Sunday, April 19, 2015

Man Utd 1-0


Independent:


Chelsea 1 Manchster United 0

By MICHAEL CALVIN

Eden Hazard proves the difference as Blues close in on Premier League title

Hazard's first-half finish was enough to secure victory and mean Chelsea need six points to win the title


Chelsea have not lost since New Year’s Day, and will approach next Sunday’s visit to Arsenal with an understandable degree of confidence. They are ten points clear, with eminently winnable games against Leicester City, Crystal Palace, West Bromwich Albion and Sunderland to come.

Since this is the time of the year when football’s gong shows take centre stage, the onus was on Eden Hazard to justify the acclamation.  The best players, the most revered marquee signings, dominate such occasions by instinct and inclination.

He has answered doubts about his workrate, having increased the ground he covers during an average match from 9.5km to 10.2km. He was central to Chelsea’s strategy of coping with United surfeit of possession and hitting them on the break.

His decisive goal, seven minutes from half time, was a mixture of precision and incision. He ran on to Oscar’s back heel, and his awareness of space and time enabled him to wait for the perfect moment to slide the ball between De Gea’s legs.

Louis Van Gaal screamed into the face of fourth official Craig Pawson, who stood at the mouth of the tunnel, that Terry had fouled Falcao just inside the United half in the build up. His post-match handshake with Mourinho was a notably stern formality. Chelsea know United will be a different proposition next season.

United’s monolithic commercial department had evidently missed a trick, given the speed at which tee shirts, depicting Angel Di Maria as Rodney and Louis Van Gaal as Del Boy, were flying off the roadside stalls. The tagline - “this time next year we’ll be champions” – was a cross between a wish and a demand.

The outcome of Chelsea’s trade-off between fulfilment and popularity was as pre-ordained as the game plan. They are quite happy to be regarded as charmless champions, since its suits the myth of their victimhood. They are Millwall manqué, rebels with regal pretensions.

Mourinho was, of course, charm personified beforehand. He even got Manuel Pellegrini’s name right, the ultimate give away since his studied sympathy for the City manager’s plight signalled his lack of threat and status. Van Gaal is an entirely different platter of Dutch deep-fried meatballs.

All new managers proclaim a clean slate and promise reputations have been consigned to history, but his United team mirrors meritocratic principles.  Ashley Young and Marouane Fellaini, fragile beauty and unkempt beast, began well to reinforce their reinvention as big time players in a big match team that had lost only once in eight previous meetings with the top six.

The presence of Kurt Zouma in midfield was a backhanded compliment to Fellaini’s threat as he played off the recalled Radamel Falcao. Wayne Rooney dropped deeper, and clearly considered himself the orchestrator. He forgot to be a finisher.

Paddy McNair brought the ball intelligently out of defence in the fifth minute, before finding Young, whose pass inside Branislav Ivanovic was met by the overlapping Luke Shaw. He had the presence of mind to roll a pass into the path of the unmarked Rooney, but his left footed shot from just inside the penalty area went wide.

The ball hit the stanchion behind the goal and bounced along the net, which rippled and provided enough of an optical illusion for David De Gea to turn to celebrate with the travelling fans in the Shed, at the other end of the ground.

It was the sort of fixture which attracted the Premier League tourists. One classic specimen, more suited to polo in the park than a barney at the Bridge, wore salmon pink trousers and suede elbow patches on his sweater. At least as the drama of the game deepened, the atmosphere was suitably vibrant.

De Gea, subject of further speculation he has succumbed to Real Madrid’s courtship rituals, was relatively untroubled, apart from a peerless punch under pressure from John Terry and a marginal handball call on the edge of his own area.

Chelsea may lack  the edge of Carlo Ancelotti’s title winners in 2010, who recorded league doubles against United, Arsenal, and Liverpool, but no one can deny their resilience, and ability to strike with speed and calmness on the break.

Fabregas, last seen in a face mask following a Dick Turpin performance at QPR, excelled in a number ten role which gave Hazard room to ,manoeuvre . Chelsea’s problem was further forward, since Didier Drogba has reached the stage of marginal decline in which he is taunted by visions of his former self.

The Drogba of old would have galloped on to a pass of the quality provided by Nemanja Matic, eleven minutes into the second half. He had the strength to hold off Chris Smalling but his shot was delayed and deflected. Hazard sensed an opportunity, and hooked the ball against the top of the upright.

Falcao, as underwhelming as ever, hit the outside of the upright as time ticked away. United’s fans got a measure of retaliation in, by suggesting Mourinho “wanted to come” to Old Trafford, but he is enjoying life at Stamford Bridge, thanks very much.



Chelsea: (4-2-3-1) Courtois; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Azpilicueta; Zouma, Matic; Oscar (Ramires 67), Fabregas (Mikel 91), Hazard (Willian 93); Drogba.

Manchester Utd: (4-1-4-1) De Gea; Valencia, Smalling, McNair, Shaw (Blackett, 80); Herrera; Mata (Januzaj, 70), Fellaini, Rooney, Young (Di Maria, 70); Falcao.

Referee: Mike Dean

Man of the match: Hazard (Chelsea)

Match rating: 6/10


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


Guardian:

Chelsea’s Eden Hazard sinks Manchester United to bring title closer

Daniel Taylor


There really can be no doubt now that when the ribbons are attached to the Premier League trophy the light blue of Manchester City will be replaced by a darker shade of the same colour. José Mourinho’s team are ticking off the challenges and their lead is now 10 points. With half a dozen games to go, the residents of Fulham can expect a letter advising them of plans for an open-top bus parade.

For long spells it was a conservative and restrained performance, but there is an expertise ingrained in this Chelseateam about the art of winning through structure, stubbornness and get-the-job-done know-how and, when the opposition makes an error, being absolutely clinical. It also helps they have a left-sided attacker, Eden Hazard, who could feasibly finish the season with a clean sweep of the player-of-the-year awards.

Hazard’s contribution has been immense and it was his goal, late in the first half, that gave Chelsea the opportunity to show their qualities of endurance. The ovation when he was substituted told its own story and it was not long afterwards that Mourinho was out of his dugout demanding more noise. His team could settle everything by winning their next two matches, against Arsenal and Leicester, and Mourinho was clearly just going through the motions when he insisted it was wrong to assume the title was heading to Stamford Bridge.

Tactically, he said, the game had been “exactly what we wanted” and his eulogy did stray dangerously close to sounding like a victory speech. “I’m the one that knows how fantastic it was. JT was amazing. Azpilicueta was the best player on the pitch. Matic worked like an animal. Zouma put Fellaini outside the game. The No11 [Didier Drogba] was another animal, fighting against two kids with the age to be his sons. And Hazard was what we know. Eden had that magic.”

Mourinho seemed pretty pleased with himself too bearing in mind the tactical straightjacket that meant all of United’s better performers recently – not just Fellaini but also Ashley Young, Juan Mata and Ander Herrera – were subdued. Radamel Falcao did strike the post in the second half but the player of old would have converted that chance and Louis van Gaal took everyone by surprise when he described it as United’s best performance of the season. The exaggeration was complete when he said Chelsea had not even managed a single chance in the first half. Hazard’s goal came in the 38th minute.

Mourinho’s first trick came before kick-off when huge jets of water started to cascade and the playing surface was drenched to the point the ball could actually be seen splashing in certain areas. The idea, plainly, was to slow down the game, though United did start brightly and moved the ball quickly during the early exchanges. Not long before Hazard stuck his shot between David de Gea’s legs, the possession statistics had flashed up that Chelsea had seen only 30% of the ball. Hazard’s goal arrived just at the point Stamford Bridge was starting to feel a little anxious.

Van Gaal could be seen remonstrating with the fourth official, Craig Pawson, after the goal because he was convinced there had been a foul by John Terry in the buildup. It was rare to see the Dutchman in that finger-pointing pose but his anger would be more accurately directed at his players. Chris Smalling’s pass out of defence was the first problem, in keeping with a recurring theme when the centre-half is on the ball. Falcao had Terry closing in from behind and as soon as Chelsea’s captain came away with the ball the away team were vulnerable. Oscar’s backheel was measured perfectly to leave Hazard scampering into the penalty area and the Belgian drew De Gea out of his goal before slotting in his shot.

Chelsea had looked short of ideas until that point, attacking only sporadically despite the presence of the promising but raw Paddy McNair in United’s defence and a new round of injury issues affecting Van Gaal’s thinking. Luke Shaw’s surging runs from left-back were a prominent feature.

Antonio Valencia had the same ambitions on the opposite side and, early on, Wayne Rooney really ought to have done better with one of Shaw’s cutbacks, managing only to hit the stanchion behind the goal. The chance fell to Rooney’s left foot and, for all his qualities, England’s captain rarely excels when the ball is on that side.

Chelsea stuck rigidly to their tactics once they had taken the lead, determined not to lose their shape and restricting themselves to counter-attacks. Drogba got away at one point and when his shot flicked off Smalling it looped over De Gea to drop at the far post. Hazard tried an improvisational hook-shot but could only turn a bouncing ball against the post. That apart, De Gea was seldom threatened.

The old Falcao might have buried the chance that came to him later on, after spinning away from Zouma, but Ander Herrera deserved his yellow card after flicking out his foot to try to manufacture a penalty from Gary Cahill’s challenge. The final whistle came soon afterwards and Chelsea celebrated like champions in waiting, however much their manager insisted he was taking nothing for granted.


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Telegraph:


Chelsea 1 Manchester United 0

Eden Hazard strikes again as hosts close in on title

Jason Burt


Chelsea now have one hand on the Premier League trophy - and used the other to fend off an irrepressible Manchester United who were desperately unfortunate to lose this encounter which put a brake on their own resurgence.

There was no champagne football from Jose Mourinho's side apart from the brilliance of Eden Hazard - this was park-the-bus, get-the-job-done- but the corks will soon be popping. A 10-point lead at the helm of the table with six games to go appears insurmountable and with it a third league title under Mourinho even if they would appear set for a more formidable challenge from this developing United side next season. But that is for the future.

The fear was that with injuries and depletions a stalemate could evolve which would suit both sides, but that danger was swept away inside four minutes. Wayne Rooney should have scored. It came as Luke Shaw, recalled with left-backs injured, overlapped down the flank and cut the ball back to Rooney.

Unmarked, with time and space, the United captain steadied himself and slotted his shot wide. Not that far wide – David de Gea even celebrated in the United goal believing his team-mate had scored – but wide enough. Rooney knew he should have hit the target.

But it signalled United’s intent and soon afterwards Shaw’s low shot was blocked by Nemanja Matic. There did not appear to be a period of adjustment for the visitors, buoyed through their recent string of restorative victories, even if they had shuffled their pack with Rooney deployed more deeply in midfield although it was Ander Herrera who took the holding role.

Chelsea also strove. A chance opened up for Cesc Fabregas – pushed into the No  10 role as Mourinho shored up his midfield to counter the threat of Marouane Fellaini by using Kurt Zouma – but De Gea saved his poked shot with his legs. From the corner Didier Drogba headed over.

The game crackled with intent and it was United who began to take a degree of control. They began to dominate possession; were winning the challenges and recycling the ball and looked to press home their advantage.

Chelsea’s frustrations grew. The dominant chant came from United supporters goading Mourinho. “Jose Mourinho, you wanted the job,” they sang.

Drogba was struggling to lead the line and Chelsea could not gain a foothold as Herrera and Rooney conducted matters through the United midfield. Such was their dominance that United surely had to press home their advantage. They did not. It was Fellaini who had to be alert, as Chelsea broke, to steal in ahead of Oscar inside the six-yard area after a clever back-heel by Fabregas. That move also involved Eden Hazard – and where there was the Belgian there was hope for Chelsea.

They broke again, from a poor United free-kick, with Branislav Ivanovic bravely heading on to Oscar, who crossed deep. The ball dropped on the edge of the penalty area and was cleared by the onrushing De Gea – with his hand, just outside the area. De Gea had kept his arm down but certainly used it although that was only clear through replays. The assistant referee was unsighted by the covering Antonio Valencia. De Gea could, indeed should, have been sent off.

United did not escape, though. Soon afterwards Falcao was too easily shrugged off the ball by John Terry – Van Gaal protested that it was a foul – and Oscar eventually back-heeled into the path of Hazard, whom Herrera failed to track. Hazard ran on and easily slipped the ball between De Gea’s legs into the net. Chelsea, improbably, were ahead.

Just before half-time Falcao almost stole in, after fine build-up by United, but Thibaut Courtois was alert to flick the ball away for another corner.

It capped a miserable half for the Colombian who had also tussled with Terry by the touchline after another challenge but he emerged, early, along with the rest of the United team for the resumption. Mourinho also took his seat early. He will have been pleased with the stickability shown by his players and the edge given by Hazard.

And it was Hazard again surging forward from his own half, evading Rooney’s lunge – fortunately for Rooney - and lifting his team again as Chelsea attempted to increase their lead and United attempted to work their way back into contention.

But then it was almost over. Herrera, horribly, drove the ball straight to Matic who immediately released Drogba. Not so long ago the striker would have sprinted away but Chris Smalling scampered back. Even then Drogba lifted the ball over De Gea and there was Hazard. The angle was tight but he still nudged the ball against the post before it was hacked away.

Ivanovic tripped Shaw and from the free-kick the ball was pulled back to the United defender whose side-footed shot was deflected away. Paddy McNair then forced a block from Courtois with a powerful, swerving drive, with Matic beating Fellaini to the rebound, before Shaw again surged forward, again surged around Ivanovic only for Juan Mata - who had endured a frustrating return to Stamford Bridge - to struggle to keep his effort on goal under control. It bounced onto the roof off the net.

Once more the pressure increased. Again Shaw cleverly stepped forward to pick out Fellaini who chested the ball down to Rooney. Again the shot was deflected narrowly wide before Falcao drove an effort past the post and Rooney failed to get enough elevation in a chip to drift the ball over Courtois. Still the visitors persevered and Gary Cahill was quick enough to block Falcao's first-time shot.

Van Gaal acted. He changed both his wide attackers although he resisted the temptation to push Rooney further forward given that United continued to dominate in midfield. Finally Falcao did wriggle free, superbly turning Zouma, only to strike the angle of post and cross-bar. It just would not happen for Falcao or for United with Herrera booked for a dive as he sought a penalty.



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


Mail:


Chelsea 1-0 Manchester United: Eden Hazard strikes as Jose Mourinho's men take another step towards the Premier League title


By Rob Draper for The Mail on Sunday


Two more games; that’s all it will take. Two more games and Jose Mourinho will have confirmed his mastery of the Premier League with a third title in five attempts at the trophy and Chelsea will be crowned champions.

The clue that this was the decisive game was in the manic nature of the second half. Not on the pitch, but on the touchline. Mourinho and his assistant Rui Faria were up and down with unusual intensity, even for them, waving players back with the most extravagant gestures when they lost the ball.

Hold on to this lead, was the implicit message, and a huge step will have been taken to the ultimate goal. In fact, as One Step Beyond played at the end of the game and the players congregated in the centre circle, there was a sense that the celebrations were already in swing.

Two more games of course have to be won and that includes a visit to Arsenal next week. But there can be little doubt as to the destination of the title after this result. The hard work of the winter has been done.

Mourinho was haveing none of it of course, rightly so, insisting they need eight points. They need nine, actually, to be sure, but beat Arsenal next week and then they will need just three more. ‘If the celebration is because we beat one the biggest clubs in the world, I understand that,’ he said. ‘If the celebration is because the players gave everything to win that game and they feel the result of the work they did this week, then I also understand that.

‘But if they are celebrating something more than that – not at all. It’s three points. Every point we get is one step in the title direction but no more than that.’

Yet though Chelsea were on the back foot for much of the game, though Manchester United did play well, the champions elect were worth their win not least in the fact that they were more or less in control of their destiny and they had the outstanding player on the pitch in Eden Hazard.

When he nut-megged David De Gea for the opening goal, it was as though the race to be player of the season – they are both shortlisted for the award - had become a personal feud. The finish was both ruthless and decisive, an indication of how far he has grown.

But he was not alone. The team approached their task with the cold, quite professionalism required of champions; not all titles are won at a canter with a spring in the step. Sometimes getting across the line is enough hand.

Louis van Gaal felt his team, shorn of Michael Carrick, Marcos Rojo and Daley Blind, deserved more. ‘I’m very proud of my team,’ he said. ‘We played the best match this season but in football you can lose in spite of you being the better team.

‘It's amazing how we have played here. When you have seen the statistics, it's unbelievable that the result is 1-0. We count it that we have made a big step forward in our process. But for the fans, they have lost. And Manchester United have lost.

‘We were always in our opponent's half. In spite of the difference and despite Chelsea's defensive organisation, we have created more chances. That's an unbelievable performance – but, read the score.’

Mourinho had the perfect riposte to that. ‘The game was exactly what we wanted. When we manage to play the game we want to play, it's fantastic. The game was exactly what we were working for the game to be. The team was fantastic.’

The truth was somewhere inbetween those two analyses. Mourinho would not have wanted the challenge Gary Cahill made in the final moments of added time, in which Andre Herrera trailed his leg into the clumsy tackle and fell.

Herrera received a yellow card for diving – and Mourinho made much play of how his players might have been accused had they done the same – but another referee might easily have given a penalty.

Likewise when Luke Shaw, a constant worry to Branislav Ivanonic, played in Radamel Falcao and he smashed the ball against the post on 76 minutes, that would not have been in the Mourinho game plan. Nor the moment when Shaw found Rooney in the fourth minute and the captain curled the ball wide when he really should have scored.

That said, though United dominated midfield with Ander Herrera and Wayne Rooney, Chelsea had the better chances. Having conceded much of the possession, John Terry muscled Falcao off the ball – a foul according to van Gaal – and found Oscar on 37 minutes, whose impudent back heel saw Hazard set off like with an intent that would not be denied. His touch and finish was that of a man wholly sure of himself.

Herrera then blotted his copy book, with a wayward pass on 53 minutes, seized on by Didier Drogba, sprinting goal-wards. Chris Smalling made enough of a nuisance of himself to ensure that shot was deflected over David de Gea. Hazard was on hand, tearing in at far post, but, unable to break his stride for a simple finish, he instead flicked the ball and hit the post.

Nevertheless, you were left marvelling at the Belgian. He reminds you of Robert Pires when Arsenal were closing in on the title in 2002. It isn’t just that his speed terrorises or that his skill is above that of almost every player on the pitch. It is his state of mind that is so dangerous, that intuitive confidence great players possess; the knowledge that they have the capacity to change the game at any point. He did just that.



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Mirror:

Chelsea 1-0 Manchester United:

Blues have one hand on the title as Eden Hazard fires them 10 points clear

John Cross


United can count themselves unlucky as Louis van Gaal’s men played well and Radamel Falcao hit the post late on, but Mourinho's side did enough

Eden Hazard kept Chelsea stumbling towards the title with a priceless winner at Stamford Bridge.

It was hardly the most convincing display but Hazard once again provided the extra quality as Chelsea ground out a victory over injury-hit Manchester United.

United can count themselves unlucky as Louis van Gaal’s men played well and Radamel Falcao hit the post late on which would have earned them an equaliser.

But United - missing key men Michael Carrick and Danny Blind - just did not create enough chances as Chelsea manned the barricades and held onto Hazard’s 38th minute winner.

Chelsea were also missing big players, they also look tired and it said much about Jose Mourinho’s approach that he used Kurt Zouma as an extra midfielder to try and frustrate United.

While we were trying to figure out which formations both teams were playing, United keeper David De Gea provided one of the comedy moments of the season.

Wayne Rooney put a glorious chance wide after just four minutes, the ball hit the stanchion behind and the United fans celebrated when the net rippled.

De Gea turned away in delight, punched the air - and then looked back in disappointment. That clip will make a few sporting blooper shows.

United were steady, strong and the better team in the first half but they did not put Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois under enough pressure.

Chelsea did not offer much going forward either as Didier Drogba looked isolated and lost as he filled in up front for the injured Diego Costa and Loic Remy.

But when Chelsea put together their best move of the first half they made a breakthrough after 38 minutes.

John Terry bundled Radamel Falcao off the ball, Cesc Fabregas found Oscar and his back heel put in Hazard who raced clear into the United penalty box.

De Gea edged off his line but stood up and Hazard had to keep his nerve before slipping the ball past the United keeper to put Chelsea ahead.

It showed why Hazard is so many people’s Player of the Year because, even when Chelsea are not at their best, he can provide a decisive moment of quality.

United kept going and turned the game into a war of attrition as they pushed Chelsea further back.

Chelsea were left trying to play on the break and nearly went further ahead after 54 minutes. Drogba’s shot was deflected off Chris Smalling, the ball looped over De Gea and Hazard somehow back heeled the ball onto the post.

United kept pressing without creating enough clear cut chances. Luke Shaw’s through ball put in Falcao who went through but smashed his shot against the outside of the post.

In the end, Chelsea scrapped and battled to hold on for another victory which edges them ever closer to the title even if they appear to be running on empty as they approach the run-in.



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Express:


Chelsea 1 - Man United 0: Brilliant Eden Hazard gives Jose Mourinho a perfect 10

Eden Hazard struck on the 38th minute to give Chelsea the lead before half time

The Blues can wrap up a first title in five years with wins at Arsenal next Sunday and at Leicester three days later.

Terry said: “I think we are doing enough. We are still getting results and that’s the mark of champions. It would be nice to get it done soon.”

This was the day when the team that played like champions surrendered that title to the side that didn't.

Chelsea, under the cosh for so long yesterday to opponents who deserved far more than they got, will almost certainly claim the crown sooner rather than later.

With a lead that is now 10 points - plus more of the luck they enjoyed yesterday - Chelsea are surely as good as champions already. And they certainly will be if they win their next two games.

Louis van Gaal, meanwhile, was left to regret the stumbling start to a season that could have ended so much better if this was anything to go by. The United boss got his excuses in early having to make three forced changes, but the Dutchman could have no complaints about the way his side played yesterday.

In fact, Wayne Rooney - playing deep - fluffed a glorious chance after just three minutes when Luke Shaw found him in oceans of space.

Paddy McNair had another effort turned away by Thibaut Courtois soon afterwards as well. There was little doubt, even then, about who was ruling the roost here.

More than 20 minutes passed before Chelsea got anywhere near David de Gea's goal, which gives you some idea of how dominant United, with Rooney pulling most of the strings, were at that stage.

Hardly any wonder, really, that Jose Mourinho looked a worried prowler on the touchline - until the 38th minute that is.

Oscar, relatively anonymous up until then, produced a bit of Brazilian back-heel magic that caught United napping and set Eden Hazard on his way to score a champion goal.

The Twitter devotees went a bit barmy afterwards, blaming Radamel Falcao for losing the ball beforehand. But let's be fair here and not take anything away from what Oscar and Hazard did afterwards. It was poetry in motion.

The fact that on the balance of play Chelsea simply didn't deserve it is neither here nor there. The goal was superbly set up end even more excitingly executed. And it's exactly why Mourinho's men are where they are. They ground out a first-half lead without playing anywhere near their best.

The sort of stuff champions are made of, eh?

To be fair, there wouldn't have been a lot Van Gaal could have said to his players at half time. Apart from conceding the goal they had hardly put a foot wrong.

Having said that Chelsea could, and probably should, have been two up 10 minutes after the restart when they hit United on the break with a move that saw Didier Drogba beat De Gea, only to watch as Hazard hit the bar with the loose ball that followed.

A younger man than Drogba might well have done the business himself if he had got the legs.

Credit to United, though, they made a real fist of this one.

Courtois had to make a desperate save to deny Ander Herrara and the speedy Shaw also caused Chelsea all sorts of problems down that left flank. And Falcao, whose season has been such an up and downer so far, was denied the chance to make it alright when he rattled the bar instead of the net at a time when an equaliser would have been so deserved.

United left at the end looking justifiably crestfallen.

Chelsea celebrated like the champions they almost certainly will be. And with a hug of congratulations for everyone of them from their old mate Juan Mata.



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Star:


Man Utd 0: Hazard's first-half strike edges Blues closer to Premier League glory


The visitors made their intentions clear from the first minute of the game and immediately took the contest to the Premier League leaders.

And they had a glorious chance to take the lead in fourth minute of the game through Wayne Rooney.

But unfortunately for the travelling United fans, the England captain's left-footed effort went narrowly wide of Thibaut Courtois right-hand post.

The Red Devils, who went into the contest on the back of six consecutive league victories, continued to dominate the game and stretched Jose Mourinho's side on several occasions.

But despite dominating the hosts they struggled to create any clear-cut chances.

And they were punished for their failure to capitalise on their dominance in the 37th minute when Eden Hazard was put through on goal by Oscar.

The Belgian international, who had found the back of the net 18 times prior to today's match, raced onto a neat flick from the Brazilian and cooly slotted the ball past the onrushing David de Gea.

United started the second period the same way they did the first and continued to have the majority of the ball.

But they should've found themselves two nil down in the 55th minute when Hazard - who was nominated for the PFA Young Player and Player of the Year awards this week, got on the end of a parried shot from Didier Drogba.

However, the 24-year-old let the visitors off the hook as he somehow contrived hit the crossbar from two yards out.

Radamel Falcao, who started up-front ahead of United skipper Rooney, nearly levelled the scores for visitors in the 77th minute after being put through on Courtois goal.

But unfortunately for the Colombian, who has only found the back of the net four times this season, his effort from inside the penalty box hit the crossbar.

Van Gaal's men piled forward in the latter stages of the game in an attempt to rescue an unlikely point.

But despite their late surge they were unable to find an equaliser which meant the Blues moved one step closer to winning the title.


Monday, April 13, 2015

QPR 1-0



Independent:

Man in the mask Cesc Fabregas secures vital win in Premier League title race
 
QPR 0 Chelsea 1

Glenn Moore


Very rarely in the 700 matches of Roman Abramovich’s ownership have Chelsea managed only one shot on target, but that was all they needed to take another stride closer to the fourth Premier League title of the Russian’s reign.

Abramovich was present in west London to see his team gain their 438th win since he bought Chelsea in 2003. It was undeserved and undistinguished, with little of the stylish football he wants, but at this stage it is all about getting over the finishing line. With Chelsea seven points clear with a game in hand, it is now a matter of when, not if, they are champions.

It was not until the 88th minute that Cesc Fabregas, who had barely played a pass right all afternoon, sweetly steered his shot through a crowd of players into the bottom corner of Rob Green’s goal. It was a shattering blow for Queen’s Park Rangers, who had worked tremendously hard in pursuit of the victory they needed to climb out of the league’s bottom three.

They might have got it had Thibault Courtois not proved rather harder to beat from eight yards than he was from 66 last week. The Belgian made a stunning save from Matt Phillips just after the hour mark as Rangers built up a head of steam.

Referring both to Charlie Adam’s freak goal for Stoke City, and to last month’s error that handed Abel Hernandez a goal, Chelsea’s manager, Jose Mourinho, said: “Courtois was there for us, but I told him that after Hull and Charlie Adam we needed him to give us a couple of points, and he did that.”

Mourinho added: “We were fortunate. We controlled them very well, but they closed [pressed] very, very well, were very organised defensively and gave us a difficult match in terms of our creation. If we’d had to go home with a point, we would have [taken that]. But every time I was champion, I remember a couple of matches my team won in the last minute. A little light that shines for the team that are going to be champions.”

The ray of hope that shone for Rangers’ caretaker manager, Chris Ramsey, after picking up four points from two away games last week dimmed with this seventh successive home defeat. “I’m sick because I think we could have given the fans a big boost by getting a point against a top, talented team,” he said. “It’s horrible. This game is almost like failing your driving test, when you’re so close but you fail it. You’d like that time back. But that’s the cruel game we play in.”

Rangers are two points from a position of safety and with trips to Liverpool and Manchester City in their remaining five games desperately need to regain the home form of autumn. “We need to turn this ground back into a fortress,” said Ramsey, but their last win in Shepherd’s Bush was in 2014.

Loftus Road had a fortress feel to it, but Chelsea are not easily intimidated. Mourinho brushed aside reports that Branislav Ivanovic had been hit by an object as his players celebrated their winner with the comment: “If it is a pound, put it in your pocket; if it is a chocolate, eat it”.

Branislav Ivanovic is hit by a lighter thrown from the crowd after the goal Branislav Ivanovic is hit by a lighter thrown from the crowd after the goal  Ramsey condemned the throwing of the missile, apparently a cigarette lighter. “We don’t want any objects thrown on the pitch,” he said. “We know the hostilities between fans can sometimes go too far and if that is the case we’d like to make sure that’s not somebody who is encouraged to come back into the club.”

John Terry was unfazed by the abuse hurled in his direction. This was his first game here since being found guilty by the Football Association (though not the courts) of racist behaviour towards Anton Ferdinand. With Anton long gone and Rio Ferdinand having largely disappeared from view at QPR, Terry was spared an encounter with either brother, instead enjoying one of those physical battles he relishes with Bobby Zamora, a boyhood team-mate at the renowned Senrab club.

Didier Drogba had a rare 90-minute outing after Loïc Rémy suffered a calf strain in training. Rémy should be fit to face Manchester United next week, which will be a relief to Mourinho, given Diego Costa’s hamstring problem and how rusty Drogba looked.

From the start it was clear a swirling wind and bobbly pitch would hinder Chelsea’s passing, as did QPR’s high-tempo pressing game.

“It was difficult to create, very difficult,” said Mourinho, who did not help by omitting Oscar in favour of Ramires’ deployment as a shield in front of Fabregas and Nemanja Matic. With Eden Hazard drifting in off the left, and Willian from the right, Chelsea were very narrow. This played into the hands of a QPR team that plays three central midfielders in the midfield four.

Consequently, aside from a mishit cross by Willian that surprised Green and struck the near post after seven minutes, Chelsea struggled to threaten. Unfortunately for the spectacle, so did QPR.

There were occasional chances. Ramires put a Drogba cross over, Courtois parried Charlie Austin’s 20-yard shot and an Ivanovic cross was headed over at the far post by an unmarked Fabregas. QPR were more offensive in the second period and Courtois, besides his superb reflex stop from Phillips, also had to deny Clint Hill and Austin.

Green needed only to tip over a miscued clearance by Hill. He had been more troubled by kicking into the wind than by Chelsea and, as a draw loomed, a sliced clearance went to Hazard. The Belgian was forced wide but cut in, played a one-two with Oscar, then teed up Fabregas.

When the final whistle went a distraught Green sat on his haunches for a long time before launching the match ball angrily into the stand but, as Ramsey pointed out, he was not the only Ranger at fault.

“I’m not blaming Rob. It wasn’t one of his best kicks, but we had a long time to defend that properly and we didn’t. All that running everyone did went to waste,” said Ramsey.



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


Guardian:

Chelsea’s Cesc Fàbregas strikes to snatch late win at numbed QPR

QPR 0 - 1 Chelsea

Dominic Fifield at Loftus Road


This is the kind of result on which fates can seem settled. Chelsea’s victorious players had gathered in front of the away support in the upper tier of the School end at the final whistle, punching the air in triumph as they celebrated the retention of a seven-point lead which has edged the Premier League title ever closer. While they rejoiced, their opponents dragged themselves from the turf in utter disbelief, the west London divide gaping wider than ever.

QPR will have been numbed by this loss, all the optimism generated by an upturn in away form and 88 minutes of industry and aggression having been undone at the last. Rob Green’s sliced clearance from hand barely stretched 20 yards outside his penalty area for Eden Hazard, of all people, to collect and dart forward. The Belgian was permitted to exchange passes with Oscar, the home defence suddenly ramshackle, before pulling back for Cesc Fàbregas to place the game’s only goal inside the post. Chris Ramsey sank to his haunches, head in hands and agony etched across his face.

The implications for his team, still two points beneath the cut-off and facing a fortnight’s hiatus in their campaign, are grim. Chelsea’s pursuit of their own more glittering prize simply seems more relentless in the aftermath of a victory chiselled from an awkward and fractious occasion.

José Mourinho admitted his team had been blessed with good fortune, prising the game’s decisive goal with their only shot on target. “I feel sorry for QPR because they worked so hard,” he said. “They didn’t let us play better and did their job very well. But every time I was a champion, I remember a couple of matches my team won in the last minute. A little light shines for the team that are going to be champions.”

Roman Abramovich, up in the stand, was peering out through designer sunglasses with the implications of the result rather than the performance enough to have dazzled.

They may actually have gained more psychologically from a narrow late success in a derby than if they had stamped some authority on the contest early on and won comfortably. Fàbregas’ reward had actually been secured two minutes from time, the Spaniard removing the protective face mask – worn after a clash with Stoke’s Charlie Adam eight days earlier which had left him with a broken nose – as he raced to the corner, pursued by joyous team-mates.

Those celebrations were interrupted as objects rained down upon them, Branislav Ivanovic struck on the neck by a cigarette lighter, with plastic bottles and coins among the other debris flung at them. “If somebody threw a pound, put the pound in your pocket and go,” Mourinho said. “If it’s a chocolate, eat it. No problem.” This was not a day to stoke further controversy; Chelsea had secured the reward that counted most of all.

They achieved their win despite being blunted, both by QPR’s eager energy and their own injury problems. Diego Costa remains hamstrung, while Loïc Rémy – formerly of these parts and a scorer of winning goals in his current team’s previous two matches – had succumbed to a “small injury” to his calf.

The hope is he will have returned to contention in time for the visit of Manchester United on Saturday, with another derby at second-placed Arsenal to follow. In that pair’s absence, Didier Drogba led the line at 37, his goal threat minimal even if the effort and commitment could never be questioned. Willian hit a post with a cross that caught in the wind, but the visitors carried little punch until Green’s slice offered relief.

QPR were not afforded the same generosity by Thibaut Courtois. The Belgian had been beaten from 65 yards against Stoke but was back to his best here, his form confirmed by an instinctive save to deny Matt Phillips as the winger shot goalwards on the turn. “I’d told Thibaut that after Hull and Charlie Adam we needed him to give us a couple of points,” said Mourinho, “and he did that.” The home side must have feared the worst when that effort was saved, Courtois having already saved twice, from Charlie Austin and Clint Hill.

The home side had offered the more coherent threat, their menace built on the tigerish industry of Sandro and Joey Barton in central midfield, but the derby had been horribly scrappy on a scarred surface which suggested stalemate. “We’ve ended up devastated,” Barton said. “We still have a number of games and feel our destiny is in our hands, and if we play like that we will be fine. But you could see what it meant to Chelsea to win that game.”

The post-match celebrations were those of champions elect. The title creeps ever closer to a return to Stamford Bridge.

Man of the match Joey Barton (QPR)


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

Telegraph:

Cesc Fabregas's late winner at QPR steers Chelsea closer to the title

By  Matt Law


Wearing a protective mask after breaking his nose in the victory over Stoke City, Cesc Fabregas played for 87 minutes at Loftus Road like he had a restricted view.

The Spaniard’s normally superb passing was off-target, he sent a close-range header over the crossbar and got caught in possession on more than one occasion.

But then in the 88th minute, Fabregas finally got something right and it might just be the goal that put Chelsea out of reach in the Premier League title race.

Chelsea had not managed a single shot on target until Fabregas placed a first-time shot into the net from an Eden Hazard pass and maintained his team’s seven point lead over second-placed Arsenal.

Fabregas has run games for Chelsea on numerous occasions and has been one of the signings of the season, but this was not one of his vintage performances. It was, however, one of his most vital interventions.

A draw would have given in-form Arsenal hope that they could still catch Chelsea at the top, but, with a game in hand, Jose Mourinho’s men now look uncatchable.

It will only hurt Arsenal more that their slim hopes were broken by their former captain and a man Arsene Wenger passed up the chance to re-sign last summer.

Fabregas left Arsenal for Barcelona because he wanted trophies. Thanks to his goal on Sunday, the midfielder is poised to finish his first season back in England at Chelsea with a Premier League title and the Capital One Cup.

Having recovered from the forearm smash from Charlie Adam that had broken his nose a week earlier, Fabergas embodied the spirit and determination within the Chelsea squad that will get them over the line.

They were happy to scrap it out with QPR and fight fire with fire against Chris Ramsey’s physical team. Gary Cahill and John Terry put their bodies on the line time and again, while goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois made at least three vital saves.

No wonder Ramsey sank to his knees with his head in his hands as Fabregas celebrated his winner. Despite good results against West Bromwich Albion and Aston Villa, QPR remain in the bottom three and have played a game more than most of their relegation rivals.

Just as alarmingly for Ramsey is the fact QPR have now lost seven successive home games in all competitions. That trend will have to stop if the Hoops are to stage any kind of meaningful fight against going down.

QPR goalkeeper Rob Green had not had a proper save to make until he gifted Chelsea their winner with an appalling attempted clearance that fell at the feet of Hazard.

Hazard swapped passes with substitute Oscar before laying the ball on a plate for Fabregas, who celebrated by removing his mask and dodging missiles thrown from the frustrated QPR supporters.

The coins and lighters descending from the stands did not deter Fabregas and his Chelsea team-mates from celebrating like they had put one hand on the Premier League trophy at the final whistle.

Roman Abramovich watched his 700th game as Chelsea owner from the sun-bathed directors’ box in black sunglasses. It was largely a forgettable experience, but the billionaire will cherish a first title since 2010.

Mourinho will be allowed to strengthen his squad even further by Abramovich at the end of the season and a striker is likely to be on the list of Chelsea targets.

With Diego Costa injured and Loic Remy missing out with a minor calf problem sustained in training on Saturday, Chelsea had to rely on 37-year-old veteran Didier Drogba against QPR.

Drogba has not scored for Chelsea since the defeat to Newcastle United at the start of December and is finally beginning to look his age. A frustrating game for the Ivorian was summed up by a yellow card he was shown after losing possession on the edge of the QPR area.

Willian hit the post early on with a mishit cross, but, otherwise, it was QPR who created the better openings for most of the game.

Cahill was forced to make a goal-saving clearing header when a Matt Phillips cross seemed destined for the head of Steven Caulker and top scorer Charlie Austin tested Courtois with a well-struck 44th-minute shot.

Austin was inches from connecting with a Phillips cross moments after the break and Courtois was forced to make a save from Clint Hill, before the Belgian prevented QPR breaking the deadlock from their best move of the match.

Bobby Zamora drilled in a low cross from the right that found Phillips and he produced an excellent turn and shot that Courtois palmed around the post.

Chelsea’s players were quick to acknowledge the contribution of Courtois, who had more than made up for the fact he had been beaten from 60-plus yards by Adam against Stoke.

Mourinho may well have considered replacing Fabregas as he looked at ways of trying to find a winner, but the 27-year-old has made himself one of a new generation of Chelsea untouchables and landed a decisive blow of his own.



QPR (4-4-2)
 Green 5, Isla 7, Onuoha 7, Caulker 7, Hill 7, Phillips 7, Barton 7, Sandro 6, Henry 6, Zamora 7, Austin 7
Substitutes: Kranjcar (on for Sandro, 81) 6. Hoilett (on for Zamora, 83). Dunne (on for Isla, 90) 6.

CHELSEA (4-1-4-1)
 Courtois 8, Ivanovic 6, Cahill 7, Terry 7, Azpiliceuta 7, Matic 6, Willian 7, Ramires 6, Fabregas 7, Hazard 6, Drogba 5
Substitutes: Oscar (on for Ramires, 56) 5. Cuadrado (on for Willian, 80) 6. Zouma (on for Fabregas 90) 6.

Man of the match: Thibaut Courtois.


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


Mail:

QPR 0-1 Chelsea:

Cesc Fabregas sinks unlucky Rangers as he scores with visitors first shot on target in 88th minute to win game

By Neil Ashton


They had only one shot at it, with the masked raider wriggling clear of security in the 88th minute and making his way into the penalty area undetected.

This was the second London heist in a week, with the Loftus Road imposter easily identifiable when he whipped off his head gear in front of QPR’s stunned supporters.

Cesc Fabregas was the diamond when he worked the opening, following the carefully laid out plans of Eden Hazard and substitute Oscar to pull off this unlikely job for Chelsea. The finish called for precision.

Jose Mourinho’s team are within inches of the silverware — the Barclays Premier League crown — after this dramatic game of smash and grab.

Rob Green had been on guard throughout, but the crestfallen Rangers keeper made the mistake that allowed Chelsea to extend their lead at the top of the table again. You snooze, you lose.

It was an important victory for Mourinho, keeping Arsenal at arm’s length by recording their 22nd victory of the season in the Premier League. ‘We have been at the top throughout,’ he declared.

Where they rank among the great teams to win the title, such as the Manchester United vintages (1999 and 2009) or Arsenal’s ‘Invincibles’ (2004) — is of no concern to the Portuguese.

Chelsea’s manager has put together a team to win the league, grinding down the opposition until they eventually lift the trophy, probably later this month. They are relentless, we know that.

Here at Loftus Road they were met with the resistance of their noisy neighbours QPR, surviving the screams and shouts from the stands to stretch their lead over Arsenal to seven points.

They will meet at the Emirates on April 26, but Chelsea are equipped to survive the sternest and stiffest tests that domestic competition can throw at them.

Even Arsene Wenger knows a title-winning team when he sees one.

Chelsea had only one shot on target, an improbable statistic for a team that can call upon the dancing feet of Hazard, Willian, substitute Oscar and Fabregas.

Chelsea were careless in possession, knocked out of their rhythm by the boisterous presence of Karl Henry, Sandro and the bristling figure of Joey Barton strung out across the QPR midfield.

This defeat feels tough on them because anyone who can sedate Nemanja Matic and Ramires over the course of 90 minutes probably deserves a bit more. The pair were over-run in that Chelsea midfield.

Rangers have found an outlet in the willing, emerging figure of Matt Phillips down their right flank. They have to use and abuse him to stand a chance of staying up.

He looked to be their one chance of making something happen, a shuttlecock on that halfway line as he flitted in and out of Chelsea’s half. Cesar Azpilicueta will be glad to see the back of him.

So will Gary Cahill, the Chelsea defender who bravely intercepted Phillips’s dangerous first-half crosses from that cultured right boot. Phillips was a menace on that wing.

He had a massive chance to put Rangers in front at the start of the second half, denied by the anticipation of Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois when the Belgian moved to his left to turn the shot away for a corner.

When that failed, Rangers went old school, lofting balls into the box in the hope that forwards Bobby Zamora or Charlie Austin would get their head onto one of them.

Even against Chelsea captain John Terry and the commanding presence of Cahill, the agricultural approach almost worked.

Terry was hammered by QPR fans, choking on the abuse from the stands because of his exchange here with their former centre half Anton Ferdinand in October 2011.

Chelsea’s captain has learned to deal with it, but the trip to Loftus Road is possibly as poisonous as it gets for Terry. He can take his medicine.

Rangers were shooting from anywhere, with Austin’s looping effort falling neatly into Courtois’ arms from long range and later drawing a stunning save to the keeper’s right with another poke from distance.

Even Barton shanked an effort wide of Courtois’ goal when he was put clean through after the break. They gave this a right, old-fashioned go.

Loftus Road was a bear pit, with just under 20,000 Rangers crammed into this stadium to watch them match their west London rivals for blood and guts. Under manager Chris Ramsey, they have renewed their faith.

Rangers have given themselves a chance of getting out of the mess at the foot of the table after that handsome 4-1 win at West Brom earlier this month, followed by a 3-3 draw with Aston Villa.

There is a noticeable shift in mentality, pulling together as they approach the final five games — West Ham, Liverpool, Manchester City, Newcastle and Leicester — of the season. Three are winnable.

Chelsea are masters at this, calling on the pedigree of Hazard, in his 100 appearance in the Premier League, Oscar and the timing of Fabregas to secure this narrow win.

It was their first chance, the only time in this game when they properly opened up the central defensive pairing of Steven Caulker and Nedum Onuoha.

The man in the mask was there to finish the job, scoring in the league for the first time since Chelsea won 2-0 on the road at Stoke on December 22. ‘It’s like failing a driving test,’ admitted QPR’s manager.

Here at Loftus Road, Fabregas turned out to be the getaway driver.


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


Mirror:
 
QPR 0-1 Chelsea: Late Cesc Fabregas strike keeps the Blues on course for the title

By Darren Lewis
 

The man in the mask ensures Jose Mourinho's men keep their seven point lead over Arsenal in second place

Another week, another daring heist in London.

Far from making a swift getaway, however, the architects toasted the spoils in full view of the watching nation.

With Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich in the stands and the Queens Park Rangers players in despair, John Terry joined Didier Drogba and Branislav Ivanovic to punch the air in front of the 1,700 away supporters.

They all knew this was a triumph worth far more than just the three points.

Boss Jose Mourinho said later: “Every time I was champion, I remember a couple of matches my team won in the last minute. A little light that shines for the team that are going to be ­champions.”

He is right to start counting his chickens again.

The Champions elect pulled this off without star striker Diego Costa, without his deputy Loic Remy – also injured – and with Cesc Fabregas widely regarded as being nowhere near the serial thriller who ripped it up during the first half of the season.

Yet Fabregas finished as the matchwinner and Mourinho’s team were left closing in on a fifth top-flight title.

The manner of this victory was just so brutal, so cruel and so very Chelsea. Even Arsenal, who have done so well to rack up those eight wins in a row, must have been left ­frustrated. Against a spirited QPR side enjoying a revival, Chelsea were being dominated.

They did not manage a single shot on target for 88 minutes – against a team third from bottom of the table. Mourinho’s men were alarmingly sluggish, lead-footed, and looked as though they were about to leave the door ajar for a late title challenge.

Then, one shot, one goal. And Rangers were gone.

It is the second week in a row that the labouring Blues have been bailed out by a mistake from the opposing keeper. Last week it was Stoke’s Asmir Begovic whose poor clearance was seized upon by Eden Hazard who set up Remy to score. This week Hoops keeper Rob Green saw his poor kick caught in the swirling wind and seized upon by Hazard.

The Belgium winger sent Oscar down the left, Fabregas burst forward from midfield and the ball ended up in the bottom corner. With two minutes left.

QPR boss Chris Ramsey slumped to his knees with his head in his hands. His players, who had done so superbly, were left shellshocked.

In truth, they only had themselves to blame. They had their chances to finish off the league leaders and could
not do it.

To be fair, they had come up against a keeper in fantastic form in Thibaut Courtois, who somehow pulled off an incredible save to deny Matt Phillips on 63 minutes.

Courtois also kept out Charlie Austin’s screamer just before half-time.

And Phillips will regret not looking up to see Bobby Zamora unmarked in the box as he raced down the left and into a cul-de-sac deep into the second half.

The Hoops, chief among them man-of-the-match Joey Barton, simply did not deserve to be on the losing side.

They served notice here – on the back of an impressive win at Stoke and a hard-fought point at Aston Villa – that they will be a force to be reckoned with as the relegation dogfight reaches its climax.

But Chelsea simply found a way to win yet again.

It is just what Jose Mourinho teams do.


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


Express:


Masked maestro Cesc Fabregas edges Chelsea closer to title after Rob Green horror show

IT WAS brutal, it was cruel, it was utterly ruthless. It was Jose Mourinho’s Chelsea to the core.

By Tony Banks


One shot on target in the entire match, from a player who had arguably been their worst performer all afternoon, and the points were Chelsea’s.

Their lead at the top of the Premier League this morning is back to seven points, and it was hard to escape the feeling that this was the kind of ominous result that wins titles.

Cesc Fabregas wore a mask to protect his broken nose, and he will not have wanted this display to have been too visible either – until the 88th minute, when he pounced on Eden Hazard’s neat pass after Robert Green’s dreadful kick, to drill home the only goal of the game.

It was one of Chelsea’s poorest performances of the campaign, and Mourinho afterwards admitted his team were lucky. But that will not matter this morning. A win is a win.

“Yes, we were fortunate,” said Mourinho. “It was a typical 0-0 game. We controlled QPR very well, kept them far from our penalty area.

“But they were very organised and gave us a difficult match. Obviously I’m very happy because we kept good emotional control. We never lost our balance. If we had had to go home with a point, we would have. But we scored at a crucial moment.

“Every time I have won a championship, I remember a couple of games where my team won in the last minute. It is a little light that shines for the team that are going to be champions. It’s not normal for a team to be top of the league since day one. That is the team that deserves all the credit.”

Chelsea found themselves battered and hassled by a Rangers side in desperate trouble at the wrong end of the table from the start at Loftus Road – and it was an assault that never let up. Their creative players, Fabregas, Hazard and Willian, simply never got a moment’s peace. Until, crucially, those final few moments.

Chris Ramsey’s side had a lucky early escape when Willian’s cross bounced back off the near post, but chances were few and far between in a frenetic, horribly scrappy match. The most notable moment was when Charlie Austin shoved John Terry to the floor, to the joy of the crowd.

The fact that Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois was probably their best player on the day said everything. The Belgian shrugged off the embarrassment of being beaten by Charlie Adam’s wonder goal last week to put in a commanding display. First he saved Austin’s 20 yard shot, and then grabbed Clint Hill’s dipping drive.

His best effort, though, was a superb twisting save to push Matt Phillips’ shot round the post after he pounced on Bobby Zamora’s cross. Had that gone in, things might have been very different.

But well though Rangers played, they simply could not find that ruthless finishing touch. And Chelsea did as they won at Loftus Road for the first time since 1996.

But Green, so often Rangers’ saviour this season, will have nightmares about the moment that cost his team so dearly. His kick out, with two minutes left and a precious point still in their grasp, was skied horribly straight to Hazard, of all people.

The Belgian dribbled to the byeline, exchanged passes with Oscar, and laid the ball back for Fabregas to slot his shot home low through a forest of legs. Green, the QPR goalkeeper, was distraught.

At the final whistle, Chelsea’s players celebrated in front of their fans, fists clenched, embracing Courtois. They knew this had been a gritted-teeth, sinews-stretched to the limit performance. And they knew what it meant. Seven games left now, and the finishing line is almost in sight.

Ramsey said: “I’m really disappointed. I’m not blaming Robert Green. It wasn’t one of his best kicks, but we had a long time after that to defend that situation properly.

“Rob is going to be down because he’s a top player. If he had not been in the form he has been, we wouldn’t be anywhere near surviving.”


QPR (4-4-2): Green 6; Isla 6 (Dunne 90 6), Caulker 6, Onouha 6, Hill 6; Phillips 7, Barton 7, Sandro 7 (Kranjcar 80 6), Henry 7; Zamora 7 (Hoilett 83 6), Austin 7.

Booked: Zamora, Sandro.

Next Up: West Ham (h) Sat April 25 PL

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois 8; Ivanovic 6, Cahill 6, Terry 7, Azpilicueta 7; Ramires 7 (Oscar 56 6), Matic 6; Willian 7 (Cuadrado 79 6), Fabregas 6 (Zouma 90 5), Hazard 6; Drogba 6.

Booked: Drogba.

Goal: Fabregas 88.

Next Up: Man Utd (h) Sat April 18 PL

Referee: Andre Marriner (West Midlands).


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


Star:


QPR 0 Chelsea 1: Late Cesc Fabregas strike sinks relegation threatened QPR

CESC FABREGAS masked his face and Chelsea’s shortcomings today.

By David Woods, Chief Football Writer
 

His match winning strike in the 88th minute was the ONLY attempt on target by the champions elect.

The win restored their seven-point lead over second place Arsenal and broke unlucky QPR’s hearts.

The reaction at the final whistle of skipper John Terry and right-back Branislav Ivanovic, who punched the air, proved just how important victory was to them as they close in on the title.

Wearing a protective mask - after having his nose broken in a clash with Stoke’s Charlie Adam - Fabregas was more sorrow than Zorro until riding to the rescue at the end.

The midfielder had been poor all match, with sloppy passes galore as Jose Mourinho’s men struggled to adapt with Didier Drogba up front, rather than the injured Diego Costa or Loic Remy.

That he had cause to whip off his mask and dash the length of the pitch to celebrate in front of Chelsea fans was down to a howler from Rangers goalkeeper Rob Green.

His terrible clearance went up into the air but only 20 yards downfield straight to Eden Hazard.

The Belgium star had also been way off his A-game as well. But this time was sharp, alert and burst forward, cutting in from the left.

After playing a one-two with Oscar, Hazard teed up Fabregas who sidefooted low past Green, with the home defence failing to close him down.

It was cruel on relegation-threatened Rangers, whose manager Chris Ramsey sank to the ground and buried his head in his hands at the loss of a vital point in the fight against relegation.

Roman Abramovich wore sunglasses to watch his 700th game as Chelsea owner.

But there was nothing bright about his star-studded team’s performance in the west London derby.

The first half was so awful, a sleep mask from Rangers owner Tony Fernandes’ AirAsia seemed more in order.

Willian did at least hit the post in the seventh minute, with a cross which almost deceived Green.

But the most exciting moments were when Charlie Austin strong-armed John Terry to the ground in the 39th minute, then forced Thibaut Courtois into a fine save soon after.

We had to wait until the 64th minute for another serious threat on goal.

Matt Phillips turned Nemanja Matic superbly to create space, following a Bobby Zamora cross. But Courtois produced a stunning reflex stop to paw away his left-foot shot.

The winger had his head in his hands, earning himself a consoling cuddle from team-mate Sandro.

Austin then had two successive attempts at goal in a scramble, the first hitting Gary Cahill’s arm, the second straight at Courtois.

It was just the prelude to a Fab finish for Chelsea.

That sparked a furious response from some home fans who hurled a bottle and a cigarette lighter as he celebrated taking another step towards the title with his team-mates.

Ivanovic was hit on the head but will probably take it, safe in the knowledge Chelsea now need 12 points from their last seven games to be certain of the title.

Following yesterday’s fortunate win, there now looks no chance of the Blues chucking it in.

As for second-from-bottom Rangers, after a sixth straight home defeat in the league, they must now wait 12 days to play West Ham at home.

But following this gutsy display all is not lost - not just yet anyway.


QPR (4-4-2): Green 5; Isla 6 (Dunne 90), Caulker 7, Onouha 7, Hill 6; Phillips 7, Sandro 6 (Kranjcar 81), BARTON 8, Henry 6; Austin 7, Zamora 7 (Hoilett 83). Subs: McCarthy, Traore, Grego-Cox, Comley

UP NEXT: West Ham (h), Premier League, Saturday April 25

CHELSEA (4-2-3-1): COURTOIS 8; Ivanovic 7, Cahill 7, Terry 7, Azpilicueta 7; Ramires 6 (Oscar 56, 6), Matic 6; Willian 7 (Cuadrado 80), Fabregas 6 (Zouma 90), Hazard 6; Drogba 6. Subs: Cech, Luis, Mikel, Brown

UP NEXT: Manchester United (h), Premier League, Saturday

REFEREE: Andre Marriner

STAR PLAYER: JOEY BARTON Captain led by example

STAR SHOCKER: ROB GREEN Awful kick proved costly

Match rating: 1


















Monday, April 06, 2015

Stoke 2-1


Independent

Eden Hazard and Loic Remy fire Chelsea into seven point lead despite brilliant Charlie Adam goal

Chelsea 2 Stoke City 1

By MIGUEL DELANEY

The only complication for what should be a relatively easy run-in is the fact Costa suffered such a difficult evening, as he was taken off just 10 minutes after coming on as a sub in anguished scenes so reminiscent of his end to last season with Atletico Madrid.
Having been flat on the ground in pain, the Spain international then had to be helped off the pitch by two Chelsea staff members. His  manager Jose Mourinho said he will be out for at least two weeks, but they will not know for certain until Monday.
Despite that, the Portuguese insisted that putting the forward on – at a stage of the game when it was 1-1 and Chelsea were looking a little toothless – was not a gamble. He also insisted that, as a medical department at a club that challenges, they have to take such decisions.
“It’s too early to determine how long he will be out,” Mourinho said. “We have to wait 48 hours, do all the scans again. He will be out for two weeks for sure, but we still have seven weeks of the season to go, and eight matches for sure. Half of it he has to be with us.
“I don’t say [it was] a gamble because we did every test, every scan. The player trained two days 100 per cent with the team. The medical department were convinced he was ready. The player was convinced he was ready, not for 90 per cent but to play and help the team.
“As a manager you have to risk things tactically, the medical department has to do the same if they want to be top medical departments like ours is. The safe medical department can’t work with me.”
Chelsea did need to take more risks in their play, as the effervescent Eden Hazard was the single source of creativity. He had put Chelsea ahead with a casually rolled-in penalty after Cesc Fabregas had been felled by Philipp Wollscheid on 39 minutes, only for Adam to respond within minutes with one of the goals of the season, if not the decade.
The midfielder picked the ball up 65 yards from goal, looked up and launched an effort over the scrabbling Thibaut Courtois’s head. It was sensational.
“I didn’t enjoy it,” Mourinho smiled afterwards, “but it’s the goal that every top player in the world would love to score.”
Adam himself said: “I never knew I had that much power, to beat a quality goalkeeper like that is something special. One that I will always remember. It was one of them that sat up nicely and I saw the goalie off his line. I was lucky enough that it went in. Once in a lifetime this can happen to you.”
Meanwhile Chelsea were frustrated by Asmir Begovic in the Stoke goal as he made brilliant save after brilliant save, only to gift them the game. His attempt at a pass out went straight to Hazard, who then ripped into the box before squaring for Loïc Rémy to finish easily. It was the striker’s second successive match-winner for Chelsea.
“It’s fantastic for the boy to play in the last two matches and score two winning goals,” Mourinho said. “Very important points for us, and important for him to feel that happiness.”
Mourinho also declared himself very happy with the performance, particularly given the stage of the season. “A victory is a victory. Yesterday I sent an SMS to [Middlesbrough manager Aitor] Karanka. They won 1-0, and I told him 1-0 in April is like 10-0 in November. For us is no different. You win titles playing well over a season, the team is very good, but in the countdown it’s about everything.
He added: “The most important thing is that our countdown went from [needing] six victories and one draw to five and one draw.” It’s far from a long shot.

Chelsea: (4-2-3-1) Courtois; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Azpilicueta; Matic, Fabregas; Willian, Oscar (Costa, 45; Drogba, 55), Hazard; Remy (Cuadrado, 62)

Stoke City: (4-4-1-1) Begovic; Cameron, Shawcross, Wollscheid, Wilson; Ireland (Crouch, 78), N’Zonzi, Whelan, Adam (Pieters, 78); Walters; Diouf (Arnautovic, 62)

Referee: Jonathan Moss.
Man of the match: Hazard (Chelsea).
Match rating: 7/10.
================================
Observer 

Chelsea’s Loïc Rémy the hero after Charlie Adam wondergoal for Stoke City

Chelsea 2 - 1 Stoke

Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge

If Chelsea’s pursuit of a first Premier League title in five years had already sported an air of inevitability, then this latest success has merely served to reinforce that sense. Even the ping of their top scorer’s hamstring or an equaliser conceded from well inside their opponents’ half cannot stop José Mourinho’s side for long these days, Charlie Adam’s jaw-dropping goal from around 65 yards rendered a mere footnote when it deserved to be a headline.
The leaders boast a seven-point advantage at the top and, even if that gap is trimmed to six by Manchester City on Monday night, they will still benefit from a game in hand on the trio of clubs closest to them in a distant chasing pack. Chelsea are ticking off the games, grinding out wins despite key players starting to wilt at the workload they have taken on this term. Five more victories and a draw will see them home even if medical checks over the week ahead will determine how much of a part Diego Costa plays in those fixtures.
A player initially rested here ended up lasting only 12 minutes having been introduced at the break with this arena still digesting Adam’s ridiculous equaliser. Mourinho confirmed the forward faces at least two weeks on the sidelines though, in reality, that initial diagnosis may prove optimistic. His absence will be felt, particularly given there are collisions with Manchester United and Arsenal to come after next Sunday’s west London derby at Loftus Road, even if his stand-in, Loïc Rémy, has now scored the winner in successive games.
The Frenchman’s decisive goal here was a gift from the otherwise excellent Asmir Begovic, the goalkeeper rolling the ball towards Steven Nzonzi only for Willian to intercept. Eden Hazard, at his inspirational best throughout, dribbled into the area and squared for the striker to score into an empty net, with the relief around this arena palpable. Forget mind-boggling attempts from distance: this team will be more than happy to stroll over the finish line with a series of opposition aberrations and tap-ins.
Stoke’s own reward here had been spectacular, a goal to eclipse that of David Beckham in 1996 in terms of its audacious quality even if it lacked the player’s superstar-in-the-making looks. The visitors had been defending just before the interval when Stephen Ireland intercepted and fed Adam, the Scot meandering to the edge of the centre-circle inside his own half before pummelling a shot so optimistic it initially felt like a clearance into touch to grant his team-mates a breather. Yet the shot arced wickedly, a panicked Thibaut Courtois only able to paw at it with his left hand as he back-tracked and the ball veered into the net.
Mark Hughes described the midfielder’s 50th career goal as “outrageous”. Mourinho, while piqued by a foul on Hazard in the build-up, elaborated. “I didn’t enjoy it, but it was a goal every top player in the world would love to score,” he said. “From Diego Maradona to Lionel Messi, all these brilliant players … some of them did it, but not all of them. He can. It’s a fantastic goal, but we made a mistake. It’s a clear foul on Hazard, but we cannot stop waiting for the referee to give it. We have to react, press the ball, close the space. The goalkeeper also has to anticipate what can happen behind him, but it’s a goal for his history, probably the best goal for the season in the Premier League. It’s a pity it doesn’t give him any points.”
In the end the only real ramifications were felt by Costa, who had been flung on as a direct result and in pursuit of parity. Chelsea had laboured at times without him in that first period, Begovic denying them reward from an urgent opening and Stoke rugged and organised until self-destructing with half-time in sight. Hazard’s backheel and Willian’s slide-rule pass liberated Cesc Fàbregas, with Philipp Wollscheid sliding in as the Spaniard dragged the ball back with his instep. The penalty was not disputed and was dispatched with ease by Hazard.
The Belgian was inspirational, a constant menace demanding the ball and tearing at his markers. He should have supplied Juan Cuadrado with a third before the end only for the Colombian, offered a rare cameo, to strike Begovic with a point-blank shot and then with the rebound when it appeared easier to score. Mourinho had slumped across the advertising hoarding in frustration at those misses, his nerves frayed further when Nzonzi struck a post, though it mattered not.
“A victory is a victory,” he added. “I sent [Aitor] Karanka an SMS yesterday after Middlesbrough won 1-0 and told him 1-0 in April is like 10-0 in November. Our countdown is only about us. At lunchtime, we needed six victories and one draw. At dinnertime, five victories and one draw.”

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

Telegraph 

Chelsea 2 Stoke 1

Loic Remy grabs winner after Charlie Adam steals show with long-range goal

Matt Law

David Beckham may well have the edge in the looks department, but Charlie Adam can now claim to have scored a better long-range goal than the former Manchester United and England midfielder.
Adam’s 64-yard stunner did not earn Stoke City a point at Stamford Bridge but it is a strong contender for goal of the season and will live long in the memory.
Fortunately for Thibaut Courtois, the Chelsea goalkeeper will not have to recall the ball sailing over his head as the moment the Premier League title race was blown open again.
Adam’s strike was sandwiched in between goals from Eden Hazard and Loïc Rémy, as Chelsea extended their lead at the top to seven points. Jose Mourinho’s men need five wins and a draw to be sure of the title.
Rémy has now scored Chelsea’s last two winning goals, having secured three points against Hull City, and may be vital in the run-in as Diego Costa suffered another injury. Top scorer Costa lasted just 12 minutes as a second-half substitute before being forced off holding his left hamstring.
Mourinho sent Costa on at half-time after Adam’s goal had cancelled out Hazard’s opener from the penalty spot and denied the home side the lead at the break.
Moments after leaving Cesc Fabregas with a bloody nose from a forearm smash, Adam picked the ball up well inside his own half and launched a left-foot shot that caught Courtois off his line.
Nobody could blame Courtois for not being ready, but the Belgian could not scamper back quick enough to stop Adam’s effort sailing over his head and bouncing into the net.
Adam ran straight over to Stoke manager Mark Hughes to celebrate his 44th-minute equaliser and Jamie Carragher was among the first to react by posting a message on Twitter that claimed the 29-year-old had tried his luck “at least three times every game” from inside his own area at Liverpool. It seems practice had finally made perfect.
Stoke had barely threatened Courtois before Adam’s goal and it was the visiting goalkeeper, Asmir Begovic, who had to be alert twice in the opening 15 minutes to stop Rémy netting. Gary Cahill’s cross fell to Rémy inside the penalty area and his shot deflected off Marc Wilson, forcing Begovic to make a fingertip save.
Begovic then got down well to stop another Rémy effort after he had been found by Oscar.
Mourinho showed his frustration at Stoke’s physical approach and Glenn Whelan was the first player to be booked for a foul on Fabregas. Later, in the first half, Whelan exchanged angry words with Hughes after the Welshmen had been shouting instructions from the touchline.
Central defender Ryan Shawcross also earned a yellow card for a body-check on Oscar, who, moments earlier, went close to opening the scoring following a fabulous Chelsea move. César Azpilicueta moved forward up the left and played the ball to Willian, who passed to Hazard, who in turn threaded Oscar through before the Brazilian shot just wide.
Hazard had already tested Begovic before the Belgian was given the chance to open the scoring from the penalty spot in the 39th minute. There was no doubt that Philipp Wollscheid chopped down Fabregas as the Spaniard attempted to cut the ball back on to his left foot and Hazard calmly dispatched the resulting spot-kick. Having watched Adam equalise in spectacular fashion, Mourinho took a half-time gamble on Costa that backfired. Costa had been forced off in Chelsea’s last game against Hull with hamstring trouble, but Mourinho had claimed the 26-year-old was fit to face Stoke. Costa pulled up unchallenged and signalled that his game was over in the 57th minute.
While Courtois may have been left red-faced by Adam’s long-range goal, Begovic will have been even more embarrassed over the part he played in handing Chelsea the lead back. He attempted to throw the ball to Steven N’Zonzi, but instead gifted it to Willian, who passed to Hazard and the forward unselfishly set-up Rémy to score with just under half-an-hour left.
Mourinho responded by taking Rémy off, presumably to protect the striker’s fitness with 37-year-old Didier Drogba already on the pitch as Costa’s replacement.
Courtois suffered another scare when an N’Zonzi shot beat him but the ball struck the post and bounced to safety. Juan Cuadrado, Rémy’s replacement, should have put the result beyond doubt with 10 minutes left.


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

Mail

Chelsea 2 Stoke City 

Loic Remy scores winner for Blues after Charlie Adam hits screamer from inside his own half

By Sami Mokbel for The Mail on Sunday

Chelsea are limping to the Premier League title; so, too, is star striker Diego Costa.
Jose Mourinho’s side haven’t been incredibly convincing in recent weeks and they stumbled to victory against Stoke, who saw Charlie Adam score with a breathtaking 66-yard rocket.
But the win came at a major cost as Costa suffered a recurrence of the hamstring injury that has dogged him all season.
The injury will sideline the forward for at least two weeks, meaning he is set to miss the games against Queens Park Rangers and Manchester United.
‘I don’t say it was a gamble because we did every test, every scan,’ said Mourinho. ‘The player trained two days 100 per cent with the team. The medical department were convinced he was ready.
‘The player was convinced he was ready, not for 90 per cent but to play and help the team.
‘As a manager you have to risk things tactically, medical department has to do the same if they want to be top medical departments like ours is.
‘A safe medical department can’t work with me. The department that says an injury of two weeks needs one or two months cannot work with me. People with fear who cannot work with risks do not work with me. Today, between them, the player and myself, things didn’t happen the best way.’
Chelsea were never in top gear — but still found a way to defeat resolute Stoke. That’s a title-winning knack.
Mourinho feels his side need five wins and a draw from their remaining eight games. It’ll take a miraculous capitulation for them not to win the title from here.
‘A victory is a victory. Winning 1-0 in April is like 10-0 in November. For us it is no different. You win titles playing well over a season, the team is very good, but in the countdown it’s about everything.’
This clash will forever be remembered for one of the greatest goals in English football history as Adam’s ping from well inside his own half left everyone in the stadium speechless.
It was no fluke. Just utter brilliance from Adam’s magic wand of a left foot. It should have been worth two.
The goal was by far and away the highlight of a relatively drab affair that Chelsea, in the end, just edged.
Loic Remy, starting in substitute Costa’s place, forced Asmir Begovic into two good saves inside 15 minutes as he looked to take advantage of his opportunity.
In fairness to Stoke, however, they were doing well to contain Chelsea’s attacking threat during and had John Terry not thrown himself in front of Philipp Wollscheid’s strike in the 24th minute they may even have taken the lead.
They went close again in the 27th minute, Steven N’Zonzi firing a long-range effort narrowly over the bar after some indecisive defending from Nemanja Matic.
For all their possession, it was developing into a frustrating afternoon for the league leaders.
Chelsea needed a spark, or a slice of good fortune. They got the latter thanks to a 38th-minute penalty as Wollscheid brought down Cesc Fabregas, whose body swerve completely deceived the German defender.
There were no complaints from Stoke. Likewise, Eden Hazard had no issues with dispatching the spot kick — sending Begovic the wrong way to put Chelsea ahead.
Fabregas, however, wasn’t smiling for long, requiring lengthy treatment on a bloody nose after running into Adam’s arm.
Hazard’s opener should have been the signal for Mourinho’s side to stroll to victory.
But they couldn’t predict what was about to happen. No one could.
There looked little danger when Adam picked up the ball around 10 yards inside his own half. But what happened next was extraordinary.
The former Liverpool midfielder glanced up to find Thibaut Courtois off his line, before unleashing an audacious attempt to embarrass the Belgian keeper.
As soon as it left Adam’s laces you knew it would end up in the back of the net. But you still couldn’t quite believe it as the ball, almost in slow motion, flew over Courtois.
Comparisons to David Beckham’s goal against Wimbledon in 1996 and Maynor Figueroa’s goal, against Stoke, in 2009 are inevitable. This was on a par, if not better.
Mourinho responded by throwing on Costa, in place of Oscar, at half-time. But the move backfired, Costa (right) lasted just 10 minutes before limping off to be replaced by Didier Drogba.
Begovic added to his growing list of stops by denying Hazard’s piledriver early in the second half.
But it was the Bosnian who gifted Chelsea the three points. The keeper’s weak throw was intercepted by midfielder Willian, who fed Hazard, who found Remy, who scored.


=========================
Mirror

Chelsea 2-1 Stoke: Loic Remy nets winner after Charlie Adam 65-yard wondergoal

Darren Lewis

Eden Hazard scored from the spot before Adam's long-distance heroics but Remy popped up at the right time to seal all three points
   
Loic Remy wiped out Charlie Adam’s Goal of the Season contender to Chelsea seven points clear at the top of the Premier League.
On paper this looked routine for Jose Mourinho’s men who were undefeated at home beforehand. The reality was anything but as this fixture turned into the Battle of Stamford Bridge.
Cesc Fabregas had his nose busted by Adam’s arm and Mourinho clashed with Stoke boss Mark Hughes as the tensions boiled over.
The Blues had drawn three out of their previous four at home going into this one. Hazard looked as though he would put that statistic to rest when he struck from the spot six minutes before half time.
The penalty had been awarded after Philipp Wollschied brought down Fabregas in the box. Hazard sent it down the middle as Asmir Begovic dived to his left.
A minute before half-time, however, Adam had Planet Football drooling as he hit his wonder-goal.
It came from behind the centre-circle in his own half with Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois off his line. Forget David Beckham’s effort against Wimbledon in 1999, that was actually on the half-way line.
Adam’s strike was against a better team, a better keeper and required far more speed of thought to assess his options. The bookies have made it the 3-1 favourite for Goal of the Season. All I can say is that the goal which beats it will be out of this world.
It left Chelsea stunned going into the break. They were already fuming from the challenge from Adam - with his arm - that left Fabregas’s nose streaming with blood.
Mourinho had good reason to be vexed as well. Stoke were rough. Too much so. Hughes can be as defensive as he likes but his side's reputation is entirely justified.
In the second half Mourinho clearly told his men to go down at every opportunity under challenge from the Stoke players in order to keep them at bay. The visitors ended up with five yellow cards against them.
It has to be said, however, that as pleasing on the eye as Chelsea’s approach play was, they were struggling to break Stoke down until Begovic gave them the winner on a plate.
The Bosnian rolled out a ball intended for Steven N’Zonzi. Hazard intercepted it, slalomed into the box and teed up Remy to caress it into an empty net.
To gift the league leaders a goal like that after his side had done so well to get back into it was simply criminal from Begovic.
Chelsea march on. But at what cost? Diego Costa, who has struggled to much with his hamstrings this season, lasted just 11 minutes after coming on as a replacement for Oscar at half time. Didier Drogba took his place.
Who knows when we will see Costa again. Chelsea should see off QPR in their next game at Loftus Road. But after that they host Manchester United then go to Arsenal.
The title race may have a few twists and turns to come yet.

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

Chelsea 2 - Stoke 1: Hazard inspires Blues to victory after Charlie Adam's 65-yard stunner

CHELSEA took another predictable step towards the Premier League title – but whether Diego Costa will be able to stay fit long enough to help them finish the job remains a serious concern.

By COLIN MAFHAM

The injury-troubled striker limped off again yesterday after just 11 minutes, raising worrying questions about his fitness to see out the rest of the season.
Sure enough, Jose Mourinho’s league leaders remain clear favourites to be crowned champions.
But they are not quite the same without Costa. His 20 goals so far are one of the main reasons Chelsea are where they are.
And even though the healthy seven point lead they now enjoy at the top of the table will probably be enough to see them home, his potential absence is still a big worry.
During the first half that Costa spent on the bench yesterday, modest Stoke always looked in with a chance.
Fair enough, they were always going to depend heavily on Asmir Begovic – and the keeper’s spectacular second minute save from Loic Remy proved the point.
But some of Chelsea’s misplaced passes were enough to give the Potters hope.
Some of the early ones were definitely not the stuff of champions, even if Begovic did need to be at his best again to deny Eden Hazard.
It was hardly a surprise when Costa – left on the bench to start with to nurse his troublesome hamstring – started to warm up on the half hour.
Chelsea without him just didn’t pose the same menace.
All that was forgotten, however, on 38 minutes when Philipp Wollscheid brought a lovely little Chelsea move to a halt with a rash challenge on Cesc Fabregas that persuaded referee Jonathan Moss to point to the spot for a penalty.
TV replays suggested the German got a touch on the ball before Fabregas went down. Hazard, though, had no problem converting what was Chelsea’s first Premier League penalty in five months and only their third this season.
But surprise surprise, Chelsea then went and shot themselves in the foot – or Thibaut Courtois did!
Charlie Adams spotted the normally reliable keeper much further off his line than he should have been and grabbed the unlikeliest of equalisers with a 60-yard cracker that could well be up there when they pick the goal of the season.
Mourinho had seen enough and Costa was duly brought on for the largely ineffective Oscar after the interval – but he was on for just 11 short minutes.
The Spaniard pulled up again and, even though Chelsea had Didier Drogba to call on from the bench, the signs were not good.
Having a legend like Drogba to bring on will be cold comfort for Mourinho and co if Costa’s problems reduce his contribution for the rest of the season.
Remy eased the pain by putting Chelsea back in front with the simplest of tap ins on 62 minutes – courtesy of a howler by the previously impressive Begovic.
The Bosnian tried to find Steven Nzoni with a casual throw out. Willian nipped in and intercepted before laying the ball on to Hazard, who found Remy with an open goal to shoot into.
Goals don’t come much easier than that, but the Frenchman’s reward for scoring it was to be immediately replaced to give the £30million Colombian Juan Cuadrado a rare run out. Such is the depth of this Chelsea squad.
And if they are left without Costa for the run-in they are going to need all that strength.

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

Star

Chelsea 2 Stoke 1: Remy nets winner after Adam stunner but Costa suffers ANOTHER injury
Harry Pratt

Stoke midfielder Charlie Adam has scored some screamers down the years but nothing that compares with his long-range stunner yesterday.
In fact long-range might be slightly belittling the Scot’s extraordinary 44th-minute effort. It was all of 65 yards. Yep, you read right… SIXTY-FIVE YARDS.
When Adam picked up possession and saw Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois off his line, few sane observers reckoned he was actually going to let rip.
However, with a swing of his mercurial left peg the Potters man did just that, catching the ball beautifully.
And from the moment it left the boot and Chelsea’s Belgium stopper started back-pedalling in frantic fashion, you knew it was on target.
Even then it seemed Courtois might get to it. But, no, the flight of the ball took it sailing over his head and then dipping perfectly under the bar.
What a stunner – a heavenly strike to rival Stoke team-mate Peter Crouch’s incredible volley on the run two years ago against Man City.
It is safe to say there is no need to look for a goal of the season in 2014-15. Adam has won it – hook, line and sink.
To be undone by such a sensational piece of skill was no consolation to Chelsea at that time.
It cancelled out Eden Hazard’s penalty opener for the Blues six minutes earlier – and suddenly had the runaway league leaders wobbling at the summit.
Worried Jose Mourinho decided to take prompt action at the interval and threw on Diego Costa, having initially resisted the temptation to play his top scorer as he struggles with hamstring trouble.
But that gamble backfired badly.
The Spaniard lasted ten minutes before limping off down the tunnel.
Yet before Stoke could take advantage, their keeper Asmir Begovic had a rush of blood and gifted Chelsea a killer second.
Begovic’s 61st-minute throw-out always looked short of pace and so it proved, with Brazilian ace Willian intercepting.
He fed Hazard and there was only one outcome from there as he sped into the box and rolled a pass for Loic Remy to fire into an empty net.
All of which seriously eased the nerves among the home fans – and ensured Chelsea remain in pole position to be crowned champions for the first time in five years.
Arsenal’s 4-1 thumping of Liverpool earlier in the day had cranked up the pressure on the Blues, who kicked off only four points clear of their London rivals.
However, they still had two games in hand – and those hoping for an almighty slip-up from Chelsea in the coming weeks were not banking on Stoke helping the cause.
The Potters had lost their last seven visits to SW6, conceding 17 and scoring none.
Not that Chelsea had been setting the place alight of late either.
One win in five at home, including being dumped from the Champions League, meant those days earlier this season when they looked invincible had long gone.
With no Costa, the focus was on replacement Remy to score the goals last night.
He nearly did that after just two minutes but Begovic clawed his deflected shot to safety.
That set the early pattern and when Philipp Wollschield hacked down Cesc Fabregas for a penalty, it seemed Chelsea were cruising to victory.
As ever, Hazard calmly sent the keeper the wrong way for his 17th goal of the campaign.