chelsea had the last laugh. Michael Ballack won a towering header to clear the throw and impressive sub Ricardo Quaresma scampered away down the right to lead a telling counter-attack.
The on-loan winger then clipped over a superb ball into the middle where, of all people, Alex was on hand to finish off.
He and Drogba had raced back on to the pitch as soon as Gunnarsson had launched his latest missile and moments later the Brazilian centre-back was charging forward to seal an April trip to Wembley for Chelsea’s third FA Cup semi-final in four years. And with Essien and Ricardo Carvalho back again they could just be coming good at the right time.
Both could feature against Juventus in Turin on Tuesday as Hiddink hunts down silverware on a second front.
Smug
But Chris Coleman accused ref Bennett of being too “friendly” with Chelsea’s stars and complained: “I was disappointed with Bennett. He was too smug. My senior players said he was very friendly with the Chelsea boys.
“I know people respect great players and sometimes they can be in awe of them.”
Coleman was angry over the build-up to Chelsea’s second goal. Drogba and Alex clashed heads and Bennett ordered the pair off the pitch while City’s Gunnarsson launched a long throw-in.
But as soon as the ball had left Gunnarsson’s hands they stormed back on to the pitch as the visitors broke away to score.
Coleman moaned: “I was not happy with the way Alex and Drogba re-entered the field after treatment. Then who scores Chelsea’s second goal? Alex!”
Chelsea boss Guus Hiddink was also unhappy. He said: “We had two of our best headers of the ball off the field when we had to defend a dangerous situation.”
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Wednesday, March 04, 2009

morning papers portsmouth away 1-0


The Times
Chelsea embrace new work ethic to break the resistance of Hart’s men
Portsmouth 0 Chelsea 1
Matt Hughes, Deputy Football Correspondent
Like his fabled young compatriot who stuck his finger in the dyke, Guus Hiddink does not shirk from seemingly impossible tasks. On his first day at Chelsea, the interim manager boldly announced that his side could catch Manchester United at the top of the Barclays Premier League and three weeks later they are hovering on their shoulder after three successive wins.
Sir Alex Ferguson will not have been too perturbed as he watched this stuttering Chelsea performance at a hotel in Newcastle before this evening’s engagement at St James’ Park, but the United manager will have recognised their fighting spirit. Like the Scot, Hiddink has the ability to imbue his players with an indomitable will to win and they needed it in dreadful conditions on a sodden South Coast, Didier Drogba settling a match that appeared to be slipping away from them with a 79th-minute goal to close United’s lead to four points.
“They’re an experienced team, but it’s good for everyone in this championship to have the pressure on the side at the top,” Hiddink said. “Four points gives me more pressure to put on them.”
Hiddink has a reputation for being a tactical genius, a deep thinker on the game with more theories than Pythagoras, but his impressive start at Chelsea has been based on something far more straightforward. By challenging his players to take greater responsibility, they are working harder and producing more for themselves and their team-mates. The Brazilian samba school has been replaced by a Dutch labour camp.
Ironically, the previously workshy Drogba has been the biggest beneficiary, with the Ivory Coast striker relishing the new regime. Drogba celebrated only his second Premier League goal of the season as if it had secured the title, but he retained enough energy to head clear a free kick from Niko Kranjcar in added time. A transformation indeed.
“Didier is making the difference in the last few games,” Hiddink said. “As long as he is so committed then he will make those goals as well. He was very happy with his goal. That was an emotional explosion.”
Drogba is not the only player to have exploded into life, as several of his team-mates have raised their game. Michael Ballack flew into tackles, Salomon Kalou threatened down the right and Petr Cech showed signs of regaining his best form, making a superb save from Sean Davis in the first half and denying David Nugent from close range in the second.
Frank Lampard has been a hard worker since the days when he stayed out until dusk practising free kicks on his own as a trainee at West Ham United, and the England midfield player was a class apart last night. Since signing a new contract last summer, Lampard has matured into the ultimate team player, alive to every situation and passing where he would previously have shot. In the first half alone, the 30-year-old released Kalou down the right with a great through-pass, picked out Ballack with a pinpoint corner that he headed over the bar and brought a good save from David James with a powerful left-foot shot.
Portsmouth, too, had their moments, and they have improved dramatically under Paul Hart, the interim manager, who deserves the opportunity that he has been given to keep them up. Hart’s secret has been to speak to the players in a language that they understand and, after being befuddled by Tony Adams, they have responded. With better finishing from Nugent and Kranjcar, they would have claimed a point, although if they can reproduce this performance regularly, they should clamber to safety.
Chelsea should not get too carried away, because all four wins under Hiddink have come by a single goal, but they have an outside chance of achieving their mission impossible.
— Portsmouth confirmed the appointment of Paul Hart as their interim manager last night, with Brian Kidd as his assistant. The club held a board meeting yesterday afternoon, attended by Alexandre Gaydamak, the owner, at which Hart’s appointment until the end of the season was ratified. Portsmouth had hoped to recruit Sven-Göran Eriksson, but he has stayed with Mexico, so Hart has been rewarded for steadying the ship since replacing Tony Adams last month.
Portsmouth (4-3-3): D James — G Johnson, S Campbell, S Distin, H Hreidarsson — H Mullins, N Kranjcar, S Davis — J Pennant (sub: J Utaka, 70min), P Crouch, D Nugent. Substitutes not used: A Begovic, Y Kaboul, N Pamarot, Kanu, A Basinas, N Belhadj.
Chelsea (4-1-2-3): P Cech — J Bosingwa, Alex, J Terry, A Cole — J O Mikel (sub: J Belletti, 57) — M Ballack (sub: M Mancienne, 90), F Lampard — S Kalou (sub: R Quaresma, 60), D Drogba, F Malouda. Substitutes not used: Hilário, B Ivanovic, F Di Santo, P Ferreira.
Referee: P Dowd.
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Telegraph:
Didier Drogba keeps Chelsea hoping of miracle
Didier Drogba maintained Chelsea’s outside chances of upsetting Manchester United’s march to five trophies with a goal 11 minutes from the end of a game played in a storm, the victory taking Chelsea to within four points of the leaders. By John Ley at Fratton Park United may have two games in hand – one on Wednesday night at Newcastle – but the intentions from a battling performance in difficult conditions were apparent, that Chelsea are refusing to give up the title lightly, with Drogba claiming his first League goal of 2009 and only his second in the Premier League this season.
Torrential rain fell before and during the game, making the Fratton Park pitch heavy in some places. And with the wind blowing off the Solent, it made for difficult conditions. The gusts were so strong early on, that players had trouble in keeping the ball steady at set-piece kicks.
Before the game, FA Cup holders Portsmouth, with help from four soldiers from the Royal Artillery, paraded the trophy around the stadium, with the PA announcer admitting it was the home fans’ last chance to see the Cup.
Chelsea fans butted in with cries of “cheerio, cheerio”, knowing that their name could be next of the trophy, particularly if they beat Coventry on Saturday to progress to the semi-finals.
Guus Hiddink, their interim manager, made two changes from the side that plucked a late victory off Wigan on Saturday. Leading scorer Nicolas Anelka, who has scored 21 goals so far, was ruled out with a toe injury, so for the first time under the Dutchman, his partnership with Didier Drogba had to be broken up.
Hiddink brought in Florent Malouda for his first start for more than a month while, in defence, Jose Bosingwa returned from suspension to replace youngster Michael Mancienne.
Paul Hart, Portsmouth’s caretaker manager, made only one change from the side that drew 2-2 at Stoke 10 days previously, with Hayden Mullins in for Greek international Angelis Basinas.
Chelsea went into the game boasting a 100 per cent record since the shock departure of Luiz Felipe Scolari. Under Ray Wilkins they beat Watford in the FA Cup with Hiddink watching from the stands and, since taking over, Hiddink has presided over two Premier League wins and a 1-0 victory over Juventus in the Champions League.
The conditions made for an enterprising if not always controlled start from both sides, with Portsmouth adopting an attacking 4-3-3 formation when going forward and threatening to open the scoring. Hermann Hreidarsson won an early corner for Portsmouth but Sean Davis sent the resultant effort over before David Nugent, named the club’s player of the month before hand, setting up Mullins, but he completely miss-kicked in the South Coast wind.
Chelsea responded with a Salomon Kalou cross, held easily by David James, and a wayward drive from Frank Lampard. They went closer in the 16th minute when John Mikel Obi’s persistence allowed Ashley Cole to cross from the left but the ball was a foot to far for the incoming Drogba.
Hreidarsson made a timely interception as Chelsea threatened again, while Malouda sent another attempt wide as the visitors increased their hold on the game. And in the 22nd minute, with the blustery conditions clearly having an influence, Malouda’s cross was spilled by James but Chelsea could not take advantage.
Portsmouth fans called for a penalty midway through the first half when, with Nugent and Peter Crouch pushing forward the ball appeared to catch Alex’s arm and then followed the best chance so far when, in the 28th minute Davis’s strong shot was pushed aside by the athletic Petr Cech.
But, in keeping with the unpredictable nature of this game Chelsea responded when Lampard produced a marvellous half volley out of nothing and it took all of James’ goalkeeping skills to block the effort on the line.
And with three minutes of the half remaining Chelsea survived a goalmouth scramble with Hreidrasson and Nugent failing to nudge the ball home before Cech made a desperate save, hugging the ball on the line.
Chelsea made an early second half change with Mikel replaced by Juliano Belletti but soon afterwards Nugent chased a ball knocked-down by Crouch but Cech made another outstanding save, stretching to his right.
Chelsea immediately made another alteration, with Ricardo Quaresma on for Kalou, but with the gusts now reaching gale-force strength, the visitors looked as if they were struggling to weather the storm.
Both sides squandered chances mid-way though the second half: Quaresma’s right-wing cross was met by Drogba, the striker beating Sol Campbell to the ball but sending a headed chance dipping just over. And at the other end, Crouch was found in a surprising amount of space, drove down the right and then crossed for Niko Kranjcar, but the Croatian shot wide when he could have scored.
But Chelsea stole the winning goal in the 79th minute when Drogba, who scored the winner against Juventus, met a cross from Bosingwa’s cross and found the bottom right hand corner with a masterclass in finishing.

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Mail;
Portsmouth 0 Chelsea 1: Drogba fires late winner to keep Blues in title huntBy Neil Ashton
Didier Drogba's late strike settled the match at Fratton Park, a reminder for the new Portsmouth manager Paul Hart that the beautiful game can still bring the most brutal results.Portsmouth did not deserve this, rough justice on a team who fought for Hart and fought for every inch of the windswept, rain-sodden turf against high-calibre opposition.
They were beaten by a strike of the highest quality, curled beyond the unsighted Portsmouth keeper David James 11 minutes from time by a player with a point to prove.
Tough luck on a team fighting for their lives near the foot of the table. Hart will stay until the end of the season, attempting to plot the path to another season in the Premier League, with the help of his astute assistant Brian Kidd.They remain 16th in the table after Drogba’s strike, staring up at Chelsea this morning and wondering how they failed to finish off Stamford Bridge title ambitions.It was cup-tie stuff, with Pompey’s supporters crackling into life as they sensed an upset, a win that would be their first over Chelsea since 1957.Drogba’s strike illustrated the narrow margin between success and failure as Pompey fought to within touching distance of ending Chelsea’s ambitious plans to overhaulthe best team on the planet, Manchester United.
Chelsea fancy their chances, with Drogba scoring only his second League goal this season and taking off on a remarkable celebration before being stopped by swathesof yellow-shirted team-mates.Guus Hiddink, soaked on the sidelines, barely flinched, reminding his players that their fourth straight victory, three in the Premier League, was not yet secure.He sent on Michael Mancienne towards the end to replace Michael Ballack, closing the game out in a style reminiscent of a certain managerial predecessor.
One-nil to the Chelsea is enough to keep them in it, enough for the players to march towards the hordes of supporters stationed behind the goal and throw their muddied shirts into the baying mob.They want more of this and Hiddink’s team are promising to provide it as they chase the impossible dream of catching Manchester United at the top of the table and the more realistic targets, the Champions League and FA Cup.Anything is possible after this streaky victory. Somehow they are still in the hunt for the title, ensuring another agonising week for Chelsea’s supporters, but Portsmouth deserved more than this. Much more.They were beaten 4-0 at Stamford Bridge on the first day of the season, ripped apart by Deco, Frank Lampard, Joe Cole and Nicolas Anelka, but that was never likely to happen last night.Hart has this team organised, scrambling towards safety with a victory over Manchester City on Valentine’s Day.
They matched Chelsea man for man, warriors all, as they chased a momentous victory.They should have won this, denied by the brilliance of Petr Cech in Chelsea’s goal, turning Sean Davis’s long-range effort over the bar in the first half and then palming David Nugent’s effort around the post after the break.Pompey paraded the FA Cup for the last time ahead of kick-off before it was spirited back to Soho Square after the game in an armoured vehicle.It is safe to say it will not been seen at Fratton Park for a while so it was given a fitting send-off by 20,000 Portsmouth supporters setting their sights on another season in the Premier League.That is the target for Hart and Kidd, popular with the players after the confusing thoughts of Tony Adams, as they prepare the team to power their way from the foot of the table.But this was a visit from a team energised by the arrival of Hiddink with three wins on the spin under the new manager and intent on securing a fourth.
They were missing Nicolas Anelka, given the evening off after stubbing his toe in training on Monday and told to use the recovery time to prepare for Saturday’s trip to Coventry’s Ricoh Arena.Instead, Drogba shouldered responsibility, throwing himself into challenges and reminding owner Roman Abramovich of some of the reasons why he spent £24million to sign him from Marseille in the summer of 2004.Only the conditions at Fratton Park prevented him scoring in the first half when he mistimed his run when Ashley Cole prodded the ball across the penalty area.No-one could blame him, sliding across the face of James’ goalmouth as he attempted to connect with Cole’s cross, but his reward for this impressive, diligentand disciplined performance was the winning goal.He got it when Jose Bosingwa’s cross fell to him invitingly inside the area, taking a touch to set himself and then sweeping his effort beyond James.It was a goal of stunning quality, not enough to turn the title in their favour, but enough to suggest Chelsea will take this to the bitter end.

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Guardian:
Drogba the difference as Pompey put faith in HartPortsmouth 0 Chelsea 1 Drogba 79
Dominic Fifield at Fratton Park
Portsmouth are on the verge of confirming Paul Hart as their manager until the end of the season, though the caretaker-turned-firefighter will be grateful he will not be visited again before the end of the campaign by the likes of Chelsea. This contest had threatened to be a soggy stalemate, the hosts eking out the better opportunities and ready to celebrate their point, until one flash of genuine quality amid the downpour wrecked the locals' mood.
Hart has his first experience of cruel defeat at the helm of this club. Didier Drogba, so anaemic for much of this campaign but resurgent in recent weeks, provided the game's pivotal moment only 11 minutes from time, gathering Jose Bosingwa's cross and cushioning a curled finish low and beyond David James to squeeze out the advantage. Guus Hiddink has overseen narrow victories in each of his four games in charge, all by a single goal, yet he retains the magic touch. How Portsmouth, still only two points clear of the cut-off, crave such inspiration. The four points accrued by Hart and Brian Kidd in their two previous games in charge had constituted something of a revival at this club given the ignominy endured too often over Tony Adams' brief reign. Portsmouth had teetered on the brink, poor luck failing to disguise a lack of cohesion in their performances to undermine the former Arsenal centre-half. The club's owner, Sacha Gaydamak, and executive chairman Peter Storrie had been seeking "stability" in granting Hart, previously the director of youth development, some permanence in the role. Theirs had been a pursuit of "continuity" in turning to Adams, Harry Redknapp's No2, back in October.
There is certainly more belief in these parts at present that disaster can be staved off. Chelsea had not lost in the league to these opponents since 1957 but they were stretched at times as this arena was drenched in a deluge. Hermann Hreidarsson and David Nugent, both revived in recent times, should have tested Petr Cech in the opening jousts. Sean Davis did, skimming a shot from distance, only for the goalkeeper to save wonderfully. Cech was merely relieved to choke Hreidarsson's subsequent stabbed attempt from close range on his goal-line as Nugent and Niko Kranjcar threatened to convert.
Yet, while those opportunities unsettled Chelsea, they did rather puncture long periods of the visitors' possession. Hiddink, like Hart, has had an immediate effect since assuming the reins, hoisting a team that had been threatening to stall under Luiz Felipe Scolari back into second place with narrow wins in his first two league games. He had cited plenty of aspects to his team's play still in need of improvement ahead of the visit to the south coast. That work is still to be implemented, but there was promise to be had in Drogba's bustling energy and Frank Lampard's class through the centre.
With Nicolas Anelka absent nursing a toe injury, Drogba was a man possessed, tearing at the home side's back-line as if he was competing for a Jose Mourinho side once again. The Ivorian was agonisingly close to tapping in Ashley Cole's fizzed centre as it careered across the goal-line. Lampard, taking up the baton, forced James to save from distance. The veteran England goalkeeper broke a record here, with this his 538th Premier League appearance, and excelled in denying Alex's free-kick in first half stoppage time. His spill from Florent Malouda's slippery cross was less to the hosts' liking.
Chelsea had threatened reward but delivered none, their approach play running aground too often on Pompey's stubborn and hugely experienced back-line. Frustration welled up, Ricardo Quaresma replacing an ineffective Salomon Kalou, but the visitors' growing desperation to force an advantage occasionally leaving them vulnerable on the counter-attack. Jermaine Pennant was a nuisance down the right. When Nugent rolled away from John Terry and wriggled in on goal there was a collective in-take of breath around this arena, only for Cech once again to palm away the former Preston striker's attempt.
The Londoners had been warned, though they did not learn. Chelsea over-committed at a Lampard free-kick, with Sol Campbell eventually clearing for Peter Crouch, alone near the halfway line, to charge down the right flank. Kranjcar was the only Portsmouth player in support but, when the England forward's cross reached the Croatian, there was only a scuffed shot wide to show for the opportunity.
The miss felt wasteful at the time but critical once Drogba had forced Chelsea ahead. The frantic late pressure, with crosses flung towards Crouch and massed scrambles inside the visitors' penalty area, rarely threatened to yield an equaliser. Hart most hope this misfortune is not a sign of things to come.

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Independent:
Drogba fires to resurrect Chelsea title ambitions
Portsmouth 0 Chelsea 1
By Sam Wallace, Football correspondent
Another case of deadly Didier and golden Guus, a double-act that is turning into a beautiful friendship. The moodiest striker at Chelsea has now rescued his new manager twice in the space of a week and last night Drogba kept alive any fading hopes his club might have of the title.
Not only that, but he keeps intact Hiddink's impressive start at Chelsea, a record that is four games, four wins and a revival that has kept the club in touch with Manchester United at the top of the Premier League. In the mud and rain of a Tuesday night at Fratton Park there were times when you had to wonder whether this was where Chelsea's challenge was going to end, but they had just enough resolve to win a crucial game.
Or rather they had a match-winner in Drogba, whose goal meant that the gap to United at the top is four points, although the champions have two games in hand. You could not help thinking that Sir Alex Ferguson's team would not have left it until the 78th minute to beat Portsmouth last night. Neither do United look as pedestrian and predictable as Chelsea do at times, but with Drogba on this form it looks like they will always have a chance.
Hiddink (below) is just about hanging in there and he knows it. "I have to face the facts that we had two difficult games," he said. "I haven't shut my eyes to [problems] in the Wigan game as well, but we must improve. What is good in this team is that they react when there are difficulties. This team is not happy when things are not going well. Then you see they get rewards."
The Chelsea coach is not so daft that he is calling it on with United, but he is keen on reminding Ferguson that his side have not given up. "[A gap of] four points means there is more pressure on them, but they still have two games in hand," Hiddink said. "They're an experienced team. But it's good, for everyone in this championship to have the pressure on the side at the top."
Hiddink called it right when he brought on the Portuguese winger Ricardo Quaresma for the final stages, he was lively and contributed to the pressure that led to the goal. The problem for Hiddink is that there are just so few options available. Salomon Kalou and Florent Malouda's contribution was negligible but with Nicolas Anelka out with a bruised toe there was little else he could do. He praised his team's reaction to adversity, their imagination was less impressive.
Petr Cech kept them in the match when he saved from Sean Davis and David Nugent, but come the end of the game there was some desperate defending. Peter Crouch had broken free on 69 minutes and crossed for Niko Kranjcar who got his touch wrong and put the ball wide. Pompey had their chances, but Chelsea are at last running into a bit of luck.
Portsmouth announced after the match that Paul Hart will be coach until the end of the season and last night you could see why he has the board's confidence. They look much more disciplined under Hart and Brian Kidd and, despite being 16th, there are definitely signs of life. David James was excellent again, and Sol Campbell and Sylvain Distin solid, but for the one moment they let Drogba in.
Hart said: "I'm very pleased to be here until the end of the season. It's good for the club and players that there's been a decision made. You don't want to speak too soon – it's been three games, but in those matches the players have shown magnificent determination and a response to what we've asked. If we maintain that spirit, we'll be a difficult side to beat. We deserved to get a point, and we could have won."
This was James's 538th Premier League appearance and he clearly still lives for evenings like these in the rainwith, as Pompey have found of late, backs against the wall. James saved brilliantly from Alex's free-kick at the end of the first half. But when Drogba got the ball from Jose Bosingwa's cross, the ball was past James before he could react.
In the period at the start of the second half, when Nugent and Kranjcar should have scored, Pompey were on top. If they could have supported Crouch more they might have won. At the end Drogba even threw his shirt into the crowd. There was a time when it might have come straight back at him but things are different now.
Goals: Drogba (78) 0-1.
Portsmouth (4-4-1-1): James; Johnson, Campbell, Distin, Hreidarsson; Pennant (Utaka, 70), Mullins, Davis, Nugent; Kranjcar; Crouch. Substitutes not used: Begovic (gk), Kaboul, Pamarot, Kanu, Basinas, Belhadj.
Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Terry, Alex, A Cole; Mikel (Belletti, 56); Kalou (Quaresma, 60), Ballack (Mancienne, 90), Lampard, Malouda; Drogba. Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Ivanovic, Di Santo, Ferreira.
Referee: P Dowd (Staffordshire).
Man of the match: Drogba.
Attendance: 20, 326.
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Mirror:
Portsmouth 0-1 Chelsea: Blues still second thanks to late Didier Drogba winner
By Martin Lipton
Barclays Premier League
Grind them out, scratch them out, dig them out.
But keep on winning, keep on fighting, never give in - and who knows what might happen.
Last night, to the despair of Fratton Park, Didier Drogba struck unerringly into the bottom corner of David James' net to continue Guus Hiddink's winning start and Chelsea's pursuit of the unlikely.
And it wouldn't be a huge surprise if the absent Roman Abramovich was left wondering what the season could have brought if he had ditched Luiz Felipe Scolari a month earlier.
Hiddink has not wrought miracles at Stamford Bridge, not changed that much, even essentially picked Scolari's team, although getting Drogba back onside was perhaps the most significant move of all.
What he has done, though, is make them start believing in themselves again, make them want to play for the shirt and find a way to win games they would have lost few short weeks ago.
This, unquestionably, was one of those, Paul Hart's side justifying the club's decision to hand him the reins for the rest of the season with a display of commitment and conviction that deserved better.
They would have got it too, had it not been for Petr Cech, another of those who fell out with Scolari.
Cech's displays in the last days of the Brazilian's reign led to a whispering campaign suggesting the Czech had lost his aura of impregnability.
But the keeper, like Drogba and the rest, has been rejuvenated by Hiddink's gentle touch and harder training regime.
And if there was any doubt on that score, it must have been ended with two moments in which Cech saved his side to create the platform for Drogba's late heroics.
The first came just before the half hour, after Chelsea's dominance, orchestrated by Frank Lampard, had brought them precisely zero reward.
Loose play on the edge of their own box allowed Sean Davis room for a screaming strike which had the home fans already celebrating before Cech flung himself to his right to turn the ball up and over the bar.
Then just before the hour, the keeper was equally, and perhaps even more crucially agile as he thwarted David Nugent when the former England man turned John Terry from Peter Crouch's flick and let fly from 16 yards.
On such moments can matches, even seasons change, although Nico Krancjar, found by Crouch when Sol Campbell's defensive hoof caught all 10 Chelsea outfield players in the Portsmouth half, glided another opening wide.
At that stage Chelsea might have been happy with a point.
Yes, they had created the best openings in the first half, with Drogba inches away from converting Ashley Cole's driven cross, before being blocked by James after racing onto a Lampard through-ball.
James, too, struck lucky when he fumbled a cross by Florent Malouda and Lampard's shot, bailed out by a back-line led by Campbell and Sylvain Distin.
But while Michael Ballack and then Alex went close before the break and Drogba headed over from substitute Ricardo Quaresma after the interval, Portsmouth had looked the more likely to reap the benefits of their sunshine break in Dubai as Chelsea looked like a side playing their third game in eight days.
Enter Drogba. A week ago, his goal against Juventus had given Cheksea the precious advantage to take to Turin.
Last night, when Jose Bosingwa's cross flicked off Campbell's knee and into Drogba's path 12 yards out, the ball was only ever going to finish up in one place.
Drogba ran to celebrate in front of Hiddink and at the end, after withstanding a late siege which saw James take residence in the other box, the Chelsea players' clenched fists were a statement of intent.
The odds still, vastly, favour United. But it is not all over yet.
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Sun:
Portsm'th 0 Chelsea 1
By SHAUN CUSTIS
GUUS HIDDINK has become a Drog addict.
Chelsea’s Dutch boss has got moody striker Didier Drogba smoking again and his winner kept the Blues just about hanging on to Manchester United’s coat-tails in the title race.
The hitman scored the goal that beat Juventus in the Champions League last week.
And last night he fired home Ricardo Quaresma’s 78th-minute cross to take Chelsea to within four points of Alex Ferguson’s Premier League kings.
Hiddink’s record as Chelsea caretaker manager is now four wins out of four.
The Dutchman had done a Kevin Keegan in the pre-match build-up and spoken about how he would ‘love it’ if Chelsea could put a spanner in the United works
But the Blues machine ran far from smoothly and they had to dig in to emerge with three points from this one.
For most of an awful night in which the wind howled and the rain pelted down it seemed the best Chelsea could hope for was a draw, which was no good at all.
A point, however, would have been invaluable to Portsmouth in their relegation fight.
They will take heart from this performance, which showed bags of character. And after the game caretaker boss Paul Hart was named manager for the rest of the season, with Brian Kidd as his assistant.
Slipping all over
But Pompey paid for failing to take their chances and found Chelsea keeper Petr Cech back to his best.
It was an evening for battlers and the conditions made quality football tricky.
But Chelsea were lacklustre and seemed content to soak up pressure rather than take the game to Portsmouth.
Players were slipping all over the place and Drogba could not quite slide far enough to connect with Ashley Cole’s cross on 10 minutes with the goal gaping in front of him.
Had Drogba got any touch Chelsea would have been ahead and life might have been a lot easier.
The keepers performed exceptionally well in the circumstances and Pompey veteran David James, 38, came skidding out superbly to block from Drogba.
He acknowledged the England keeper’s excellence with a respectful thumbs-up.
Cech showed he was equally adept when he palmed a screaming low drive from Sean Davis, which was heading for the bottom corner, over the bar.
Holding on to the ball was difficult though and James could only bundle a Frank Lampard free-kick back into his own six-yard box where former Chelsea defender Glen Johnson cleared before Michael Ballack could finish it off.
Ballack headed just over from Lampard’s corner then, with the last kick of the first half, Alex’s rocket of a free-kick from 35 yards beat the wall but not James who got firm hands on it diving to his right.

Hiddink’s men needed to step it up and take the game to the opposition and the manager withdrew defensive midfielder Jon Obi Mikel and replaced him with the more attack-minded Juliano Belletti.
But the Blues were almost caught out on 58 minutes after an uncharacteristic mistake by Terry.
The skipper failed to deal with a routine through ball and David Nugent was clear on goal.
He got his shot in but it was a nice height for Cech who flew to his right to beat it away.
The man who changed the game was on-loan Quaresma who replaced Salomon Kalou on the hour and livened things up immediately.
He burst down the right and crossed for Drogba who headed over and another dangerous ball into the area from the Portuguese winger was scrambled behind by Sol Campbell.
It reminded us of what once made Quaresma one of the most sought-after creators in European football.
He lost his way having been bought then dumped by Jose Mourinho at Inter Milan but maybe he and Chelsea will be good for each other.
For all Chelsea’s pressure, Portsmouth suddenly broke as the ball rebounded to Crouch who was all alone on the halfway line.
His first touch was not a good one, taking him too far wide but he still had plenty of room to work in and crossed for Nico Kranjcar who controlled and shot wide.
The rain came down harder and the wind got stronger but Quaresma’s influence on Chelsea was growing and it was his cross which found its way through the Pompey defence for Drogba’s winner.
The strike from 12 yards was clean and true and it was job done.
Absolutely spliffing!

Sunday, March 01, 2009

sunday papers wigan home 1-0


The Times
Frank Lampard lights up Chelsea
Joe Lovejoy at Stamford Bridge
CHELSEA celebrated their victory in stoppage time as if they had won the Premier League, and who knows? Frank Lampard’s decisive header, with 91 minutes on the clock, lifted his team into second place in the table, and they could trim Manchester United’s lead at the top to four points if they win again at Portsmouth on Tuesday.
At the final whistle Didier Drogba gleefully booted the ball into the crowd and Lampard and John Terry, the Chelsea goalscorers, embraced in recognition of another restorative result which makes it three wins out of three under Guus Hiddink’s revivalist management. Would it have spelled the end of Chelsea’s title hopes if it had finished 1-1? Smiling, Hiddink said: “I’m glad it’s an if and not a fact.”
Wigan thought they had gained a draw, which would not have flattered them, when Olivier Kapo equalised in the 82nd minute, but Lampard exemplified Chelsea’s never-say-die spirit in looping a header over Chris Kirkland after Michael Ballack had set him up from Terry’s long punt. The midfielder has now scored five times in his past seven league games and, with 15 in all, is set to pass the 20 mark in the season yet again.
Terry is no less important to the Blues’ cause, and talk of the captain leaving for Manchester City, in exchange for Robinho, was ridiculed after his opening goal, in the 25th minute, made him the highest scoring defender in Chelsea’s history, with 35.
Luiz Felipe Scolari, sacked last month, might have countenanced such a swap. The new regime most certainly would not. The fans would lynch anybody who dared to part them from their hero. Wigan, who have been punching above their weight under Steve Bruce, contributed in full to a competitive match, and continue to reflect great credit on their manager, who has had to cope with the sale of his two best players, Emile Heskey and Wilson Palacios, and was without the influential Antonio Valencia here. They had not conceded for over five hours when Terry finally beat Kirkland with a left-footed volley from 18 yards.
For most of the first half Wigan were the better team, and they would have had a commanding lead after 20 minutes but for a notable save by Petr Cech from Paul Scharner, and goalline clearances by Ashley Cole and Terry to thwart Titus Bramble and Kapo.
It was against the run of play when Chelsea took the lead, Terry scissor-kicking home from a central position on the edge of the penalty area for a goal that was an embarrassment for Emmerson Boyce. First he headed Lampard’s corner straight to his opposite number, then Terry’s shot parted his hair on the way in.
Chelsea then enjoyed a purple patch. Lampard, who was outstanding, might have scored twice before half-time. Drogba, who created the second of these, has been invigorated by the change of management and is back to something approaching his powerful, intimidating best.
In the second half he demanded a last-ditch clearance from Wigan’s best player, Bramble, with a crisp shot, then out-muscled both centre-halves in the same belligerent run. Inspirational stuff from the big man. It had the look of Hiddink’s third successive 1-0 win until, with 10 minutes left, Maynor Figueroa’s left-wing cross enabled Kapo to dart in front of Nicolas Anelka at the near post and steer the ball home at nudging range.
Roman Abramovich looked on, stony-faced, as time ticked away, then joined in the cavorting when Lampard, after holding off Mario Melchiot with what Bruce insisted was a foul, nodded the ball over Kirkland from eight yards. The Wigan manager was unhappy with the referee, Lee Probert, and entered the time-honoured plea that the big decisions always favoured the big clubs, but it was a classic case of poacher turned gamekeeper.
Bruce the Bruiser routinely got away with much worse in his playing days. “We deserved something and we didn’t get it,” he said. “The same thing happened to us at Old Trafford and Liverpool.” The £1m bonus question for Hiddink was: Can you still win the title? With a mischievous look, he said: “I’m rather realistic. We have to win our games — preferably more comfortably than we did today — and then ask my Dutch friend, Edwin Van der Sar, if he’ll have the ball in the back of his net to help us. I know him well, and I don’t think he will.
“Manchester United are in a good seat, but as long as there is the possibility for us, as long as it’s not decided, we’ll keep going. We showed that at Aston Villa last week and again today.” Ominously for Hiddink and Chelsea, Van der Sar is obliging nobody, having kept 16 clean sheets this season.
CHELSEA: Cech 6, Mancienne 5 (Quaresma 81min), Alex 6, Terry 8, A Cole 6, Kalou 5 (Belletti 75min), Mikel 6, Ballack 5, Lampard 9, Drogba 7, Anelka 6
WIGAN: Kirkland 6, Melchiot 6, Boyce 5, Bramble 8, Figueroa 6, Kapo 6, Scharner 6, Brown 5, Cattermole 6 (Rodallega 69min), N’Zogbia 6, Zaki 6 (Sibierski 90min)

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Telegraph:
Chelsea show last-gasp resilience again at Stamford Bridge
Chelsea (1) 2 Wigan Athletic (0) 1 By Jonathan Wilson at Stamford Bridge
Three games played, three games won by a single goal, and Chelsea are up to second. It would be deeply misleading, though, to suggest that Guus Hiddink has transformed his side. There was, rather, a deeply familiar feel about yesterday afternoon, as Chelsea huffed and puffed unconvincingly.
To their credit, they showed the character, having conceded late, to go on and steal a last-minute winner through Frank Lampard, but then his previous goal for the club had also been a last-minute winner against opposition they would have expected to brush aside, against Stoke in January.
The winner was not without controversy, with Steve Bruce, the Wigan manager, angered that the referee Lee Probert had not penalised Lampard for a supposed push on Mario Melchiot as he looped his header over Chris Kirkland. “The referee made a poor decision,” he said.
“Frank’s obviously got his hand on Mario’s back and turned him round as he’s gone to head it. He’s got that one wrong and it’s gone against us. We played very very well. But you need the referee to be strong and see what he sees and not get influenced, but it doesn’t seem to happen for little Wigan, which is very frustrating.”
“Not a lot of contact,” was Hiddink’s verdict, and he pointed out that Ballack had probably taken just as much of a shove as he flicked the ball on for Lampard. He was more concerned with praising the “fighting spirit” of his side. “We reacted well,” he said. “But what I like to see is when you are dominating, to have the game killed.” It’s not entirely clear, though, when that period of domination was.
Chelsea certainly had the bulk of the chances, but it took them a while to assert themselves, and a five-minute spell of Wigan pressure in the middle of the first half suggested Chelsea’s problems run too deep to be solved in a week, even by a manager as charismatic as Hiddink. First Paul Scharner, laid through by a deft touch from Amr Zaki, saw his finish touched wide by Petr Cech. Then, more troublingly for Chelsea, the familiar fallibility defending dead-balls re-emerged.
An unmarked Titus Bramble was denied on the line only by a stretching Ashley Cole, and then it took a combination of Cech and Terry to deny Maynor Figueroa.
Given time, the anxiety might have germinated, but within three minutes Terry had scored his first league goal of the season. His leaping scissors-kick to meet Emerson Boyce’s headed clearance may have been uncharacteristic, but there was typical force behind the shot, and Boyce’s attempt to clear succeeded only in diverting the ball past Chris Kirkland.
Wigan remained bright, particularly down their left, where Figueroa and Charles N’Zogbia combined well, but it seemed they would be frustrated when Hiddink chose to withdraw Michael Mancienne. Juliano Belletti dropped in to right-back, but he hadn’t even touched the ball in his new position when he allowed Figueroa to cross, and Olivier Kapo stole across the near post to jab in.
It would be unfair to say it was undeserved, for Wigan’s enterprise had been impressive, and Titus Bramble, in particular, had been outstanding in an exemplary defensive display, but equally Chelsea would have felt deeply aggrieved had they not gone on to win. Bramble had made one stunning block from Didier Drogba, and Kirkland had pulled off excellent first-half saves from Mikel Jon Obi and Lampard.
In the end, though, the goalkeeper was caught in no-man’s land for Lampard’s winner. A win salvaged, and their title challenge still — just about — alive, but the more relevant fact for Chelsea is probably that they now look rather more secure in the Champions League places.
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Independent:
Lampard shows perfect sense of timing for Blues
Chelsea 2 Wigan Athletic 1: Last-gasp goal breaks Wigan hearts and moves Chelsea above Liverpool
By Steve Tongue at Stamford Bridge
Last April Emile Heskey stunned Stamford Bridge with an equalising goal for Wigan in the final minute that effectively ended Chelsea's hopes of winning the Premier League. Yesterday, although Heskey is long gone, they appeared to have pulled off a similar trick when Olivier Kapo scored nine minutes from the end, only for Frank Lampard to defeat them with a header right at the start of added time.
So Guus Hiddink, having overseen 1-0 victories against Aston Villa and Juventus, watched his new team produce something altogether more dramatic and move into second place in the table ahead of Liverpool. He has placed the necessary rocket underneath Didier Drogba, who has often looked jet-propelled in those three matches. Nicolas Anelka unselfishly worked the left flank again and behind that pair, Lampard was once again exemplary. Michael Mancienne, deputising for Jose Bosingwa in only his second start at this level, endured a difficult first 20 minutes like the rest of his team but settled down thereafter, even though he regards central defence and not right-back as his best position.
Wigan, 18th at the end of October, have risen to seventh place and are among the small group no longer worried by relegation. After losing Heskey and Wilson Palacios in the transfer window, they are nevertheless facing a tricky period and Kapo's goal was only the second in seven games, none of them won. Steve Bruce was delighted with the performance here and felt Lampard's goal should have been disallowed for a push on his former Chelsea team-mate Mario Melchiot. "You need the referee to be strong and not be influenced," he said. "We've seen it happen all the time against little Wigan."
Hiddink, who felt a penalty might just as easily have been given to Chelsea in the build-up, said: "We reacted well after the equaliser. Playing after a Wednesday game in Europe is always difficult and Wigan are a hard-working team who played decent football." They certainly did so in that early period, and the home side had to overcome a muted atmosphere and then a series of Wigan chances before exerting any control and taking an undeserved lead.
It was symbolic of the pressure they came under that both centre-halves, Alex and John Terry, received yellow cards in the first 20 minutes for heavy tackles and had to tread carefully thereafter. Florescent lime shirts flooded forward in a manner not expected of a team who had just played three successive goalless draws. Petr Cech saved from Paul Scharner, who was clear on goal, and from one of several corners Titus Bramble placed a firm header past the goalkeeper that Ashley Cole hacked off the line. Before the ball was cleared Maynor Figueroa forced Cech to save with his foot.
A surprising game was midway through its first half before Chelsea, and with them the crowd, suddenly came to life. In the 24th minute Wigan were caught out by a short corner on the left that allowed Lampard to take Cole's pass and cross into a crowded penalty area. Emmerson Boyce headed out straight to Terry, whose smart left-footed volley took a slight deflection off the unfortunate Boyce on its way past Chris Kirkland. OPT CUTThe captain will claim it as his 35th goal for the club, not least because that takes him past Peter Sillett's record as the highest scoring defender in Chelsea's history.
Before half-time the increasingly busy Kirkland saved from Alex, Drogba and Lampard. Bramble cleared off the line from Ballack, who was given offside, and then again from Drogba, who had made a fine run onto Lampard's pass. There were no clear chances for a long spell after that, which made the dramatic denouement all the less predictable as Wigan found a second wind. Scharner at the far post headed Figueroa's cross over the bar and Amr Zaki curled a 20 yard shot wide. Then Figueroa crossed from the left and Anelka, tracking back, was unable to prevent Kapo stealing in to score from close range.
There was still time for further heroics from Chelsea's England contingent, who have served them so well this season. Terry lofted the ball upfield and Lampard was far enough forward to send his header from Ballack's flick arcing gently over poor Kirkland.

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Observer :
Last-gasp Lampard proves Chelsea mean business again Chelsea 2 Terry 25, Lampard 90 Wigan Athletic 1 Kapo 82
Amy Lawrence at Stamford Bridge
Guus Hiddink has been around enough blocks to know that football can just as easily warm your heart as rip your guts out. In a gripping finale, Chelsea surrendered a lead delivered in breathtaking style by John Terry, and then wrestled back the points with a 90th-minute Frank Lampard header.
It was a compelling way for Hiddink to familiarise himself with Chelsea's penchant for late flourishes. "If the boys give me that guarantee, I can suffer on the bench for 90 minutes," he said. "But no one can give that guarantee in sport. I am satisfied for the win, but the way we gave away control in the second half was not super satisfying."
And there, in that typically shrewd response, was the difference between Hiddink and his predecessor. Not so long ago Luiz Felipe Scolari's blushes were saved by a stoppage-time Lampard strike against Stoke City. The Brazilian was happy and a bit of an emotional wreck. The Dutchman was analytical and cool.
Aside from results, he has made a notable difference in Chelsea's willingness to express themselves. Consider the way the captain was transformed into a strange and wonderful amalgam of himself and Robinho on a good day. No wonder Manchester City are reportedly so keen on buying him. They would, it seems, get two players for the price of one.
Terry gave Chelsea the lead in the 25th minute with a balletic, scissor-kick volley that was stunning in more ways than one. Centre-halves are not meant to play quite so prettily, and he was mobbed by his team-mates. Not many of them would dare to mention that his goal took a crucial nick off Emmerson Boyce, without which Chris Kirkland was well placed for the catch. The watching Roman Abramovich allowed himself a jovial laugh.
But in fairness, Wigan could have been 2-0 up by then. Paul Scharner, having got into a splendid position, shot too tamely to trouble Petr Cech. Then a double-chance at a corner saw Titus Bramble's powerful header hooked off the line by Ashley Cole, and a cross shot from Maynor Figueroa cleared up by Cech and Terry.
Chelsea had that air of confidence for most of the second half, and a re-motivated Didier Drogba would have caused some damage but for crucial tackles from the excellent Bramble and his accomplice Boyce. But Wigan's equaliser exposed a chink in Hiddink's tactical approach. Chelsea appeared confident of closing out their third successive 1-0 win, when Hiddink substituted his right-back to give Ricardo Quaresma 10 minutes' playing time.
Immediately Chelsea were exposed where their right-back should have been covering. Figueroa breezed past Quaresma and whipped in a delicious cross, Olivier Kapo appeared unmarked to strike, and Wigan thought that they had upset their more illustrious hosts for the second season in succession.
Steve Bruce complained that Lampard had climbed on Mario Melchiot to gain leverage for his winner. "The referee was 15 yards away and made a poor decision," he lamented. "It was a big shame because the team deserved to get something out of the match."
Naturally Hiddink was unperturbed, suggesting the referee could have given multiple penalties for both sides during a passionate conclusion, and preferring to concentrate on his players' reaction to a disappointing leveller.
Lampard ensured Stamford Bridge emptied in celebratory mood. They roared their approval as news flashed down of Liverpool's slip at Middlesbrough, which means they eased into second place on goal difference ahead of Rafa Benítez's side. Chelsea mean business again.
And what of the title? "It's rather realistic," mused Hiddink. "We have to win our games – hopefully more comfortably than this – and ask Edwin van der Sar if he'd like to have the ball in the back of his net. I know him and I don't think he is willing to do so. But as long as we have the possibility, we will keep going."
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Mail:
Chelsea 2 Wigan 1: Lampard's winner isn't kidding HiddinkBy Rob Draper
All around him, fans were celebrating and his staff were ecstatic. Yet Guus Hiddink, Chelsea's new manager, stood impassive, arms folded and grimfaced, a pose that has become familiar in the past 10 days. He is Sir Alf Ramsey reincarnated, in temperament at least, keeping his head when all round are losing theirs. Frank Lampard had just headed home a winner over Wigan in the 90th minute and Stamford Bridge had erupted in sheer relief. Not Hiddink, however. He makes encouraging noises about the commitment and the reaction of his players but he knows this Chelsea side need to improve - and quickly. 'I'm happy and satisfied for the win but the way we gave away control in the second half is not super-satisfying,' said Hiddink.
'I have to be happy but also critical. We have to improve tactically when we are on and off the ball. 'If the boys can always guarantee a last-minute win, then I can suffer for 90 minutes on the bench. But no one can give me that guarantee. What I like to see is that the game is killed when you're dominating in the first period.' Yesterday his side were labouring, stumbling towards another draw at home, the kind that became familiar under Luiz Felipe Scolari. Chelsea had the better of the game, the pick of the chances but had allowed themselves to be caught out in the final 10 minutes, thanks to slack defending. Yet as the fourth official held up the board that indicated three minutes of added time, John Terry played a long ball, hoping for once to outwit Wigan's excellent defensive partnership of Emmerson Boyce and Titus Bramble. Michael Ballack flicked the ball on and Lampard directed a header home to lift Chelsea to second in the table. But Chelsea were fortunate that referee Lee Probert did not rule out the goal because Lampard held Mario Melchiot.
Wigan manager Steve Bruce was right to be utterly dismayed, for his team deserved better after a fine performance. As for the title race, Manchester United remain seven points clear with a game in hand and Hiddink is no romantic dreamer. 'I'm rather realistic,' he said. 'That's to say we have first to win our games - and hopefully a little bit more comfortably than we did today. And second, we have to ask Edwin van der Sar if he would like to let the ball in the back of his net. I don't think he would be willing to do so. 'A stable team like Manchester United are in a good seat. But as long as we have a possibility, and as long as it's not decided, we will aim for it and that's what the team showed last week at Villa Park and today.' Wigan had the best of the opening chances and Paul Scharner should have put them ahead on 18 minutes when clear through on goal. A minute later Ashley Cole headed off the line from Bramble's header. 'Two chances in two minutes!' reflected Bruce. 'I don't think I've had two chances in the last two years here! But we didn't take them and we needed to.'
Chelsea then awoke, John Mikel Obi forcing an excellent save from Chris Kirkland before the goal came on 25 minutes.
Lampard crossed into the six-yard area, Boyce headed the ball away but only to Terry on the edge of the area. The Chelsea captain's leftfooted volley was impressive but it was the deflection by Boyce that beat Kirkland.
The goal will go down as Terry's and his 35th for the club takes him past Peter Sillett, from the Fifties, as the club's highest-scoring defender. Lampard forced another sharp save from Kirkland in the 37th minute and Bramble was again required to clear off the line when Drogba finally managed to get past the Wigan keeper.
Yet Wigan kept coming and Scharner should have scored with a diving header after Maynor Figueroa provided an excellent looping cross. Four minutes later it seemed they had a point for their travails. Figueroa again provided the cross and Olivier Kapo stuck out a leg to deflect it in. They celebrated in the corner in front of their fans, though it turned out to be premature.
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NOTW:
CHELSEA 2, WIGAN 1 Frank Lampard lights up Blues From ROB SHEPHERD at Stamford Bridge, 28/02/2009
THINGS you expect to read: Frank Lampard pops up to grab a last-minute winner and all the glory.
Things you thought you’d never read: Titus Bramble was brilliant and deserved to be the hero.
By his standards Lampard had a nightmare, Titus Bramble played like a dream by his. Yet, as so often in sport, there are those who seem permanently blessed even on an off-day, while others are cursed when they have barely put a foot wrong.
Lampard is one of those who has that unerring capacity to deliver when the game seems up.
His last goal at the Bridge six weeks ago was a stoppage-time winner against Stoke which gave Phil Scolari a brief stay of execution.
Yesterday, just after the board had been raised displaying three added minutes, Lampard headed home to win the game and maintain the new momentum under Guus Hiddink.
It seemed Lampard got away with shoving Mario Melchiot in the process but them’s the breaks when you have the Midas touch.
Fears that Chelsea might slip out of the top four and so fail to qualify for the Champions League — unless they win it — have now eased.
These three points lifted the Blues into second place above Liverpool on goal difference and established more breathing space between themselves, Aston Villa and Arsenal.
Hiddink’s claim that Chelsea can catch Manchester United seems optimistic but it’s still not out of the question, as it surely would have been had Wigan held on to the draw having equalised in the 82nd minute.
It’s not as if Chelsea are suddenly playing so much better than in the last days of Scolari but the spirit and drive has returned. That has much to do with Didier Drogba, who was ridiculously cold-shouldered by Scolari.
But ultimately it was Lampard and John Terry, the players who carried the side when Scolari lost the support of others, that made the difference — spoiling what should have been a memorable day for poor old Bramble.
As a youngster at Ipswich, the burly centre-half was regarded as a top prospect. But he became a figure of ridicule during his time at Newcastle when he was branded Titus Shambles.
Yesterday he was more like a Titan, clearing one off the line, getting in block after block, winning most of the aerial battles and making sure the revived Drogba didn’t run Wigan ragged.
It was indeed tough on a Latics side who deserved a draw but now, according to boss Steve Bruce, will have their season defined over the next three games.
They are certainly not out of the relegation woods and the club may yet rue the decision to let Emile Heskey and Wilson Palacios leave.
The visitors’ start was as bright as their luminous lime-green shirts and they really should have capitalised on Chelsea’s early lethargy.
It was as if the euphoria of beating Juventus in midweek had sapped the sharpness that has returned since the arrival of boss Hiddink. Wigan striker Amr Zaki was quick to exploit the time and space on offer.
In the 15th minute, the Egyptian pounced on indecision by Alex and unleashed a fierce shot which was deflected just wide.
Three minutes later, Zaki produced an inspired back-flick to guide Melchiot’s pass into the path of Paul Scharner. In the clear, Scharner strode on with purpose but his confidence disappeared as Petr Cech rushed out and saved his feeble attempt. Then, in the 21st minute, Ashley Cole cleared an Emmerson Boyce effort off the line before Cech and Terry combined to keep out Maynor Figueroa’s cross-shot.
That scare seemed to wake up Chelsea and in the 25th minute they went in front. Lampard, who had barely had a decent touch and whose free-kicks would prove wayward all afternoon, suddenly created danger when he sent over a cross.
Boyce headed away but the ball fell to Terry on the edge of the area and he conjured up a Samba-style finish, lashing it home with a left-footed scissor kick.
Chelsea should have seized full control by the interval but Lampard wasted two great chances. Wigan kept plugging away, though, and they eventually got their reward eight minutes from time when Olivier Kapo outsmarted Nicolas Anelka at the near post and converted Figueroa’s low cross with a side-foot finish.
Muscles
But, once again, Lampard stole the show. Michael Ballack nodded on a long ball from Juliano Belletti, Lamps outmuscled Melchiot then strained the neck muscles to arc his header over Chris Kirkland.
Bruce complained: “I thought at the time Frank shoved Mario in the back and the replay confirms it. In those situations you need the ref to be strong but this sort of thing always seems to happen when you come to the big clubs.”
Bruce had a point but memorably he once scored two controversial headers during SEVEN minutes of stoppage time which enabled Manchester United to clinch their first title under Alex Ferguson.
Lampard’s lavish celebrations were as if Chelsea had actually won something. They may yet do under this regime — especially when you have a talisman like Lamps.
For Bramble, the only prize was Terry’s promise to swap shirts in the tunnel. But at least he can feel fit enough to wear it.