Sunday, September 14, 2008

sunday papers man city away 3-1


The Sunday Times
September 14, 2008
Rich pickings for Chelsea
David Walsh

A young man stood outside a department store in Piccadilly about three hours before this game began. He wasn't selling anything, nor looking to buy; rather he just stood there singing softly but nevertheless sweetly. “We have Robinho, we have Robinho, we have Robinho.” He wasn’t drunk, nor crazed; merely a City fan.
But his little melody did bear witness to the wonderful strangeness of the day. It was a Saturday in Manchester, football was in the autumnal and City were the story. Earlier in the month, the city’s poor relation found it had a trillionaire godfather in the Middle East and so the club moves from rags to riches, from Bianchi to Robinho.
And what better way to announce this new-found wealth but to play host to rivals that were once considered the Premier League’s richest. Along the roads to Middle Eastlands, they were selling Brazilian jerseys bearing Robinho's name and number, they had light blue T-shirts that proclaimed City the wealthiest club in the world.
Such was the expectation, the bonhomie, that hardened City fans were doffing their hats to lampposts and inside the ground, there wasn’t a spare seat. Neither was the game a disappointment and there was much to like about the richer, star-speckled City. Robinho started alongside his Brazilian compatriot Jo and so John Terry and Ricardo Carvalho kept their minds on the game.
Seven minutes in, Robinho galloped wide to take a corner and every City fan stood and applauded. Excessive perhaps but five minutes later, they had good reason to express their gratitude. Jo and Carvalho went for a ball on the edge of the penalty area, the defender seemed to get the ball before Jo fell over but Mark Halsey saw it differently.
Robinho spent ages lining up the free, Chelsea spent longer lining up the wall, the crowd had time to consider every penny of that £32.4m and, then in a flash, everything was reduced to chance. Wall member John Mikel Obi got his head to Robinho’s free kick, deflecting it wickedly past his goalkeeper, Petr Cech.
But that deflection was a detail easily ignored by an entranced crowd. In those minutes, the hype was justified, the transfer fee an irrele-vance and City were on their way. Except that Chelsea hadn’t come from London like Chelsea teams of bygone days. Even in the moment of that goal, there wasn’t a hint of doubt, nor a trace of panic in their reaction.
And in a game which ebbed and flowed with excellent football, their passing was crisper and more penetrative. Robinho may become a very fine Premier League player in time but he wasn’t that yesterday. He gave the ball away too often and we are talking about straightforward passes missing the target.
He wasn’t a patch on Frank Lampard, who was the game's best player and by quite some distance. To every good Chelsea move, he was centra: the choice of his pass, the timing, the accuracy, the weight, he had it all and it was a joy to watch. What the other Chelsea players love about Lampard is that he never takes a fraction more time to make the than is necessary.
It is clear too that Lampard likes playing with Deco, they weave patterns that look simple but because it all done quickly, it creates space and there were times yesterday when Chelsea looked a very slick side. Their equaliser came just four minutes after City’s goal, and even if that was timely for them, it wasn't that surprising.
For they picked up the pace after conceding and when Shaun Wright-Phillips conceded a corner against his former club, Lampard's delivery picked out Terry, whose header ricocheted off Joe Cole backwards into Carvalho's path and the centre-back slammed his right-foot volley high into the roof of the net. Poor City goalkeeper Joe Hart was lucky that he wasn’t in the way. Perhaps the Gods were making up to Carvalho after that free kick award.
The game continued to hum along; City were good but Chelsea were better. Florent Malouda got his head to a Joe Cole cross but the ball crashed against the bar and when Jo and later Stephen Ireland had good shooting chances, Carvalvo got back to make brilliant blocks. Ia there a central defender anywhere who makes those tackles better than the Portuguese?
By the time Ireland’s effort was blocked, Chelsea were already in front, thanks to another demonstration of Lampard’s class. He surged through from midfield, exchanged passes with Ashley Cole and, forced on to his left foot, he rifled his shot into the far corner. Brilliant. Though City kept playing and the fun continued, Chelsea were always superior.
Anelka got their third goal, after good work by Malouda and a clever final pass from Joe Cole. Fifteen the end, John Terry got a straight red card – the first of his career – when Mark Halsey deemed him the last defender when he fouled Jo. It was a slightly harsh decision as other defenders scampered back and were not far away when the Brazilian fell.
City kept trying but even with Jo, Vincent Kompany and Pablo Zabaleta all showing they can become big players for the club, there was a challenge to the nouveau riche in the performance of the team with Roman's old money and it was this: can City absorb all their new wealth and find the team spirit that make Chelsea so for-midable? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Telegraph:
Frank Lampard cashes in on Manchester City flawsManchester City (1) 1 Chelsea (1) 3 By Duncan WhiteLast Updated: 11:11PM BST 13 Sep 2008
It will take a lot more than one brilliant Brazilian to overturn the Premier League hierarchy. Robinho may have made a thrilling debut in English football, opening the scoring with a deflected free-kick, but ultimately this game merely underlined that the team he spurned are still a marker of excellence for any incalculably rich owner.
Chelsea were outstanding and this would have been a perfect evening for Luiz Felipe Scolari had it not been for Terry’s late red card, which has ruled the England captain out of the Premier League clash with Manchester United on Sunday.
This is, like it or not, 21st century football: polyglot players performing for the super-rich in ultramodern stadiums. Amidst the minting of cliches – 'Middle-Eastlands’, the 'clash of the cash’ – and the cheerful offending of Gulf sensibilities – tea-towels– there was no disguising that this game was part of a paradigm shift in English football. Sheikh Mansour’s £210 million takeover of Manchester City means Roman Abramovich is no longer the exception.
The Russian oligarch’s new position in the financial food chain was amply demonstrated by City’s giving a debut to Robinho, the Brazilian winger that Scolari had so publicly coveted. And what a debut it proved. Rumours of the former Real Madrid man’s flakiness have been greatly exaggerated. He was bursting with enthusiasm and threat and will undoubtedly win many games for City this season.
It took him 13 minutes to bring the house down. Jo, with whom Robinho formed a £50 million plus all-Brazilian strike partnership, just managed to get a toe to the ball before Ricardo Carvalho just beyond the 'D’.
There was no debating who was going to take the free-kick. With Robinho standing expectant, referee Mark Halsey escalated the pressure by his patient insistence that the Chelsea players did not infiltrate the 10 yards. When the Brazilian finally struck the ball he curled it with his instep into the middle of the wall, the ball clipping John Obi Mikel’s forehead and diverting into the side netting.
Robinho went wheeling away into his trademark thumb-sucking celebration with jubilant team-mates haring after him.
The hysteria lasted all of three minutes. Lampard’s corner was met by a leaping Terry and the England captain’s header hit Joe Cole before sitting up for Carvalho. The Portuguese centre-back volleyed in like he was Van Basten. With that Chelsea were back in the right mindset.
Indeed Scolari’s team played with exceptional fluidity and elegance as they poured forward and would have run away with this game if they had taken their chances. Florent Malouda came ludicrously close, heading Joe Cole’s cross onto the bar only for the rebound to fly straight to the relieved Joe Hart, who had missed the cross. Malouda and Anelka spurned further headed chances and when Pablo Zabaleta cleared lamely to Anelka, the French striker could not beat Hart at the near post.
Not that City did not offer stylish glimpses themselves. Stephen Ireland shot over after a flair flick from Jo and the Brazilian striker went close himself with a left-footed curler, only for Carvalho to deflect it over. Shaun Wright-Phillips was especially lively against his former club, relishing the vocal support of the supporters on his home debut.
Yet as the game unfolded, Chelsea grew stronger, their exquisite passing pulling City apart. The second goal came from a rapier counterattack: Mikel to Joe Cole to Lampard to Malouda and back to Lampard.
The Chelsea midfield has been brilliant in these early season games and his confidence found expression in his bold finish, side-stepping Richard Dunne before shooting left-footed across Hart and into the net.
Ireland might have equalised if not for another heroic Carvalho block but with 20 minutes left Chelsea landed the decisive blow.
Joe Cole’s cute through ball with the outside of his boot was perfect for Anelka, who beat Hart easily at the near post.
The drama was not done, though. Jo pushed the ball past Terry just beyond the halfway line and Terry for some reason decided to bring the Brazilian down, wrapping an arm around his waist.
Despite Carvalho seemingly being there to cover, referee Halsey instantly produced the red card. Foolish from Terry; harsh from Halsey. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Independent:
Manchester City 1 Chelsea 3: Reality check for City after Chelsea spoil Robinho party
Scolari's men remind new rivals in money stakes that you cannot buy instant success
By Guy Hodgson at the City of Manchester Stadium
Eastlands was ready to party. Supporters were decked in Robinho shirts and arab head-dresses to mark the twin arrival at Manchester City of Britain's most expensive footballer and the wealth of the Abu Dhabi royal family. Then an icy blast of reality hit them.
Just because you are the planet's richest club, it does not mean you can catch up the elite overnight, and last night "Middle Eastlands" was quickly disabused of the theory that a Champions' League place will come as easily as the next million pounds. City did not flop their big entrance nor revert to calamitous type but they were comprehensively beaten by Chelsea who have a five-year start on collecting the world's best footballers.
City have just one, Robinho, and to be fair to the Brazilian you cannot expect even the most expensive player ever in British football to do much more than score on his debut. The £32.5m man did, with a first-half free-kick, but the problem was that Chelsea, who oozed the class of potential champions, got three goals through Ricardo Carvalho, Frank Lampard and Nicolas Anelka. Even the late sending-off of John Terry for a cynical foul could not derail the visitors.
"It's an important three points," Luiz Felipe Scolari, the Chelsea manager, said. "When we went 1-0 behind I saw that the team were nervous but after they equalised I think they largely controlled the game. We have some injuries and I had to change A, B and C but the players who came in did very well. I'm more happy with that than the 3-1 result."
Mark Hughes, the Manchester City manager, also found plusses beyond the scoreline. "We know where we are at the moment," he said. "It's very early in our development in terms of a squad and a team. Chelsea were well drilled and knew exactly what they were trying to do, and that comes as a consequence of playing winning football for the past five or six years.
"It's not going to happen overnight. We all realise that. People have got a little bit ahead of themselves and a little bit hysterical but as a squad we know the level we are at." Whether it was hysteria is a moot point but the mood around Eastlands before the game was of mounting, and pinch-me-am-I-dreaming, excitement.
Given the pressure to live up to his billing, it was not a surprise that Robinho's first two touches were misplaced passes but before the words "what a waste of money" could emanate from the Chelsea fans, the Brazilian had put City ahead after 13 minutes. Carvalho was harshly judged to have brought down Jo 22 yards out and there was a helping glance off John Obi Mikel's head but you could not fault the drama or the crispness of the shot as Robinho curled the free-kick past Petr Cech.
The place erupted, Robinho ran to the touchline and collapsed to the ground under a pile of team-mates, but Chelsea are not a side to accept a supporting role and within three minutes they had equalised. A corner was won by Terry, the ball rebounded off Joe Cole and Carvalho crashed a volley past Joe Hart.
That goal ushered sobriety into the party and Chelsea spent the rest of the match creating edifying patterns. Lampard was outstanding, Deco, Carvalho and Joe Cole were fractions behind him and City, who had the chance to train with Robinho for the first time on Friday, looked what they are: a team in search of understanding.
Florent Malouda hit the bar with a header and Lampard fired just over immediately after the interval so it had been coming when Chelsea took the lead after 53 minutes. Lampard passed to Malouda and with the home defenders distracted by Chelsea's strikers there was a yard of potential on the edge of their area. The England midfielder is a master at exploiting this space and when the ball was returned he swerved round Richard Dunne's challenge and hit a low shot into the opposite corner.
City needed something extraordinary to get back into the match and they went somewhere nearer to it in the 77th minute when Jo seized on a mistake by Deco and would have raced away had he not been brought down with a rugby tackle by Terry.
His sending-off was a rare discordant note for the visitors on a night when victory was relatively easily achieved. "We expect to make a better fist of it when we meet them again," Hughes warned. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------City find Lampard and co too rich for them
Manchester City 1 Robinho 13 Chelsea 3 Carvalho 16, Lampard 53, Anelka 69
Daniel Taylor The Observer, Sunday September 14 2008 Frank Lampard scored Chelsea's second goal as they beat Manchester City at Eastlands. Photograph: Carl Recine/Action Images
In the end, it was a reminder for the Premier League's newest billionaires not to get too far ahead of themselves. Manchester City's supporters will have enjoyed their first sight of Robinho and the swish of his right boot that brought him a debut goal. Yet, ultimately, Chelsea made it a bruising experience for all those fancy-dress 'Arabs' who had walked down Joe Mercer Way with tea-towels tied round their heads and something that looked suspiciously like Cherry Blossom smeared on their cheeks.
For that, Chelsea have to take immense credit. They were a goal down after 13 minutes, when Robinho offered the first tantalising glimpse of his talent by floating a free-kick past Petr Cech, but their response was emphatic to the point of being brutal. Ricardo Carvalho equalised within two minutes and second-half goals from Frank Lampard and Nicolas Anelka confirmed their superiority, the only downside for Luiz Felipe Scolari being John Terry's red card 13 minutes from the end for an alleged professional foul on Jô, City's other Brazilian recruit. It was harsh, to say the least, and television replays confirmed that Terry was not the last defender.
Strangely for someone who is usually so outspoken, Scolari refused to talk about it, but Chelsea should have a watertight case to launch an appeal and prevent their captain missing next week's match against Manchester United.
That apart, it was an evening of huge satisfaction for Chelsea, whose performance sent out a clear message that there is an established order of merit at the top of English football - and, for now at least, that City are still some way off it.
Typical City, you could say. Yet it would be unfair to pick fault with these nouveau riche wannabes. Mark Hughes's team made a significant contribution to an absorbing game,and it would be wrong for anyone to presume that the optimism that has been swirling around Eastlands will evaporate on the back of one bad result.
'I wouldn't say it's a reality check,' Hughes said. 'We know exactly where we are at this stage of our development. It's early days for us and we always knew Chelsea would be really difficult opponents.'
Perhaps, in hindsight, it was just City's misfortune to come across Chelsea in their first game since the Abu Dhabi United Group moved into power. For the past fortnight it has been constantly rammed down Chelsea's throats that they are no longer the richest club on the planet and that City are on the verge of worldwide domination. This was their opportunity to respond and, once Robinho had scored, they did so in a manner that might have left the Brazilian pondering whether, money aside, he had joined the right club, after all. 'I'm happy for him that he scored,' Scolari said. 'But I'm even happier that we scored three.'
Robinho, in fairness, seemed happy enough in his new surroundings and Hughes described himself as 'delighted' with his new signing. 'Robinho was excellent. He showed in glimpses what he can produce and he also has an excellent work ethic, which a lot of people don't realise. It was difficult because he has just come off a flight from Brazil and he has played a lot of football. But I felt it was important he was exposed to what the Premier League is about. He will be better for it.'
You wonder sometimes whether, when he is running with the ball, his step-over routine slows him down. But we can quickly forgive him because, overall, it was a debut that demonstrates this is a genuine superstar. One little pirouette to spin away from Ashley Cole was particularly enjoyable and there was something beautifully choreographed about the way he announced his introduction to English football.
It came from a free-kick, 20 yards from goal. In a central position, it was the kind of area that every dead-ball specialist cherishes and there was never any doubt about who would be given the responsibility of taking it. Cech probably knew what was coming too, but Robinho's shot flicked off Lampard in the wall and the deflection was decisive.
At that stage it looked like being a difficult evening for Chelsea, but equalising so quickly made a huge difference. Had they allowed City to get up a head of steam, the attacking trio of Robinho, Jô and Stephen Ireland looked as if their elaborate, triangular patterns could inflict more damage. Instead, Chelsea won a corner, Lampard swung the ball towards the penalty spot and the entire defence were guilty of collective ball-watching. Terry connected with the ball first, sending his header goalwards only for the ball to come back off Joe Cole. The bounce fell fortuitously for Carvalho, who thumped a volley into the roof of the net.
The remainder of the first half saw Chelsea emerge as the dominant side, with Florent Malouda striking the crossbar with one header, then sending another flashing wide. Hughes talked of his players 'losing their spark' whereas, after the interval, Chelsea produced some lovely, crisp, pass-and-move football. Lampard's goal was a case in point, with four players involved before the midfielder exchanged passes with Malouda, sidestepped Richard Dunne and fired a precise left-foot shot beyond Joe Hart.
Sporadically, City still looked dangerous, with Shaun Wright-Phillips particularly impressive against his old club. But Pablo Zabaleta had a difficult debut at right-back and, as they looked for an equaliser, they left more space at the back. Chelsea, who brought on the fit-again Didier Drogba in the second half, were in control and the game was effectively ended as a contest in the 70th minute when Cole sent Anelka running clear and the former City striker clipped his shot past Hart.
After that, there was a genuine threat it could become a rout, but Terry's sending-off changed the mood and Chelsea were happy to see out the final exchanges, content in the knowledge that there was nothing Robinho or anyone could do to stop them.
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Mail:
Blue eclipse for Robinho - Chelsea deliver reality check to City's £32.5m Brazilian debutant By PATRICK COLLINS
Manchester City 1 Chelsea 3
The evening which saw a rare and wonderful talent introduced to the English game was also the evening which witnessed the captain of England fall miserably short of the standards he ought to represent.
Robinho of Brazil, bought by Manchester City for £32.5million, scored a memorable goal and displayed the flair which has already endeared him to the blue battalions of Manchester.
Terry, with Chelsea easing to a convincing victory, tripped Robinho's compatriot Jo in the 77th minute as the forward ran on goal. He was then at the finger-jabbing fore of an extended argument as he contested the decision with referee Mark Halsey.
It made for a distasteful end to what had been a captivating occasion. And it will be fascinating to see how the Football Association reacts to the captain's antics. The City fans seemed uncertain about the turn events had taken. Before the match, they strolled in the evening sunshine and wondered what to expect.
There were a good many 'sheikhs', tea-towels around their heads but looking faintly embarrassed. The rest seemed slightly bewildered, like Lottery winners who are pleased with their fortune but reluctant to give up their day jobs.
Inevitably, there was some provocation from the Chelsea followers, for whom wad-waving has long been a way of life. It came down to sheikh versus oligarch, billions against trillions.
Chelsea could point out that their man owns Francis Bacon's Triptych, a Boeing 767, a country estate in several countries, a fleet of ocean-going yachts and more toys than Hamleys. But City could trump those boasts by commending their new patron, who owns the Al Jazeera network, five per cent of Ferrari and an awful lot of oil. Time was when a Manchester City chairman might take pride in owning a Chrysler.
This chap owns the Chrysler Building. It all seemed somehow misplaced in an English football ground, with the real world outside dreading the onset of a deep depression. But the outside world rarely intrudes into football, and this occasion continued that tradition.
City's manager Mark Hughes had struggled to express his feelings about his new acquisition. 'Whenever Robinho gets the ball, you feel that something will happen,' he said. True enough, but £32.5m tends to promote such expectations. What was genuinely surprising was the fact that the young man did not disappoint.
The omens were not encouraging, since he had played in two World Cup qualifiers this week and arrived in Manchester in the early hours of Friday morning. Moreover, after walking out to a clamorous reception, he kissed the City badge. He may well be a terrific player, but clearly he needs to work on his sense of irony. Yet soon, only the magic seemed important. His first pass was intercepted but after that, he scarcely wasted a ball.
Control at a touch, pass in an instant, moving into new and damaging space. The old managers used to say it would be an easy game, if only the players wouldn't complicate it. This player is blissfully uncomplicated. And then, in the 12th minute, he raised simplicity to a new level. Ricardo Carvalho came sweeping across to challenge Jo, 20 yards out and in the centre of the field. The free-kick may have been harsh, and certainly it was long disputed. But the execution was extraordinary.
With scarcely a stride, Robinho chipped the ball over the wall, a brush off a defender's shoulder leaving Petr Cech minimally three yards adrift. It was that killing simplicity which separates the extraordinary players from the rest, and the roar told it all. Blue Moon was bellowed, prayers were muttered and euphoria reigned for all of four minutes.
Then City remembered their oldest habits when a Frank Lampard corner was met by Carvalho. Joe Cole squeezed a rebound and Carvalho struck the scoring volley. And so it was that they attacked like Brazil, but defended like Manchester City. Slowly, inevitably, Chelsea started to dictate terms, driven vigorously from midfield by Lampard.
City continued to defend with misplaced generosity and Florent Malouda almost punished their lapses with two strong headers, the first of which bounced off the bar. At half-time, Deco and Robinho swapped shirts as they departed, and we suspected that the Brazilian's day was done. But he returned, full of running, as Chelsea went about wrapping up the result.
In 52 minutes, they broke out in numbers when a City attack broke down to leave them short at the back. John Obi Mikel began the advance, Joe Cole and Lampard carried it on, and Lampard moved into space for a successful swing of his left foot.
In 69 minutes, with Chelsea in total control, Joe Cole played a short, incisive ball through the square defence and Nicolas Anelka scored comfortably against his old colleagues.
There was time for City to fight, and time for Terry to take the gloss off his own side's victory. Terry was given a straight red by referee Mark Halsey for pulling down striker Jo just inside the Chelsea half, with fellow defender Carvalho closing in.
'I have never seen a man get sent off before for a professional foul where there were two players behind him,' said Lampard. 'I saw one this morning in the Liverpool-Manchester United game that only got a yellow card.'
Victory this time to the oligarch. But, in time, the sheikh of Manchester may have things to say.
‘We have started the season very well and we will get better,’ said Lampard. ‘It is great to have people like Didier Drogba fit again because he is the best striker in the world to me.’---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NOTW:
MAN CITY 1, CHELSEA 3 Frank Lampard leaves Manchester City sheikhing By ANDY DUNN at Eastlands, 13/09/2008
ROMAN ABRAMOVICH could probably have dug deeper and found the £32.5million for Robinho but decided to give the money to Frank Lampard instead. And that was the finest piece of business in the maddest of transfer windows.
Robinho started by kissing the City crest after his opening goal — and ended the night crestfallen.
And Lamps showed that his new contract — valued at the price of a Robinho — boasts the most valuable signature of the summer. After Ricardo Carvalho had cancelled out the Brazilian’s storybook opener, Lampard produced the defining moment of the game and edged Chelsea ahead.
It was left to Nicolas Anelka to confirm the Londoners’ huge superiority and show the sheikhs that City are going to need an awful lot of their money if they are to fulfil the pipedreams going around Eastlands.
Not even John Terry’s harsh, late dismissal — for a tug on Jo some 40 yards out — could take the shine off a shimmering Chelsea performance. Terry now misses Sunday’s crucial clash with Manchester United
City supporters arrived with their heads swathed in towels — the type they usually throw in about now.
Had Sven still been here, he probably would have thought they were real ones.
The genuine article had, of course, provided the readies to recruit Robinho, for whom this occasion must have been extremely confusing. From Real to surreal.
And for a little while, he clearly thought he HAD signed for Chelsea. How else can you explain his insistence on passing to Carvalho, Jon Obi Mikel and just about anyone else in a black jersey?
But Robinho has some presence — and a fairly decent scriptwriter.
When ref Mark Halsey — setting the tone early for a pitiful display — mistook Carvalho’s immaculate timing for an infringement against Jo, Robinho’s official introduction somehow seemed inevitable.
If you conveniently forget that a deflection from Mikel’s spiky hair is what kept keeper Petr Cech anchored, then the free-kick was a pleasant taster of Brazilian delights to come. But Robinho will soon discover false dawns are a speciality in the land of the blue moon.
And no sooner had he finished sucking a celebratory thumb than his team fell to a sucker-punch. In an interesting departure from the defensive coaching manual, City decided to leave Terry and Carvalho unmarked for a corner.
Novel. Innovative, even. And rank amateurish.
And even though Joe Cole got in the way of Terry’s header — that bang on the head still obviously taking its toll — the Portuguese defender sent the rebound home.
He is some player, Carvalho.
In his civvies, he looks like a mature student. But what he reads is the game. Better than most. And his intervention to lift Jo’s left-footed curler clear of the bar was a typical example of his work.
Terry was crowned the Champions League Defender of the Year.
Bedrock
Many would argue not only is the England skipper not the best defender in Europe, he is not the best in south west London. The type of partnership which has been the bedrock of Chelsea success for so long is one which Micah Richards and Richard Dunne have occasionally threatened to emulate.
And I put the emphasis on occasionally.
They looked like a couple on a blind date. You speak, no you speak.
Which all made Chelsea’s failure to secure a half-time lead bemusing. Anelka, maybe not having emerged from the fantastic sulk with France last week, headed straight at a photographer from Position A and Florent Malouda — showing a verve under Big Phil that had previously been very well-hidden — put his sitter against the angle of bar and post and back into the arms of Joe Hart.
Anelka’s reception was indifferent. From both sets of fans. Unlike the one afforded to Shaun Wright-Phillips. From both sets of fans. The irksome aspect of watching Wright-Phillips buzz as effectively as this is to remember all that wasted time at Stamford Bridge.
Plughole
He chased the fast buck all the way down the plughole. But Chelsea’s midfield is a tough club to get into.
And its king is still Lampard, who is possibly the most consistent performer in the history of the Premier League. It is the England midfielder’s directness that impresses. And his runs are not physically quick, they are mentally quick.
His half-a-yard advantage over rivals is entirely between the ears.
After laying out a simple pass to Malouda, he anticipated its return, in an instant created a favourable angle and then rolled a superbly-controlled left-footed shot into the bottom corner to make it 2-1. Deco is the perfect foil for Lamps: the intricacy to complement the incisiveness.
The £8million paid out for Deco — and the £32.5m saved on Robinho — might just mean Chelsea, after all, enjoyed the shrewdest summer.
Robinho had certainly faded into obscurity by the time Anelka converted Joe Cole’s cute 69th-minute pass, and confirmed it will take an awful lot of oil money to turn this City into slickers.
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Monday, September 01, 2008

morning papers spurs home 1-1


The Times
September 1, 2008
Chelsea run out of gas
Chelsea 1 Tottenham Hotspur 1
Martin Samuel

One chance, one goal, one point: slim pickings for Tottenham Hotspur, but in the circumstances, enough is as good as a feast. Juande Ramos got the draw he came for and avoided replicating the worst start at the club in 29 years. A previous Chelsea manager might have sneered that the opposition merely parked a bus in front of the goal, but Luiz Felipe Scolari is more generous.
“Sometimes a team plays very well and it is impossible to win,” he said. “They had five, sometimes nine, players back in front of goal in the last 30 minutes, but this is the game. We had chances, but when you make mistakes with the final shot, a draw is the normal result.”
Normality is not what is expected of Chelsea, however, and, having started the season against Portsmouth as if powered by rocket fuel, the past two matches have been a bungled splash landing. Chelsea got away with it against Wigan Athletic eight days ago, when a moment of brilliance from Deco turned the game, but Scolari’s little magician had his first quiet afternoon yesterday and the performance dipped accordingly. If it were not for Frank Lampard, there would have been barely a scoring threat, although that applied at both ends, unfortunately.
It was a well-intentioned but misdirected clearing up job by Lampard that set up Tottenham’s equalising goal. Stealing the ball off Luka Modric midway in the Chelsea half, Lampard’s interception bisected Ricar-do Carvalho and José Bosingwa in the back four, but not Darren Bent, the striker bereft of goals since preseason ended, who was suddenly left with only Petr Cech to beat. Bent’s first touch was poor, but by knocking the ball some way in front of him he drew the goalkeeper from his lair and stuck the ball smartly under his body.
It sent Tottenham in at half-time with a parity that was scarcely deserved but confidence-boosting. The first 45 minutes would have shown them that Chelsea are a weakened force without Didier Drogba and in the second half, the odd speculative effort from Lampard aside, Scolari’s team barely created a chance. Jonathan Woodgate, in particular, and Ledley King were outstanding for Tottenham, watched by Fabio Capello, the England manager, who is in a predicament recognisable to many predecessors, with an embarrassment of riches in one position – in this case centre half – and a shortage elsewhere.
Woodgate and King were aided by Chelsea’s self-limiting decision to attempt to win by lobbing high balls into the area for the final 20 minutes; potentially effective when Drogba is leading the line, but a tactic that rendered Nicolas Anelka even more redundant than he has rendered himself in recent matches.
Once, in the 78th minute, a long clearance from Carvalho found Anelka, who passed the ball on to Florent Malouda, on as substitute for the ineffectual Joe Cole, but he panicked and shot pitifully wide. The rest of the time Tottenham’s back-line treated Chelsea’s route-one approach like a training-ground exercise before a visit to Stoke City and the tactics brought out the Brazilian in Scolari, who was gesticulating ever more furiously on the touchline but clearly did not know the sign language for “keep it on the damn floor”. “We made a mistake with too much long ball,” he said. “The problem with hitting it high is that you win that way one time, but lose eight times. I understand, though, because when the players feel the pressure it becomes difficult to think.”
And the pressure is on Chelsea, certainly to take advantage of Manchester United’s traditional slow start to the season, the absence of Cristiano Ronaldo and the brief period before the arrival of Dimitar Berbatov or a run of form for Wayne Rooney. Dropping points at home against opponents who have lost matches to Middlesbrough and Sunderland is not part of the plan, even if Tottenham are in a false position.
The most worrying aspect for Scolari will be that his players found it hard to break through the defensive screen of Didier Zokora and Jermaine Jenas and their best chances came from range, usually from Lampard, who went close with two fantastic dinked chips at the start of each half. The first caught Heurelho Gomes, the Tottenham goalkeeper, off his line, but he recovered to tip over; the second beat him but dropped just the wrong side of the bar.
Between that Michael Essien had a shot from 25 yards that struck the bar, although Chelsea did get a reward from the resulting corner. Lampard curled it in, Bent missed his kick with an attempted clearance and Juliano Belletti glanced the ball past Gomes at the near post.
The match was a tiny triumph for Belletti, a reserve full back, who was given the job of holding midfield with John Obi Mikel injured. In addition to scoring from a set-piece, he shut Modric out of the game. It is amazing that English football finds it so hard to fill this position in the national team when foreign players respond instantly to its code of discipline and self-sacrifice. These are worrying times for English football all round, with injuries mounting in key roles, a void where a world-class striker should be and a series of failed auditions for David Beckham’s role. Nothing David Bentley did here would have impressed Capello going into his first competitive international; mainly, because he did nothing.
“We deserved a point for what we did in the second half,” Ramos, the Tottenham head coach, said.
About right. Both teams looked as if they could do with an injection of sorts. The arrival of Roman Pavlyuchenko at Tottenham and, perhaps, Robinho at Chelsea cannot come soon enough.
Chelsea ratings
4-1-3-1-1
P Cech 6 J Bosingwa 6 R Carvalho 6 J Terry 7 A Cole 7 J Belletti 7 F Lampard 7 M Essien 6 Deco 6 J Cole 5 N Anelka 5 Substitutes: F Malouda 5 (for J Cole, 65min), S Kalou (for Belletti, 75), F Di Santo (for Anelka, 88) Not used: C Cudicini, W Bridge, P Ferreira, Alex Next: Man City (a)
Tottenham ratings
4-5-1
H Gomes 7 C Gunter 7 J Woodgate 9 L King 8 G Bale 8 D Bentley 5 J Jenas 7 D Zokora 7 L Modric 6 G Dos Santos 5 D Bent 7 Substitutes: T Huddlestone 7 (for Gunter, 62min), A Lennon 5 (for Dos Santos, 59), J O’Hara (for Bentley, 72) Not used: C Sánchez, Gilberto, M Dawson, B Assou-Ekotto Next: Aston Villa (h)
Referee: H Webb Attendance: 41,790
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Chelsea long for Drogba as Spurs seize the initiative
Chelsea 1 Belletti 28 Tottenham Hotspur 1 Bent 45
Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge
The Guardian, Monday September 1 2008

The transfer window is an invitation to peer into an enticing and elusive future, but Tottenham Hotspur's supporters could not peel their gaze from the joys of the present. There was no inclination to start wondering what Roman Pavlyuchenko or signings yet to come might achieve when the existing line-up was conducting itself with such care and competitiveness. While the equaliser from Darren Bent had its element of luck, there was an organised resilience to the visitors that merited yesterday's draw.
When Juliano Belletti gave Chelsea the lead Tottenham looked bound for a third consecutive loss. It was proof of the recovery by Juande Ramos's team that much of what ensued raised questions about Chelsea. Sharing the points is no fiasco, but the hosts' dullness was unexpected.
Nicolas Anelka must have been dismayed. There are sound reasons for using a single outright striker. Chelsea themselves were devastating in the rout of Portsmouth with precisely that system. Here, by contrast, the weaknesses of the approach were highlighted. Tottenham, for whom Didier Zokora was significant, snipped the connection between the midfield and the forward.
Anelka is not equipped to be a lone battler. In the wake of the match there were immediate inquiries about the return of the injured Didier Drogba. He assuredly has the height, weight, speed and skill to harry an entire defence by himself, but the Ivorian's knee problem had been an issue for a long time before it became acute early this year. The 30-year-old cannot be confident that the aches and pains will ever leave him entirely.
The outcome of Chelsea's bid for Real Madrid's Robinho was still inscrutable in the late afternoon yesterday, but the Brazilian bears no resemblance to the sort of centre-forward whom Anelka needed badly as a partner in this game.
Of course, there were also some mundane reasons for Chelsea's mechanical football. With Michael Ballack injured, Michael Essien took a more advanced midfield position to which he is not really suited and Belletti, who is considered a full-back, was placed in the holding role. The outcome was that Luiz Felipe Scolari's team did not move fluently and Deco, in particular, seemed frustrated.
For all that there were omens of a standard win for Chelsea. Belletti, for instance, split the defence with a devastating pass in the 26th minute and Anelka tamed it with his first touch, only to bash the finish over the bar. Two minutes later Scolari's team took the lead. Tottenham were aggrieved that Joe Cole was not ruled offside before a corner was awarded, but they should have coped with the set-piece. Deco took it and Bent failed to clear before Belletti diverted the ball into the net.
The leveller came peculiarly in first-half stoppage time. Bent headed down and Frank Lampard, tackling Luka Modric, inadvertently fed the ball back to the Tottenham striker. He finished with a shot through the legs of Petr Cech. Were it not for the transfer market machinations that kept Dimitar Berbatov away from Stamford Bridge, there might have been minor involvement for the scorer yesterday.
The part Bent will play in the longer term is still in doubt, but that goal could be seen as a telling episode in Tottenham's season. Ramos's team did not put Chelsea in all that many difficulties and Modric, specifically, was unable to show the zest expected of him. A share of the points, nonetheless, will make Tottenham feel they can return to normal business with fewer accusations of instability at White Hart Lane.
The team, after all, was far from brittle. After the unfortunate decline and sale of Paul Robinson it would have been a comfort for Ramos that Heurelho Gomes was commanding in goal. His handling of crosses was adhesive and while a couple of Lampard attempts to chip him were entertaining the tall Brazilian dealt with them.
Tottenham, of course, may not have taken as much credit if they had been under any obligation to attack. Berbatov's subtlety would have been missed in a different type of match, where this side was supposed to hold the initiative. Equally, it was apparent why Tottenham have been so keen to buy Andrei Arshavin, considering how he links midfield to attack.
For Chelsea there was a reminder that Scolari is not the guarantor of verve. The efforts here were highly reminiscent of lacklustre afternoons under Avram Grant and, indeed, Jose Mourinho. Both clubs will have left with a sense of the long haul ahead. For once, Tottenham must have been feeling cheerful about it.
Man of the match Jonathan Woodgate (Tottenham)
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Indy:
Chelsea 1 Tottenham Hotspur 1: Scolari lets slip Kalou bid as a diversion
By Sam WallaceMonday, 1 September 2008

Now we know that Luiz Felipe Scolari is not just a shrewd coach. He has also read that chapter in the manager's handbook that tells you what to do in the event of your team tossing away two points at home to Tottenham. The answer? Tell everyone who Arsenal's transfer target was earlier in the summer and hope they forget about the result.
It turns out Arsène Wenger made an offer for Salomon Kalou. It was casually mentioned by Scolari yesterday as he discussed his striking options in the absence of Didier Drogba. Arsenal made the enquiry when they thought that Emmanuel Adebayor might leave them – possibly even to Chelsea – and you suspect Wenger asked Chelsea to keep it to themselves.
Asked why he considered Kalou as a central striker, Scolari cited Wenger's opinion. "If you ask Arsène Wenger, he wants him [Kalou] as a No 9 so why shouldn't I play him there?" Scolari said. "Arsène's an intelligent man, so maybe he knows something."
No doubt his friend will be delighted to have his transfer business made public but it served a purpose for Scolari. The Chelsea manager is evidently not averse to being political when it suits him – he is learning fast in the Premier League.
Nevertheless, it was difficult to dispel the notion that Juande Ramos had the measure of another Chelsea manager yesterday, especially in the way he changed his team after a fortuitous equaliser for Darren Bent just before half-time. Before then Chelsea had run the game, taken the lead through Juliano Belletti and generally looked like they were about to extend Spurs' run of two defeats.
There are undoubtedly problems in Ramos's team. There is no Dimitar Berbatov and too little Premier League experience in Luka Modric and Giovani Dos Santos, who looked like autumn leaves in the slipstream of the Chelsea juggernaut in the first half. But Ramos withdrew Dos Santos and kept faith with Modric and Tottenham withstood the onslaught.
With Tom Huddlestone on as the holding midfielder and Jermaine Jenas as right-back, Ramos gave Spurs a touch of stability. He is adept at thinking on his feet and is not afraid to make bold decisions – rather like Jose Mourinho. Chelsea have not forgotten that he showed Avram Grant how it was done in the Carling Cup final in February.
There were no Mourinho-style accusations of Spurs coming to Stamford Bridge to "park the bus" in front of their own goal. Instead Scolari was lyrical about the quality of Spurs' players and how difficult his side found it to break them down. He must have been disappointed by Deco, who was overly cautious after an early booking. Nicolas Anelka did not suggest Drogba will have any trouble getting back in this team after the international break.
Whether even Robinho would have made a difference was debatable because without Drogba Chelsea do not have a target man in case of emergency. In midfield, Didier Zokora had one of his best games for Spurs, snapping around the heels of Frank Lampard and Michael Essien. Gareth Bale excelled at left-back.
Chelsea's goal came on 27 minutes, when Bent moved to clear a corner from Lampard at the near post and missed the ball. Belletti nipped ahead of Zokora and toed the ball in from close range. Earlier Lampard's chip had been touched over the bar by Heurelho Gomes but Chelsea had precious few good chances.
They were punished just before half-time when Lampard and Modric challenged and the ball rebounded into the path of Bent. His first touch was dire and caught out everyone, including Petr Cech, making the angle right for the striker to slip the ball into the net. Tottenham were due a bit of luck but you would not bet on Bent keeping his place ahead of Roman Pavlyuchenko for the match against Aston Villa on 15 September.
Goals: Belletti (27) 1-0; Bent (45) 1-1.
Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Terry, Carvalho, A Cole; Belletti (Kalou, 76); J Cole (Malouda, 66), Lampard, Essien, Deco; Anelka (Di Santo, 89). Substitutes not used: Cudicini (gk), Bridge, Ferreira, Alex.
Tottenham Hotspur (4-1-4-1): Gomes; Gunter (Huddlestone, 62), Woodgate, King, Bale; Zokora; Bentley (O'Hara, 72), Jenas, Modric, Dos Santos (Lennon, 59); Bent. Substitutes not used: Cesar (gk), Gilberto, Dawson, Assou-Ekotto.
Referee: H Webb (South Yorkshire).
Booked: Chelsea Deco, J Cole, Bosingwa.
Man of the match: Zokora.
Attendance: 41,790.
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Telegraph:
Luka Modric tireless for Tottenham Hotspur as Chelsea stars fade
Chelsea (1) 1 Tottenham Hotspur (1) 1 By Henry Winter at Stamford Bridge

Luka Modric, his flaxen locks darkened by sweat, ran himself into the ground so fully at the Bridge that his socks soon flopped around his ankles. Ledley King, the man of the match, stretched out a leg to nick the ball away from Michael Essien. Jonathan Woodgate, similarly impressive, threw himself in the way of a Frank Lampard shot. Collected together, such snapshots formed the big picture of Tottenham Hotspur’s ceaseless endeavour.
Spurs did not park their bus in front of their goal, as Jose Mourinho once complained, nor even their Bentley; defending with organisation and determination, Spurs were also committed to attack, particularly in the second period. With the cloud called Dimitar Berbatov disappearing north, the sun appears to be warming Tottenham, and there was a real togetherness about them here.
If Spurs players are beginning to find their stride, certainly after two false starts, further detail of the promising bigger picture was provided by Juande Ramos’ impact. His pursuit of Roman Pavlyuchenko is inspired. Darren Bent scored for Spurs, equalising Juliano Belletti’s effort, but Ramos’ 4-2-3-1 formation will carry even greater threat when the lively Russian starts.
There is real substance to Ramos. When Giovani dos Santos looked frustrated at being substituted, Spurs’ manager gave him a blood-chilling glare that brooked no arguments. Ramos’ second-half tactical switches also worked.
Tom Huddlestone brought some control to central midfield, Aaron Lennon injected energy down the right and Jamie O’Hara arrived on the left and combined well with Gareth Bale. Chelsea could not pour forward completely because of the danger of a Spurs counter-attack.
Two dropped points should not alarm Chelsea unduly, particularly with Manchester United slow out of the traps, and particularly if their own reinforcements arrive soon. For all the talk of Robinho’s little bit of magic being needed to unlock the door, Chelsea could really have done with Didier Drogba. Still recovering from injury, the Ivory Coast battering-ram allows Chelsea an extra option, the direct ball. When Luiz Felipe Scolari’s men played it high towards Nicolas Anelka, he was too often outmuscled by King and Woodgate.
What should worry Scolari was the way some of his players faded. Deco, kept in reserve by Barcelona last season, needs to work on his core fitness. Florent Malouda had no excuse, tiring after coming off the bench. One of Chelsea’s strengths, their ability to overpower teams, will be enhanced when Michael Ballack and John Obi Mikel are fit.
Belletti may have scored Chelsea’s goal but he is not an anchor man. The right-back’s presence in central midfield was partly to keep an eye on Modric in what was loosely a 4-1-4-1 formation with Deco and Joe Cole out wide, although often interchanging. This constant movement afforded some early space for Lampard, whose wonderful chip drew an equally superb tip-over save from Heurelho Gomes.
Spurs were far from daunted. With Didier Zokora and Jermaine Jenas holding, and Zokora earning rich applause from the visiting contingent with one lovely turn away from Deco, there was plenty of movement in Tottenham’s midfield.
Modric sought to support the initially isolated Bent through the middle while Dos Santos and the right-sided David Bentley worked the flanks. Giovani soon glided inside Belletti and cut the ball back to Bent, whose shot deflected wide.
Chelsea fans were quick to find their voice, serenading the noisy visitors with chants of “Berbatov’’ and “going down’’. Anelka should have scored, controlling Belletti’s neat pass expertly, but shooting wide.
Sometimes it takes a tackle to stir a team to real life, and when the excellent Essien thundered through 50-50s against Jenas and Zokora, crashing a shot against the bar, Chelsea hopes were lifted. Woodgate conceded the corner, which Deco swirled into the box, and Bent missed badly. The ball continued to Belletti, who had lost Zokora, and a touch took it past Gomes.
Spurs never gave up, levelling just before the break. When Bent’s nod-down found Modric, the Croatian’s pass hit Lampard and deflected back into Bent’s path. His first touch was poor, carrying it slightly to the left, but it served to entice Petr Cech from his line, allowing Bent to slide the ball under the onrushing keeper and in.
Chelsea raised themselves briefly in the second half, Ashley Cole shooting wide, Lampard firing just over and Ricardo Carvalho heading into the Shed. Enlivened by Ramos’ changes, Spurs responded. One sinewy Bale run took him past Deco, and required the combined strengths of Jose Bosingwa and Carvalho to bring him down. The Welshman stood up, dusted himself down but swept his free-kick into the wall.
Now it was Chelsea with sweat beads glistening. John Terry was desperately fortunate to escape sanction for blocking off Modric, an offence that may not be forgotten when the pair run into each other in Zagreb next week. Scolari sought to influence the game, sending on Salomon Kalou, who wasted a decent flick-on from Anelka, and the promising Franco Di Santo, a prolific force in the reserves. Spurs stood firm and held on to a deserved point.
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Mail;
Spurs hold out for a point despite Chelsea's Brazil trick
Chelsea 1 Tottenham 1
By Matt Lawton
Until Darren Bent followed a terrible first touch with a terrific finish, Luiz Felipe Scolari once again looked like something of a genius at Stamford Bridge.
The deployment of a Brazilian full back with no apparent ability to defend in the midfield holding role would have baffled a watching Claude Makelele as much as anybody.
But Juliano Belletti not only performed admirably in the position but scored the goal that even Juande Ramos probably suspected would secure a third successive League win for Chelsea and condemn Tottenham to a third successive defeat.
Then, however, came three more surprises: Frank Lampard gave the ball away, Bent seized on the opportunity with the same predatory instincts he showed regularly prior to moving to White Hart Lane, and Tottenham's defending excelled for the remaining 45 minutes.
A draw leaves Tottenham second from bottom of the Barclays Premier League, but the importance of the point will not be lost on Ramos when his side have lacked confidence as much as Bent has lacked support in attack.
Ramos owed much to Didier Zokora at the base of a midfield five as well as Jonathan Woodgate and Ledley King at the heart of his defence.
All three were outstanding. Zokora was a destructive force in the middle, Woodgate and King inspirational at the back. They were brilliant and Scolari recognised as much, rejecting an invitation to echo former boss Jose Mourinho in accusing them of 'parking the bus' in front of their goal.
They parked three buses on this occasion, all at once.
As well as adding Roman Pavlyuchenko to a forward line who have struggled in the absence of Robbie Keane and Dimitar Berbatov, Ramos needs to do everything he can he keep Woodgate and King on the field.
This match was as memorable for the fact that it represented King's second appearance on the bounce, and relying on two centre halves who have suffered so badly from injuries remains a problem for a club with ambitions to break into the Champions League.
Judging by this, the Champions League is still a long way off. But Spurs will return from the international break lifted by their success in at least stopping Chelsea build on an impressive start to their campaign.
If Scolari was frustrated, he did a fine job of disguising his true feelings. Just as he did, it has to be said, when mention of the controversy surrounding Robinho was made.
So Real Madrid are branding the conduct of Chelsea's directors as deplorable? Sir Alex Ferguson will see the funny side of that one.
It's a bit like Woodgate accusing Dimitar Berbatov of giving professional footballers a bad name.
Clearly, Scolari could use Robinho if only to increase the competition for places in the Chelsea attack.
The Stamford Bridge team are not the same when Didier Drogba is missing but the arrival of Robinho would lessen the chance of Deco and Joe Cole performing as they did yesterday.
They were both poor, as was Nicolas Anelka. The France striker really should have scored in the 26th minute.
It was a super ball forward from Belletti, dropping between Woodgate and King and at the feet of Anelka. But a fine first touch was followed by an awful finish and Anelka and Belletti both cursed the sight of the half-volley flying over the crossbar.
Michael Essien struck the crossbar seconds later with a beautifully struck shot and it was from the corner which followed that Belletti scored his goal.
Deco's delivery may have been decent, but it was Bent's failure to clear that enabled Belletti to turn the ball past Heurelho Gomes with what looked like his left thigh.
Belletti ran immediately to Scolari to celebrate and the manager responded by urging his countryman-to push further forward.
Turns out Scolari's knowledge of Brazilian football benefited Chelsea yesterday, because he knew Belletti had played in the position during his time at Sao Paulo.
The demeanour of Ramos suggested he was almost resigned to a third defeat on the bounce.
But when Lampard tracked back to regain possession from Luka Modric, he succeeded only in knocking the ball into the path of Bent.
One rather fortuitous touch then took Bent away from Ricardo Carvalho before his finish was driven through the legs of an advancing Petr Cech.
Chelsea did create opportunities after the break. Ashley Cole dragged an effort across the face of Tottenham's goal and Lampard threatened with a clever chip, having forced a fine save from Gomes with a similar effort in the first half.
For all their dominance, though, Chelsea could not break through that determined Tottenham triumvirate and in the end they were a little lucky not to lose their captain for what looked like a cynical elbow in the face of Modric.
Ramos was not amused.
Fabio Capello will be equally unamused if he now discovers that the sight of Lampard limping away from Stamford Bridge last night amounts to bad news for England.
But withdraw him Scolari no doubt will if there is any danger of losing him when the Premier League resumes for Chelsea at Manchester City on September 13.
Not even a manager with the international experience of Scolari is going to worry about England after dropping two points here.

Monday, August 25, 2008

morning papers wigan away 1-0


The Times
August 25, 2008

Deco makes a difference for Chelsea
Wigan Athletic 0 Chelsea 1
Martin Samuel

Scant consolation, maybe, but it is not only English-born footballers who look better for their club than country. Petr Cech did not have the happiest time in goal for the Czech Republic during the European Championship this summer, but he was the reason Chelsea took three points and a place at the top of the Barclays Premier League table yesterday.
After the euphoria of the opening-day demolition of Portsmouth, this was very much business as usual, a slender victory ground out against opposition who were, for large periods, superior but simply lack the financial clout to buy the players who make the difference.
Deco, in this case, whose third-minute free kick was still all that separated the teams some 93 minutes later when Alan Wiley, the referee, brought the contest to a frustrating end for the home side. Beyond the one moment of magic, then, the difference was Cech, who made four excellent saves to deny Wigan Athletic, while at the other end Mike Pollitt, the stand-in goalkeeper after Chris Kirkland suffered a back injury in the warm-up, was largely untroubled.
Cech saved at the near post in the fifth minute after Wilson Palacios – who had an outstanding first half but could not sustain it – cut inside José Bosingwa, then again two minutes later after Jason Koumas had played the ball through to Amr Zaki, a hugely promising forward from Egypt.
In the 25th minute, the move of the match, involving Emile Heskey and Emmerson Boyce, was finished by another shot from Zaki, this time from the edge of the area, which Cech kept out, and with three minutes remaining, near the end of a dire second half, he moved quickly to tip round a shot by Olivier Kapo, a Wigan substitute.
It was a performance that revived memories of Cech at his best, before misfortune left him vulnerable physically, and perhaps mentally. If uncharacteristic mistakes had blighted his summer tournament, here was a goalkeeper at the top of his game, bravely off his line to any cross that strayed within his range, completely in command on a day when his defence looked surprisingly vulnerable.
“If you were listing the greatest goalkeepers in the world, you would say Cech and Gianluigi Buffon, and maybe one other,” Luiz Felipe Scolari, the Chelsea manager, said. “In training, if we are doing one hour, he wants to do two – he has not let us down in any game since I have been here.”
Steve Bruce, the Wigan manager, knew that his team had missed an opportunity. Chelsea’s form against Portsmouth last week was terrifying but Bruce and his players refused to be intimidated, put an extra body in midfield to match Chelsea’s small army and were by far the better team in the first half. John Terry and Ricardo Carvalho were challenged in a way that eluded last week’s strikers, Peter Crouch and Jermain Defoe, and the full backs were not allowed the space to operate as wingers.
Understandably, this level of commitment was tough to maintain and Wigan seemed to hit a wall after an hour, while still producing the only noteworthy chance of the second half. In all, they did enough to win and Scolari knew as much. His team were not inconsistent, he said, Wigan were simply stronger opponents than Portsmouth. “They had good ability, power and they put pressure on us,” he said. “In England, sometimes, to win 1-0 is like winning 10-0, because last can beat first.”
He said that several players are not entirely fit, including Michael Essien, Frank Lampard and Michael Ballack. Bruce saw it differently. “It is getting harder to beat the top teams with each new season,” he said. “Chelsea had a bad day today, but then Deco comes along and changes everything with one kick. If it isn’t Deco it will be Nicolas Anelka, or Joe Cole, or Florent Malouda, one of them is going to do something special – and all big clubs have that string of talent.
“When we first won the Premier League at Manchester United, the team to beat that season was Norwich City. That is never going to happen again. The gap is huge now. A team wins the league and buys four players. Chelsea got to the European Cup final and lost, so they bought two more. We used to laugh at the situation in Scotland with Rangers and Celtic. Not any more.”
It was tough on Bruce, who ended last season by losing at home to Manchester United, another match in which his team had the edge. Wigan have yet to gain a point this season, but impressed with the way they hustled Chelsea, without resorting to roughhouse tactics or the long ball. Palacios was outstanding early on, while Zaki and Luis Antonio Valencia were tirelessly energetic.
What Wigan do not have, and will never have unless football’s finances undergo a radical transformation, is a master like Deco, a player who got one chance all game, and a difficult one at that, and needed no more.
Lee Cattermole handled the ball on the edge of the area, Ballack voiced the sort of appeal that would have rattled even the most flint-hearted taekwondo judge, and the free kick was duly awarded. Deco, with his right foot, lifted the ball over the wall and into the top left-hand corner of Pollitt’s net. If Wigan had only known, the three points were gone.
“Deco is such an intelligent player,” Scolari said. “He waited for one little mistake from the goalkeeper, moving just too far in one direction, and then he adjusted his angle and scored. He thinks about the game. I have watched him in training all week, and he puts them in the other corner – but this is why he is one of the best players in the world.”
Scolari will meet board members at Chelsea tomorrow to discuss the last seven days of the transfer window, which should bring a move to Everton for Shaun Wright-Phillips and the completion of the £28 million deal for Robinho, of Real Madrid.
John Benson, the Wigan general manager, meanwhile, is in Seoul checking on Park Chu Young, the winger, and a £4 million purchase. Park was the Asian player of the year four years ago but has been in and out of the national side. Wigan accomplished a feat to only lose 1-0, really, all things considered.
Wigan ratings
4-2-3-1
M Pollitt 6 M Melchiot 6 E Boyce 6 T Bramble 6 M Figueroa 6 L Cattermole 7 W Palacios 7 L A Valencia 7 J Koumas 5 A Zaki 7 E Heskey 6
Substitutes: D de Ridder 5 (for Koumas, 46min), O Kapo (for Palacios, 79), H Camara (for Melchiot, 84). Not used: C Nash, M Brown, K Kilbane, A Sibierski. Next: Hull City (a).
Chelsea ratings
4-1-3-1-1
P Cech 9 J Bosingwa 5 J Terry 5 R Carvalho 5 A Cole 7 M Essien 7 M Ballack 7 F Lampard 6 Deco 7 J Cole 6 N Anelka 5
Substitutes: S Kalou 5 (for J Cole, 57), W Bridge (for A Cole, 82), F Malouda (for Anelka, 88). Not used: Hilário, B Ivanovic, Alex, J Belletti. Next: Tottenham (h).
Referee: A Wiley.
Attendance: 18,139
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Telegraph

Deco brilliance shades Wigan resolve as steely Chelsea excelWigan Athletic (0) 0 Chelsea (1) 1
By Henry Winter at the JJB Stadium

For Chelsea followers, it was just like watching Germany rather than Brazil this week. After their silky opening-day vanquishing of Portsmouth, Luiz Felipe Scolari’s side showed their steely trait, grinding out victory to frustrate lively opponents in Wigan Athletic.
As in the 4-0 defeat of Pompey, the Brazilian-born Deco was again to the fore, embarrassing another goalkeeper, but his breathtaking free-kick was as far as Chelsea’s advertisement for the Beautiful Game went. Withstanding relentless pressure from Wigan, for whom Amr Zaki excelled, Chelsea tackled and harried, intercepted and cleared and made sure they returned south unscathed. Never mind the quality, feel the quantity of points.
Petr Cech, looking back to his best, pulled off some good saves. Michael Essien anchored diligently. Ashley Cole put in some important tackles. John Terry kept cajoling, ensuring commitment levels never dipped. When Didier Drogba regains enough fitness and sharpness to replace Nicolas Anelka, Chelsea’s 4-1-4-1 shape under Scolari will exude even greater balance and menace.
Chelsea’s character was embodied in Michael Ballack’s willingness to start despite a slight niggle. Frank Lampard, also feeling a small injury, endured a brief battering from the raw but promising Lee Cattermole, even catcalls from Wigan fans, but never wilted. Essien hardly trained for 10 days but returned hungrily to the fray.
“They gave everything and they won,’’ enthused Scolari. “It’s fantastic for Chelsea, for us as a group, because we now have more confidence. It was more difficult than Portsmouth. Wigan played better than Portsmouth. This is the first time I have been to the north of England, so now I know what to expect. In English football, no game is easy.’’
Refusing to comment on Robinho’s seemingly imminent arrival and the prospect of Shaun Wright-Phillips departing to Everton, Scolari was more keen to expound on the mind-set he expects from his players. “It’s not important whether Lampard or Deco scores,’’ the Brazilian said. “This is my philosophy. Chelsea is more important than us [as individuals].’’
Deco symbolises what Scolari craves from his team, technique and character. As well as stirring admiration for the effortless way he guided the ball around Cattermole in the first half, and then nut-megging him for good measure in the second, Deco also impressed with his relish for the physical side of the game. No shrinking violet, the Portuguese international put in a stiff tackle on Antonio Valencia and bulldozed into a challenge on Cattermole. But it was his clever free-kick after four minutes that inevitably guaranteed him the headlines. When Cattermole handled just outside the hosts’ box, Deco stood with Ashley Cole and watched Wigan arrange their wall. In training, Deco has apparently been placing every free-kick to the right. He changed tack here, sweeping it over the wall and in to the left.
“Deco is a very intelligent boy,’’ Scolari explained. “As he ran up to the ball, he saw the keeper made a mistake, move a metre, which left room for Deco. So he went for the other side from what he has been taking in training. That’s why he is one of the best in the world.’’
Wigan were unfortunate that they had lost their first-choice goalkeeper moments before the start, Chris Kirkland aggravating a back problem, but little blame could really be attached to his stand-in, Mike Pollitt. Few keepers would have saved Deco’s free-kick.
“It was another bit of magic, but he does it in training every day,’’ said Ashley Cole, who limped off with a dead leg but will return to training tomorrow, according to Chelsea. Until he departed, Cole experienced a busy afternoon with Valencia and Mario Melchiot constantly running at him.
Jason Koumas and Wilson Palacios also carried the ball deep into Chelsea’s half. Emile Heskey, watched by Fabio Capello, kept showing for the ball long and short, pressuring Terry into a foul and a caution. Zaki, Heskey’s attacking accomplice, twice demanded saves from Cech as Wigan controlled the first half for substantial periods.
Zaki’s deployment by Bruce was interesting. “Chelsea get their width from their full-backs who like to get forward,’’ said the Wigan manager, who told Zaki to drift wide to peg back Jose Bosingwa while Valencia kept Ashley Cole deep. With a little more craft at set-pieces, Bruce’s tactics and his players’ work-rate would have been rewarded with a deserved point. Wigan were far from overawed, Palacios elegantly spiriting the ball away from Bosingwa and Anelka, drawing admiring gasps from the crowd.
As the second half unfolded, Chelsea raised their game. Lampard lifted a superb pass to Anelka, but Emmerson Boyce intercepted. Essien let fly with a long-ranger but Pollitt was equal to the task. Cattermole then slid in to dispossess Lampard in the area.
Bruce’s side finished the stronger. Cattermole shot over. Then Zaki, the striker on loan from Zamalek, embarked on a terrific run, passing Essien and Bosingwa before Ricardo Carvalho intervened. Zaki then set up Olivier Kapo, who was denied by Cech, Chelsea’s best player yesterday. “If you have three goalkeepers in the world, it is Cech, Buffon and another,’’ Scolari said. “He trains for an hour but then wants to train for two hours.’’
Bruce sighed in frustration afterwards. “Chelsea had a bad day at the office but a piece of brilliance won it for them,’’ he said. “We have missed an opportunity. The top two lose only once or twice a season.’’
Wigan’s manager also bemoaned the gulf between the elite four and the rest. “When I won the Premier League with Manchester United [in 1993], Norwich City were the only team we had to beat,’’ added Bruce. “That would never happen now. Smaller teams cannot mount a challenge. We used to mock Celtic and Rangers in Scotland but the gap is enormous in England now. It’s been the [same] top four for some time now.
“It will continue because they can go out and buy two or more players. United haven’t bought this season but they bought four last year for £70 million.’’
Bruce pursues less illustrious players, revealing that Wigan are in negotiation for the FC Seoul striker, Park-joo Young. Chelsea, meanwhile, await Robinho.
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Indy:
Wigan Athletic 0 Chelsea 1:
Art of Deco lifts Chelsea to top as Scolari paints picture of new world

Luiz Felipe Scolari has managed in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, he has won a World Cup in Japan and he comes from the remote Rio Grande do Sul in the southern Brazil, but he admitted that, until yesterday, he had never been to that distant, exotic kingdom known as the north of England. Chelsea will have play better on their further visits if they are to win the Premier League this season.
A moment of brilliance from Deco four minutes into the match decided it, a free-kick that swooped into the top corner of Mike Pollitt's goal before he had barely picked out its flight. The rest of the game was not so beautiful although it was never easy for Chelsea, whose second win of the season leaves them top of the Premier League after two games. So far, so good, even if Roman Abramovich chose not spend to his August bank holiday in Lancashire.
Scolari explained how this was the first time that he had ventured north of London but that his grip of geography was improving. "Yes, it's my first time in the north," he said, "and I know that I will have to come here to play Bolton, Manchester United, Manchester City. Here in the north. I understand that now."
Gritty, physical, relentless: Scolari got a view of the other side of football in England that was in stark contrast to the opening weekend when Chelsea passed the ball around Portsmouth in the sunshine at Stamford Bridge. Only the marble-hearted would have begrudged Wigan a point from this game, in which they ran themselves silly in the first half closing down the opposition. Wilson Palacios and Amr Zaki were outstanding but it all felt futile against superstars who need just one chance to pick opponents off.
It will be curious to see how Scolari's teams play away from home this season, especially in the North-West – which Sir Alex Ferguson has often referred to as if it were one rebellious tribe desperate to wreak havoc on any London sides with pretensions to winning the League. Yesterday Scolari paid tribute to the strength of the competition when he said that a 1-0 away win was equivalent to "10-0" in other leagues around the world. "In England," he said, "you always say that first [placed team] playing against the last is not easy."
Up to a point, Felipe, but when you have players in the side like Deco, they can, at times, make the whole thing look as simple as lacing their boots. For the goal, Lee Cattermole handled the ball about 25 yards out and Pollitt, a late replacement for Chris Kirkland who aggravated his back injury in the warm-up, never got close to Deco's resulting free-kick. "Another piece of Deco magic," said Ashley Cole. "He does it all the time in training."
That was the assumption, given that the Portuguese international was even allowed to take the shot – the queue for free-kick status at Chelsea is long and distinguished. But soon Wigan were back in the game, snapping at the heels of Chelsea's midfield, which looked stretched at times with Joe Cole in a more forward position. Palacios and Antonio Valencia, Steve Bruce later noted, played in Mexico for Honduras in midweek, while Zaki represented Egypt in Sudan, and none of them looked rusty.
Two defeats into the season, Bruce talked wearily of beating any one of the big four and the lengths he has gone to source players – he made his trip to Cairo to persuade Zaki to sign sound like he had been asked to find the source of the Nile single-handed. Now he is looking at the Korean striker Park Chu-Young, from FC Seoul. "Chelsea didn't look at any stage like they would rip us apart like they did with Portsmouth," Bruce said. "Chelsea have had a bad day but a piece of brilliance from Deco has saved them. That's why they are at the highest level. If it hadn't been him, they have others who can do that."
Fabio Capello was in attendance and, as usual, he will have left thinking about the non-English players on the pitch. Cattermole was determined for Wigan and Emile Heskey contributed to the move that saw Zaki's shot stopped by Petr Cech at close range, but they struggled to put Chelsea's defence on the back foot. Cech was excellent – that save from Zaki and another from substitute Olivier Kapo were decisive in winning the game.
With Frank Lampard, Michael Ballack and Michael Essien all playing with injuries, and John Obi Mikel out of the game, Scolari declared himself delighted with the performance. "It doesn't mean that much to be top after just two games," he said, "but it's good for the group to have six points." They will, after all, face some tougher tests in this part of the world.
Goal: Deco (4) 0-1.
Wigan Athletic (4-5-1): Pollitt; Melchiot (Camara, 85), Boyce, Bramble, Figueroa; Valencia, Cattermole, Palacios (Kapo, 80), Koumas (De Ridder, h-t), Zaki; Heskey. Substitutes not used: Nash (gk), Brown, Kilbane, Sibierski.
Chelsea (4-1-3-2): Cech; Bosingwa, Carvalho, Terry, A Cole (Bridge, 83); Essien; Ballack, Lampard, Deco; J Cole (Kalou, 58), Anelka (Malouda, 89). Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Ivanovic, Alex, Belletti.
Referee: A Wiley (Staffordshire).
Booked: Wigan Cattermole; Chelsea Terry, Carvalho.
Man of the match: Cech.
Attendance: 18,139.
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Deco's gifts leave lumbering Wigan wishing for more
Premier League
Wigan Athletic 0 Chelsea 1 Deco 4
Dominic Fifield at the JJB Stadium
The Guardian, Monday August 25 2008
Luiz Felipe Scolari had known this was coming. Back in the build-up to his Premier League debut, his comments lost amid what appeared to be outlandish suggestions that Manchester City and Portsmouth would challenge for the title, the Brazilian had warned that Wigan Athletic would cause his team "big problems" in his second game in charge. The sight of Chelsea's manager punching the air at the final whistle here was a telling indication that a horribly awkward hurdle had been vaulted.
Where Pompey had been dismissed with scintillating ease, Wigan were held at arm's bay, though never with any sense of comfort. Deco had conjured the game's decisive goal but that free-kick, curled gloriously in from distance after only four minutes, was as swashbuckling as Chelsea could muster. Thereafter, this became a test of resilience. Sir Alex Ferguson has often claimed London sides - apparently as showy as they are flaky - find life difficult in the wilds of the north-west. That may be an urban myth but this was Scolari's first time north of the capital and, even early in his reign, a small psychological blow has been inflicted.
Nothing, as yet, has fazed him about the English game. "I've never been 'north' but I'm at Chelsea for two seasons, so I must get used to Bolton, Manchester United, Manchester City..." said Scolari in the aftermath. "What I expected, I saw today. It was difficult. Winning 1-0 away from home in England is the same as winning 10-0 elsewhere. Wigan played better than Portsmouth and had players who are healthy, have power and pressured us. I know we didn't play as well as we did last week, but I understand the reasons why."
The visitors pointed to the lack of fitness of Michael Essien, Michael Ballack and Frank Lampard, and to the absence of the injured Mikel John Obi. He also lost Ashley Cole to a dead leg but, in truth, the visitors were winded less by their own ailments and more by Wigan's aggressive energy. Steve Bruce had seen his own fan out to various corners of the globe for midweek internationals - his Hondurans Wilson Palacios and Maynor Figueroa were in Mexico, his Egyptian Amr Zaki in Sudan - but they tore into this contest unperturbed. Zaki, outstanding throughout, twice forced Petr Cech to claw away rasping drives. The substitute Olivier Kapo did likewise in the final exchanges.
This team are far better than their current lack of a points' tally suggests. Dominant for long periods while succumbing at West Ham the previous week, they unsettled the title challengers here. They remain without reward but there will be an air of anxiety around this club, but more productive times surely lie ahead. This was actually transformed into the latest lesson on the Premier League's cruel hierarchy. Chelsea rode their luck and scored a blistering goal from an individual flash of brilliance. Wigan merited more but were sloppy from their own dead-ball delivery. "Appalling," said Steve Bruce of his side's free-kicks. "It didn't matter who took them, they kept doing the same frigging thing."
Deco had spent the week practising free-kicks into the right-hand corner only to spot Mike Pollitt - handed an opportunity after Chris Kirkland was ruled out with a back injury in the warm-up - slightly out of position after Lee Cattermole had handled. The shot curled beyond the goalkeeper's dive and Chelsea had their lead on which to cling.
"We've missed an outstanding chance to beat them," added Bruce, who hopes to sign FC Seoul's South Korea forward Park Chu-Young this week. "They've had a bad day, but the piece of brilliance in the game came from Deco. If it wasn't him it might have been from Nicolas Anelka. If not him, Joe Cole. Florent Malouda. They've got a string of talent, and how do you compete? To think that we used to mock Rangers and Celtic being so dominant [in Scotland], didn't we."
Chelsea are likely to become better in the final week of the transfer window. Their chief executive, Peter Kenyon, was present here but will expect to resume talks with Real Madrid over the potential £28m signing of the Brazilian forward Robinho as a resolution edges ever closer. Andriy Shevchenko is due in Milan this morning to undertake a medical ahead of completing a long-term loan move, with a view to a permanent transfer, while Shaun Wright-Phillips is attracting interest from Everton.
The England winger, like the Ukrainian, is surplus to requirements at Stamford Bridge and Scolari will meet Kenyon at Cobham to discuss who will be coming and going. His has been a satisfying start to his career in England. Tottenham Hotspur - pointless to date - will hardly be relishing their trip to Stamford Bridge on Sunday.
Man of the Match Amir Zaki (Wigan)The Egyptian left John Terry and Ricardo Carvalho bruised and battered, and bent Petr Cech's fingers back with two battered first-half attempts. He appears made for this leagueBest moment The slick turn away from Jose Bosingwa tight at his back, as the game lurched towards stoppage time------------------------------------------------------------
Mail:
Travel slickness - Away days prove a joy as Chelsea manager Scolari wins again
By Matt Lawton

This was Luiz Felipe Scolari's first trip to the north west of England and it proved something of an education.
Not only did he learn that his Chelsea team have retained that ability for grinding out results but he was also given an useful geography lesson.
'I now know that Bolton is here, that Manchester United is here and that Manchester City is here,' he proudly declared. Sat-nav might still be an idea but the Stamford Bridge manager can at least plan ahead in the knowledge that his players continue to travel well.
Wigan made it immensely difficult for their illustrious visitors on Sunday and still Chelsea emerged with all three points.
It was not what Scolari would call pretty. If the previous weekend's game was just like watching Brazil, so much so that Frank Lampard considered it the perfect performance, this was more akin to the Chelsea of a previous era.
Jose Mourinho might be long gone but the discipline and spirit he instilled very much remains.
They beat Wigan with their only decent effort. An absolute beauty of a fourth-minute free-kick from Deco that once again underlined his value to his new club and invited praise from both managers.
While Steve Bruce described it as 'the one moment of brilliance in the entire game', Scolari explained why it was worthy of such a compliment.
Deco is intelligent,' he said. 'He saw the goalkeeper make one mistake, in moving one metre, and changed where he was going to put the ball. That's why he is one of the best in the world.'
Scolari refused to get too excited about the result or the fact that Chelsea already have a five-point lead over United.
'We are only two games into the season and United play tomorrow night,' he said. 'But we can be pleased to have six points. Wigan played better than Portsmouth did last week. They have players with good ability and power and they put pressure on us.
'It also helped them that they are playing at home. But we overcame some problems we have had this week with injury and that will give the players confidence.'
Bruce could only complain about how difficult it has become for clubs like Wigan to beat the very best teams. This was Chelsea's 300 t h game of the Roman Abramovich era and former United man Bruce says the gap has never looked greater thanks to the investment of men like the Russian billionaire.
'When Manchester United first won the Premier League the team we had to beat was Norwich,' he said. 'Norwich.
'That will never happen again. We used to mock Rangers and Celtic but the gap is enormous here as well now. My lads delivered today and it just didn't happen for us. And Chelsea had a bad day. It just shows how difficult it is for us to win these kind of games.
'We had an outstanding chance to beat them but they've taken the points with one free-kick.'
A back injury that forced Chris Kirkland to withdraw shortly before kick-off did not exactly help Wigan. Kirkland might not have presented Deco with the opportunity he so cleverly seized after Lee Cattermole handled the ball.
But they were the better team for much of this match and probably deserved the equaliser that never quite came. Even if Bruce bemoaned the fact that he had to go to Cairo to find him, Amr Zaki nevertheless looks a most useful loan signing.
Full of running and blessed with a combination of flair and finesse, he tested a Chelsea back four that at times appeared surprisingly shaky. Zaki worked well with both Jason Koumas and Emile Heskey, who was subjected to one of the more amusing chants.
'He used to be s***e, but now he's all right,' cried Wigan's adoring fans. Had it not been for Petr Cech, who rivalled the Egyptian for man of the match, Zaki might well have scored.
As it was, he succeeded only in forcing a succession of fine saves from the Chelsea goalkeeper that in turn reminded us why he is considered alongside Gianluigi Buffon as the best in the world.
Cech also excelled in denying Olivier Kapo with only a few minutes remaining. By then, Ashley Cole had limped off with what looked like a hamstring injury that will worry England manager Fabio Capello as much as it does Scolari.
And afterwards Scolari admitted that a possible move for Shaun Wright- Phillips to Everton would be discussed along with a number of other topics - the pursuit of Robinho being another - at Stamford Bridge on Monday.
Add that to the fact that Scolari discovered that, no, the coffee in the Wigan press room is not 'Brazilian', and it amounted to a useful day's work.
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Sun:

From SHAUN CUSTIS at the JJB Stadium
IT is the small things which can make the big difference in a title race.
And they do not come much smaller than Deco.
Phil Scolari’s Chelsea escaped with three points against tigerish Wigan thanks to a brilliant fourth-minute free-kick from the 5ft 8in midfielder, who could turn out to be bargain of the season.
When Scolari invested £8million on the Portugeezer — who turns 31 on Wednesday — questions were asked about why the Blues were buying an ageing player deemed past his best by Barcelona.
How would he fit in with the likes of Michael Ballack, Frank Lampard and Michael Essien? The answer appears to be easily.
Former Portugal boss Scolari had been around Deco long enough to know exactly what he was getting.
For a club which barely blinks at bidding £30m for a player like Real Madrid’s Robinho, Deco was bought for loose change.
But he is proving invaluable. Deco complements those around him rather than gets in their way. He is always available but equally allows his team-mates to play, too.
That said, he is not about to give ground when it comes to taking the free-kicks.
Didier Drogba and Michael Ballack had a famous spat last season arguing over a set-piece.
And with Frank Lampard and now Deco also in the mix, there is plenty of competition for the job.
But Deco pulled rank and his 20-yard strike proved the difference on a day when Wigan put the wind right up Chelsea — as they do on a regular basis.
The Blues needed a late winner three years ago at the JJB and Wigan ended their title hopes last season with a late equaliser at Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea were so pleased to have got away with this there were backslaps and high fives all round at full-time — not least in keeper Petr Cech’s direction after he made three excellent saves.
Scolari’s men were acutely aware they had nicked this one. Those who predicted after the first weekend that the title returning to Stamford Bridge was a formality might have another look at it.
One week it was like watching Brazil, the next it was almost like watching England.
Chelsea played to the samba beat when they thrashed Portsmouth 4-0 at home on the opening weekend, with Deco scoring another cracker.
But here it was as if they had mislaid their drumsticks and drum.
Wigan boss Steve Bruce, who has lost his first two games, observed: “Most people who witnessed this would have said we did enough to get a point.
“Our keeper didn’t have a save to make but Cech had a few. We have missed an outstanding chance.”
Bruce’s disappointment was understandable as Wigan got in Chelsea’s faces and didn’t give them any peace — unlike Pompey, who allowed them acres last week.
Things started badly before kick- off when Wigan lost injury-prone keeper Chris Kirkland to a bad back in the warm-up.
Bruce then watched as back-up keeper Mike Pollitt picked out Deco’s effort from the net following a handball by Lee Cattermole.
That was about the only mistake by the impressive Cattermole, who more than held his own against such an illustrious midfield group.
Bruce has also discovered a diamond in Amr Zaki.
The Egyptian is rated the No 1 striker in the world according to FIFA’s rankings.
After breaking clear on eight minutes, Zaki was denied by Cech’s outstretched boot.
Strike partner Emile Heskey, watched by England boss Fabio Capello, started well by turning John Terry, who hauled him back and rightly got a yellow card.
But the Chelsea skipper recovered his poise and — apart from the occasional lost header — prevented Heskey doing too much damage.
Cech was fortunate ref Alan Wiley missed his shove on Emmerson Boyce in the penalty area, which might have earned a spot-kick.
But he was alert to push out Zaki’s shot from Boyce’s lay-off
Cech’s dreadful mistake against Turkey at Euro 2008 led to the Czech Republic’s elimination from the competition.
But he has put the disappointment behind him and will again be a key figure in Chelsea’s push for silverware. Scolari is lacking up front and he will be hoping Drogba gets fit soon and that the club can complete the Robinho deal.
Frenchman Nicolas Anelka struggles as the main focal point of attack and his dive as he cut into the box just before half-time smacked of desperation.
Scolari said: “Deco is very intelligent — he is one of the best in the world.”
Bruce agreed: “Chelsea have had a bad day and the difference was Deco. That is why he has played at the highest level.”
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Monday, August 18, 2008

morning papers portsmouth 4-0


Times August 17, 2008
Chelsea show attacking flair to thrash Portsmouth

Chelsea 4 Portsmouth 0
Martin Samuels


It was, it has to be said, just like watching Brazil. Not because Luiz Felipe Scolari already has his Chelsea team playing with the joyous expression of the Canarinho, but because he has them set up in the modern way perfected by his countrymen. Scolari’s Chelsea play fast, overlapping full backs, a high, creative midfield line, and have, in John Obi Mikel, a holding midfield player who doubles as a centre half in the style of Gilberto Silva. It puts them quickly on the offensive, but always with the padlock secure at the back and Portsmouth found them unplayable. The scoreline flattered the visiting team, who did not look like scoring, but could have let in three more with better finishing, when Chelsea forwards were left one on one with David James, the England goalkeeper.
Fabio Capello, the watching England manager, will have taken away positive thoughts about Frank Lampard, Joe Cole, John Terry and Ashley Cole, less so Jermain Defoe, the Portsmouth striker, who barely got a kick. His partner, Peter Crouch, also did little to make the Italian rethink his decision to exclude him from the squad to play the Czech Republic on Wednesday.
What Scolari has succeeded in doing very quickly is blending the English core of his team with a continental intellect, so efficiently that it is scarcely possible to tell one from the other. José Bosingwa, the right back, got forward quickly, but so did Ashley Cole on the left. Deco played sublime passes that caused Portsmouth huge problems in the heart of midfield, but so did Michael Ballack and Lampard. The role of Mikel, who drops in as a third centre half when the backs operate as wingers, is a masterstroke and brought out the best from the Nigeria player. This was his finest game in a Chelsea shirt, and Michael Essien’s return to the first team cannot be regarded as a formality.
Scolari airily dismissed the Brazilian connection, preferring to talk of the flair of his individuals, regardless of nationality. The aspect on which all agreed, though, was that this was the perfect start for Chelsea under the new manager. Asked whether it was a result that would have Manchester United, the champions, worried, Scolari did not take the bait. “No,” he said, “because we do not play them next. Wigan Athletic, maybe.” Steve Bruce’s team are up in six days’ time.
This was Chelsea’s most emphatic start to a season since victory by the same scoreline over Sunderland in 1999 and if Sir Alex Ferguson thinks that this Chelsea team are too old to win the title, then that side would have had him sending mocking deliveries of Sanatogen. It was the era when Chelsea were attracting world-class players, but not in their prime, and Marcel Desailly, Gianfranco Zola, Albert Ferrer and Didier Deschamps were in the starting lineup. By comparison, this Chelsea team are spring chickens and anyone who did not think they had the potential to be champions on the evidence of yesterday was not paying attention.
Chelsea were a goal up after 12 minutes and three clear by half-time. If the second half was quieter it was because Portsmouth were no contest and Scolari’s team sensibly conserved their energy for bigger challenges ahead. Between the 52nd and the 88th minutes, Chelsea did not have a clear-cut scoring chance, although Deco rewarded those who stayed to the end with a 25-yard shot from outside the right of the penalty area, which swerved so much in mid-air that James could only palm it into his own net. It was a fitting end to the game, though, confirmed by the admission from Harry Redknapp, the Portsmouth manager, that his team could not live with Chelsea. He did not sound angry, more resigned. His only consolation is that he will not be playing Chelsea every week. No, his next opponents are Manchester United.
Portsmouth were not helped by naive defending – at one time a headed clearance by Terry from inside the Chelsea half was allowed to loop over the heads of the opposition back line, leaving Joe Cole with only James to beat – but in the main it was Chelsea’s movement that won the game. The first goal was created by a first-time chip from Ballack, but it was the wit of Joe Cole, peeling off his marker and cutting inside, that finished it.
Chelsea’s second came from the flanks, with Bosingwa crossing deep and Deco playing the ball back into what was now a largely unguarded net, James having deserted his position, and Nicolas Anelka outjumping Glen Johnson on the line to score the first goal of his career at Stamford Bridge. It could have been more.
Joe Cole and Lampard combined to put Anelka through alone after 20 minutes, but his shot was saved, and a mistake by Sol Campbell left him in a similar position from Petr Cech’s goal kick, this time steering the ball wide.
The calamitous defending of a header by Terry that Joe Cole then missed out on was the final straw for Redknapp. “If you coach nine-year-olds the first thing you tell them is when a defender is about to head it forward, take a step back and give yourself a bit of space,” he said with a grimace. “Our lot are all standing there, thinking: ‘Are we going to win this? Oh, where’s it going now?’ ” He had a point, but the basic problem was one that could not be surmounted by any amount of coaching. There was not a player in his team who would have made the first XI at Chelsea.
The outcome moved beyond doubt in the 45th minute when Sylvain Distin handled a cross by Joe Cole, Lampard scoring from the penalty spot. James was booked for dissent, ignoring the FA’s new Respect agenda, with its instruction to get on with the game. Unfortunately, this would have been the least tempting option for Portsmouth. Nipping outside to a public telephone box and abandoning proceedings with a hoax bomb alert would have contained more appeal.
Chelsea ratings
4-1-4-1 P Cech 7 J Bosingwa 8 R Carvalho 7 J Terry 8 A Cole 7 J O Mikel 8 M Ballack 7 Deco 7 F Lampard 8 J Cole 7 N Anelka 6
Substitutes P Ferreira (for Bosingwa, 83), F Malouda (for Ballack, 37 6), S Wright-Phillips (for J Cole, 77) Not used H Hilario, F Di Santo, W Bridge, Alex. Next: Wigan (a)
Portsmouth ratings
4-4-2 D James Y 5 G Johnson 5 S Campbell 5 S Distin 5 H Hreidarsson 5 P B Diop 5 L Diarra 5 Y Kaboul 5 N Kranjcar 5 P Crouch 5 J Defoe 5
Substitutes A Mvuemba (for Diarra, 67min 5), J Thomas (for Kranjcar, 72). Not used J Ashdown, Lauren, J Utaka, M Cranie, D Traoré. Next: Manchester United (h)
Referee: M Dean. Attendance: 41,468.

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Telegraph :
Chelsea coach Luiz Felipe Scolari lays down expansive rhythm against Portsmouth

Chelsea (3) 4 Portsmouth (0) 0

By Oliver Brown


We expect flamboyance from Chelsea but not understatement. Here we were given both as Luiz Felipe Scolari instantly imposed his brand of expansive football on the Premier League to exhilarating effect, while downplaying his own cult of personality. Before his lavishly-assembled squad dismembered Portsmouth at will he announced himself to the crowd with nothing more than a polite wave and thumbs-up – a muted gesture from this Croesus of a manager, lavished with wealth, power and the acclamation of his people.
Scolari exudes charisma through his every move but needs few of the histrionics patented by predecessor Jose Mourinho when his players respond as emphatically as this. It has become axiomatic at Chelsea that they need to entertain to acquire any kind of broader affection, and to that end the width and dynamism of their play here, the licence given to full-backs Ashley Cole and Jose Bosingwa to attack at every chance, formed a compelling advertisement.
It was an afternoon when each simmering sub-plot of Chelsea's summer came to a satisfying resolution. Deco answered all doubts about his age and pace by terrorising Portsmouth's centre-halves, then providing a stunning goal. Scolari delivered on his promise to inject some flair by devising a tactical scheme full of verve and enterprise. Even Frank Lampard was in on the act, dispatching an easy penalty.
At that point, with Lampard putting Chelsea three goals to the good, Scolari claimed that his team had achieved "tranquillity". It seemed a strange choice of word for a man struggling so endearingly with his English. Perhaps it was borrowed from Sun Tzu's The Art of War, the Chinese military treatise around which the 59-year-old famously built Brazil's 2002 World Cup win. In the seventh chapter – about, appropriately enough in Chelsea's case, winning confrontations by deft manoeuvres – is the proverb: "In order await the disordered; in tranquillity await the clamorous. This is the way to control the mind."
Unscrambled for a sporting context, this suggests a team that they should only engage in battle on terms favourable to themselves. Chelsea followed this concept to the letter yesterday, controlling the game with an exhibition of creative movement that Portsmouth could never hope to emulate. A lack of width in midfield meant nothing with Bosingwa called to act less as a right-back than as a winger. Joe Cole was similarly menacing on the right flank and his fleetness of foot, seizing upon a quick exchange between Michael Ballack and Nicolas Anelka, helped propel Chelsea into a 12th-minute lead.
Anelka has so far appeared a man restored under the strict tutelage of Scolari and the Frenchman converted Deco's cross with a fine header after 26 minutes. The fluidity of this performance portended a fine season for Chelsea, who eclipsed Portsmouth in every department. This might have owed much, though, to the ineptitude of Harry Redknapp's side, defensively shambolic and badly exposed in midfield as strikers Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch failed to spearhead an ambitious 4-4-2 system.
Sylvain Distin was another culprit as his clumsy handling of a ball from Joe Cole gifted Chelsea a penalty and an unassailable advantage in the dying seconds of the first half. Lampard stepped up to score with aplomb and thereafter Chelsea could afford to be, as Scolari hinted, tranquil, if not serene. Belatedly, Portsmouth's partnership of Defoe and summer signing Crouch flickered into life, but their sense of wretchedness was complete when David James palmed in Deco's speculative drive.
The new understated Chelsea were careful not to celebrate this win too wildly. Lampard simply wheeled away after his penalty and thumped his shirt. After extending his commitment to the club for another five years because of loyalty, brotherhood, and not at all because of £33 million, he might at least have been expected to kiss the badge.
250
This was Chelsea's 250th clean sheet in the Premier League, matching Arsenal's total, set on Saturday

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Indy:
Chelsea 4 Portsmouth 0: Scolari's 'beautiful game' brings joy to Chelsea
By Sam Wallace

Monday, 18 August 2008


As a former manager of Brazil, Luiz Felipe Scolari will be used to steamrollering the occasional opponent but it would be fair to say that even a French Guyana team in the midst of an injury-crisis and struggling with self-esteem issues would have put up a better fight than Portsmouth. First day of the season and Big Phil's team filled their boots.
This is how the Chelsea hierarchy dreamed it when they signed up Scolari: Stamford Bridge bathed in sunshine, the full-backs overlapping like it was the 1970 World Cup final and Deco slamming one in the top corner from 30 yards. It will not be like this every week of course but at least the first game went to plan and, unlike Avram Grant's empty promises of a bold new attacking team, Scolari does seem to have changed some of the fundamentals that made Chelsea so unlovable in the past.
From the moment that Joe Cole buried the first goal on 12 minutes, Chelsea's full-backs were getting forward like never before – to the extent that Ashley Cole might have required directions to get back to his normal spot at left-back. When Nicolas Anelka headed the second on 26 minutes the game was over, although there was a touch more joy about the football than is usually the case when Chelsea obliterate the opposition in the first half hour.
It was, Scolari said, "a beautiful game" that Chelsea will now be expected to repeat every week. "We have to keep this going," he said. "We can. Every game, every week." His argument that his players were given the freedom to interpret their roles rang true. "We're not playing like Brazil – Lampard is not Brazilian, he's English," the Chelsea manager said. "Ballack's style is different, as is Deco's... I ask my players to hold their position but to play to their style."
They were stylish indeed, sufficiently so to warrant a dressing room visit from Roman Abramovich after the game. Frank Lampard marked his new contract with the third goal from the penalty spot and the £9m spent on Deco looked good value even before his 88th-minute goal. John Obi Mikel just edged Deco out as the game's outstanding player, the holding midfielder giving nothing away in front of the defence.
Early days yet for Portsmouth but yesterday's performance was insipid. Harry Redknapp bemoaned defending that was "like a nine-year-old's" and cited an injury crisis that forced him to play Younes Kaboul in the centre of midfield. It is safe to say that the former Tottenham central defender is no Paul Scholes but it is the lack of width that makes Portsmouth so predictable. With Papa Bouba Dioup and Nico Kranjcar anonymous on the flanks, Pompey scarcely put one decent cross in for Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch.
It was a miserable day for Portsmouth's two marquee names, who found themselves stifled at every turn by John Terry and Ricardo Carvalho. The money has dried up for Redknapp, which is perhaps why the stories that suggest he would like a move back to West Ham will not go away. Given that this is a man who went from Pompey to Southampton and then back again, nothing is impossible despite his denials yesterday that the grass may be greener elsewhere.
"Chelsea were just too bright – their movement was too much for us," Redknapp said "Last year we played 4-5-1 and were fantastic away from home. I made a rod for my own back by bringing in two strikers. I don't think you can play 4-4-2 here. You get overloaded in midfield."
It is a curious point but one that is central to Pompey's season. Redknapp said that if he had decided to play 4-5-1, "I'd have had to leave Defoe out and I've bought him here to play." What is evident is that without Sulley Muntari and, to a lesser extent Pedro Mendes, both of whom Redknapp said he did want to sell, the FA Cup winners are not quite the same force. They have two international strikers but a midfield that seems to have no way of getting the ball to them.
The only cloud over Chelsea's day was an injury to Ballack that forced him off in the first half and he may miss Germany's friendly against Belgium on Wednesday. Joe Cole opened the scoring, via a sweet Ballack through-ball, then Anelka added the second with a close-range header after David James had committed himself to an earlier cross. Syl-vain Distin's handball gave Lamp-ard the penalty before half-time.
Just before the end, James should have done better when Deco hit a shot from the kind of distance that should not beat an England goalkeeper, but he might put that down to the new Premier League balls. Four goals up, Stamford Bridge looked like it was enjoying itself and, as Scolari knows, they will want more of the same every week.
Goals: J Cole (12) 1-0; Anelka (26) 2-0; Lampard (pen, 45) 3-0, Deco (88) 4-0.
Chelsea (4-1-3-2): Cech; Bosingwa (Ferreira, 83), Carvalho, Terry, A Cole; Mikel; Ballack (Malouda, 38), Lampard, Deco; J Cole (Wright-Phillips, 78), Anelka. Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Di Santo, Bridge, Alex.
Portsmouth (4-4-2): James; Johnson, Campbell, Distin, Hreidarsson; Diop, Kaboul, Diarra (Mvuemba, 67), Kranjcar (Thomas, 73); Defoe, Crouch. Substitutes not used: Ashdown (gk), Lauren, Utaka, Cranie, Traoré.
Referee: M Dean (Wirral)
Booked: Portsmouth James
Man of the match: Mikel.
Attendance: 41,468.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Chelsea 4 Cole, J 12, Anelka 26, Lampard (pen) 45, Deco 89 Portsmouth 0


Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge

The Guardian, Monday August 18 2008


This is the sort of boredom they have been crying out for at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea were much too clever and effective for the opposition, ensuring that the uninteresting second half was just a statutory requirement. Even then there was still a twinge of pain for Portsmouth as Deco, on his competitive debut, rattled a 30-yarder that David James could only help into the net a minute from the close.
Chelsea fans were thrilled by the football laid before them prior to the interval. The movement in a layered midfield ensured elusiveness and Harry Redknapp's side must almost have felt haunted by all the ghostly presences. The style was reminiscent of Luiz Felipe Scolari's previous work with Brazil and Portugal. In this ideas were translated perfectly into the language of the Premier League.
The display had an expansiveness that was not among Jose Mourinho's aspirations. He, of course, is not to be chided for an approach that made him the most successful manager in Chelsea's history.
Nonetheless Mourinho had a penchant for controversy and conflict that was debilitating and, in the end, the club's owner, Roman Abramovich, could apparently bear no more of it.
Dispensing with Mourinho was a questionable decision and Avram Grant had little hope of distracting anyone from the feats of the Portuguese. Scolari, a World Cup winner, does not need to convince anyone of his standing but the Mourinho period is the context by which subsequent Chelsea managers will be judged.
The newcomer, with his high profile and vivid character, ought to cope. Scolari has seemingly converted the squad to his approach at high speed and there were no reservations in the mind of the Chelsea players. They opened as if they had always craved this sort of football and it must be appreciated how unusual this kind of drubbing is for Portsmouth.
Last season Redknapp's side conceded 26 goals over the course of 19 away matches in the Premier League. It was only a week ago that they forced a goalless draw against Manchester United, prior to the penalty shoot-out defeat in the Community Shield.
At Stamford Bridge, by contrast, they were immediately on the brink of capitulation. The back four was disoriented since it was so hard to identify the danger as Chelsea, with Nicolas Anelka as a lone striker, devastated with flowing midfield play that was a tidal wave to the Portsmouth defence. Michael Ballack was the best of the quintet before his ankle injury but home fans could have had a merry debate on the topic as contributions were made by many players.
Redknapp was repentant afterwards about fielding two strikers. Hard as Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch worked, they had scant bearing on the game and Portsmouth were outnumbered in midfield. There was a sureness of touch by Chelsea that left the visitors baffled in the 12th minute. Deco pitched the ball forward, Anelka chested it back and Ballack put Joe Cole through with a sweet pass. The England midfielder fired across James for the opener.
Cole, mostly keeping in close contact with Anelka here, has been viewed as potentially surplus to requirements at Chelsea. While he did scuff wide from a fine opening in the second half Cole went about as far as he could in illustrating the merit of keeping him on the payroll.
Mikel John Obi was another who pressed his claim, while the regular holding midfielder Michael Essien was missing through injury. Portsmouth, in truth, did not often harass him but there was a calm about Mikel that was unfamiliar. Chelsea, indeed, got through the afternoon without a yellow card. That saintly statistic comes more readily to a side at peace with itself. The team was encouraged, too, by the dynamism of Jose Bosingwa in his first competitive appearance for the club. The right-back raced down his flank and Ashley Cole had as much licence on the other wing.
It was the Portuguese who hit the deep cross in the 26th minute that James ought to have left to others. Instead the goalkeeper chased after it and was stranded as Deco chipped the ball into the middle for Anelka to head home.
There were twitches of pride from the visitors and Petr Cech, after 43 minutes, had to pull off a double save from Niko Kranjcar and Crouch but that was a digression from the real story of the match. Two minutes later an effort by Joe Cole hit the outstretched left arm of Sylvain Distin and Frank Lampard marked the start of his new Chelsea contract by sending James the wrong way from the penalty spot.
If need be, his side would have come up with even more goals before Deco's spectacular strike. That drive capped the contribution of a man who had already invited Anelka on to the scoresheet. However, the Portugal midfielder did waste the ball now and again. It must be pleasing to Scolari that his side was overwhelming while also showing that it can certainly improve.
The audience had no quibbles. They had witnessed svelte, imaginative football and, with Didier Drogba absent because of a knee injury, Anelka hinted that he might regain his old sharpness after that blunt spell under Grant. The line-up may not have been overhauled radically but Scolari has met his first target by showing that everything has still changed radically.
Several players made important contributions for Chelsea but the attacking right-back, on his competitive debut for the Blues, gave the team a drive on the wing that has been lacking.
Man of the match Jo Bosingwa (Chelsea)
Several players made important contributions for Chelsea but the attacking right-back, on his competitive debut for the Blues, gave the team a drive on the wing that has been lacking.
Best moment His run and deep cross to the back post that led to Anelka's goal was full-back play at its finest and explains why Chelsea agreed to pay £16.2m for him.
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Mail:
The Phil good factor - Scolari era at Chelsea starts with style, guile and goals
Chelsea 4 Portsmouth 0
By Matt Lawton


This was not exactly what you would call a seven-year hitch. It might have been that long since Luiz Felipe Scolari last took charge of a competitive club game but the break appears to have been good for the Brazilian.
Yesterday amounted to an impressive start for Scolari, his side producing the kind of football Roman Abramovich has craved from the moment he decided to invest a sizeable chunk of his fortune in Stamford Bridge. It was football with fluency and finesse. Football, believe it or not, that invites Chelsea's full-backs to venture out of their own half and join the forwards in attack.
Scolari could be forgiven for now thinking the FA Cup must be an easy competition to win. Portsmouth were that poor. But Chelsea were devastatingly impressive, performing so well in the opening 45 minutes that Frank Lampard dared suggest was the 'best football we can play'.
His manager was a fraction less enthusiastic, even if he did remark that opening the bottle of orange he was given the drink was more difficult than the match. 'If we want to be champions we will need more than this,' he said. 'But I think Chelsea's fans saw a beautiful game today.
'It was more than I expected. We put what we have been working on in training for the last 15 or 20 days on to the pitch and that was pleasing. We played as a team. Closed the midfield. Marked very well when they had the ball and passed well when we had it. I think the fans will be happy today and the owner will be happy too because he is one of the fans.'
His tactics might have been simple but they were brilliantly executed. A case of John Obi Mikel dropping into the centre of defence whenever either Jose Bosingwa or Ashley Cole were in possession and therefore enabling Chelsea to attack in the knowledge that they remained secure at the back. It meant that, on occasions, they had five players up front and it was wonderful to watch as a consequence.
Harry Redknapp could only marvel at 'their movement'. 'They were just too bright for us,' he said after insisting, in response to reports linking him with a return to West Ham, that he was 'happy' as Portsmouth manager. 'We were guilty of some basic errors but they have so many options when they have players like Deco, Joe Cole and Frank Lampard. It was really difficult for us and I'm just glad we've got an easy game next. Manchester United next Monday.'
Scolari described his first game at Stamford Bridge as a 'fantastic experience' and even if he was reluctant to soak up the applause of the fans shortly before kick-off he soon got into the spirit of the occasion.
A first goal after little more than 11 minutes prompted a trademark goal celebration, the South American punching the air in delight after seeing Joe Cole chase down a super ball from Michael Ballack - who has an ankle injury that Scolari said could take a week to heal - before guiding a shot past David James.
By now Deco was starting to excel with a demonstration of his artistry - Art Deco you might say - and when he met a fine cross from Bosingwa at the far post, Nicolas Anelka rose above the hapless Glen Johnson to score his first goal at Stamford Bridge. James, incidentally, was nowhere, having committed himself to the cross and failed to make contact.
Goal three then arrived moments before the interval, Sylvain Distin blocking a cross from Joe Cole with his left hand and inviting Mike Dean to point to the penalty spot. The referee did exactly that and Lampard then followed with a perfectly executed finish.
The second half was something of a stroll for Chelsea. Time, by then, to save themselves for international duty and the next Premier League encounter.
A fourth goal nevertheless arrived in the 89th minute, Deco crowning a super debut with a 25-yard strike James could only guide into his own net.
Already favourites to win the title? Having met United in the Community Shield a week earlier, Redknapp was not so sure. 'They are both fantastic teams,' he said. 'And they play a very similar way.'
And Scolari was not about to reflect on his first taste of Premier League football by taunting the defending English and European Champions. Asked if the performance would now be worried about playing them, he said: 'I wouldn't have thought so because we are not meeting them next. But maybe Wigan will.' No doubt.
Chelsea (4-3-2-1): Cech 7; Bosingwa 7 (Ferreira 84min, 6), Carvalho 7, Terry 7, A Cole 7; Ballack 7 (Malouda 38, 6), Mikel 8, Lampard 7; J Cole 8 (Wright-Phillips 78, 6), Deco 7; Anelka 6. Portsmouth (4-4-2): James 6; Johnson 4, Campbell 6, Distin 5, Hreidarsson 5; Diop 5, Kaboul 4, Diarra 5 (Mvuemba 68, 5), Kranjcar 5 (Thomas 73, 5); Defoe 4, Crouch 4.Booking: James. Referee: M Dean.Man of the match: J Cole. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Express:
SCOLARI’S CHELSEA GET OFF TO PERFECT START
Sunday August 17,2008 By Mauro Galluzzo Chelsea 4 Portsmouth 0


LUIZ Felipe Scolari got his Chelsea reign up and running with victory over Portsmouth at Stamford Bridge and a message of attacking intent to the rest of the Barclays Premier League.
Chelsea were criticised for being cautious under Jose Mourinho but Scolari’s first match in charge suggested he wants style as well as substance, and they continued to push forward once Joe Cole opened the scoring in the 12th minute.
Nicolas Anelka, Scolari’s only senior forward available, headed in his first goal at home for Chelsea before Frank Lampard put the result beyond doubt just before the break, scoring a penalty just five days after sealing his new five-year contract at the club.
Deco, on his debut, added a fourth from long range just before the end.
While Lampard may have been in the headlines this week it was Scolari - wearing a blue club tracksuit - who took centre stage on the opening weekend of the new season.
The Brazilian had promised a samba style to his time in west London, and he did not disappoint after being introduced to the crowd and giving them a thumbs-up.
Like his Brazil team that won the 2002 World Cup, he relied on his full-backs to create width - instead of Cafu and Roberto Carlos he has Jose Bosingwa and Ashley Cole marauding forward.
It allowed his five-man midfield to dominate through the middle, which is where the opener was created from less than a quarter of an hour into Scolari’s career in England.
Anelka cushioned a header back to Michael Ballack, who lifted the ball over Pompey’s defence with the outside of his boot for midfielder Cole to steer his finish around David James.
It could have got worse for the visitors as Lampard split their defence again, only this time James saved with his feet when Anelka ran through.
The France striker was not made to wait long for his goal. Bosingwa helped set it up by getting to the byline and standing up a cross to the far post.
Ballack almost got in the way as Deco met the ball but the Portugal midfielder managed to clip over James and Anelka beat Sylvain Distin on the line to head into the empty net.
Anelka should have added a third on the half-hour mark when he raced through again, but his effort went just wide of the post after he tapped the ball around James.
It did not run entirely smoothly for Scolari as he was forced into a change when Ballack picked up a knock, with Florent Malouda coming on.
Pompey also suggested they were willing to fight back when Petr Cech was forced into a double save before the break, first from Niko Kranjcar’s powerful drive, then bravely with his body when Peter Crouch latched onto the rebound.
However, their hopes ended when Chelsea were awarded a penalty in first-half stoppage-time after Distin handled a cross by midfielder Cole.
James was booked for kicking the ball away before Lampard tucked away the spot-kick and tapped his badge in celebration as he ran to the crowd.
Pompey boss Harry Redknapp, Lampard’s uncle, had offered his advice before Lampard committed his future to Chelsea - and there was an inevitability that the midfielder would find the net against his relative.
The attacking continued after the break, with Anelka twice firing over the crossbar after the restart.
Midfielder Cole went sent through over the top again but fired wide of the post after outpacing the Pompey defence.
Pompey, in contrast, looked short on belief and were contributing to their own downfall, one free-kick in their own territory resulting in possession lost and a chance being presented to Anelka.
Younes Kaboul thought he had sight of goal from a corner but his effort came off his knee, and Crouch could not tame the ball when it fell to him.
Pompey also had a penalty appeal when Niko Kranjcar’s drive was blocked by Ricardo Carvalho.
Crouch’s partnership with Jermain Defoe clearly needs time to gel. It took them 78 minutes to combine, and Defoe could not get direction on his finish when he met a flick-on.
Deco’s goal came in the 89th minute, a powerful and swerving effort from 30 yards that James could only parry into the top corner.-------------------------


Sun:
Chelsea 4 Pompey 0
By SHAUN CUSTIS at Stamford Bridge


BLIMEY, it really was almost like watching Brazil.
New Chelsea boss Phil Scolari had promised to turn the Blues into entertainers like the side he guided to World Cup glory six years ago.
He warned it would take time but it will not be long judging by this.

In fact, whisper it quietly, Chelsea might even become popular — a team you would happily sit in your armchair and watch for 90 minutes instead of sending you to sleep before half-time.
Despite all the success the Blues enjoyed under Jose Mourinho, Chelsea could never be described as easy on the eye — more like a smack in the chops. They bludgeoned rather than dazzled the opposition.
But the standing ovation from the excited supporters at the final whistle and the sight of Roman Abramovich applauding like a demented seal suggests this will be the start of something very good.
The Chelsea owner craves world-wide respect for his club but, to earn it, you have to achieve with style. Winning is not enough.
In Big Phil he has the man to give him all he desires.
Even before the game the manager had made an impact, forging a renewed spirit within a group which was threatening to implode.
But all that good work could have gone up in smoke if Chelsea had lost at home in the league for the first time since February 2004 — a record stretching back 82 games.
Instead the Blues enjoyed their biggest win on the opening day of the season for nine years.
They were aided by a desperately poor Portsmouth side which performed badly enough to make Harry Redknapp think seriously about a mooted return to West Ham.
Their defence was a shambles and ex-Chelsea star Glen Johnson suffered another nightmare afternoon to go with his display in the Community Shield.
Sol Campbell struggled too and Hermann Hreidarsson looked every bit like an ex-Charlton player.
Redknapp also discovered Younes Kaboul is no central midfielder although Spurs fans would probably argue he was no centre-half either.
And up front Peter Crouch and Jermain Defoe did not get a look in. Crouch was surprisingly axed from Fabio Capello’s England squad to face the Czech Republic on Wednesday but he did nothing to persuade the Italian the decision was incorrect.
It seems so long ago the Pompey Chimes were ringing proudly as Portsmouth paraded the FA Cup.
Chelsea were purring from the off and some quality link play produced the opener on 12 minutes.
Nicolas Anelka chested down and Michael Ballack flicked a gorgeous ball into the path of Joe Cole who tucked it in the corner.
Questions are being asked about whether Cole will fit in Scolari’s system once everyone is fit.
He has been linked with a move to Aston Villa and there has been a hint Liverpool will show interest. But Cole would far rather stay at the Bridge and he made his case yesterday.
Deco also showed why Scolari has such faith in the little Portugeezer who was his first official signing.
There were a few raised eyebrows about Chelsea going for a 30-year-old midfielder who did not figure in Barcelona’s plans.
But Deco, an £8.3million buy, showed his class against Pompey as he gently caressed the ball to all points of the park.
He played a part in Chelsea’s second after 26 minutes when he rather fortuitously scooped Jose Bosingwa’s cross back into the area and Anelka climbed above Johnson to head in.
It was Anelka’s first ever goal at Stamford Bridge and shook a huge monkey off his back.
But he should have had a hat-trick and his lack of clinical finishing which has dogged him since his £15m arrival from Bolton came back to haunt him.
The Frenchman was unlucky when he flicked the ball past David James and it ran inches wide.
But he wasted at least three other clear-cut openings.
By half-time though, Chelsea were home ’n dry as Frank Lampard converted a penalty awarded when Sylvain Distin managed to pat the ball from his left hand on to his right hand.
Lampard, celebrating his new five-year deal, never looked like missing and said: “The first half was as good as we can play.” Admittedly, it would be difficult to better it.
"They understandably eased off the gas after the break but Deco put the seal on victory with a 25-yard shot with a minute to go.
It was a sweet strike, with a touch of swerve, which James could only help into the top corner.
But the England keeper will probably feel he should have turned it over the bar.
So ended what Scolari called “a perfect day” although he did fail to get the top off a juice bottle as he wound up his Press conference. “The match was easier,” he laughed.
Not just a winner, a comedian too.