Sunday, February 08, 2009

sunday papers hull home 0-0


Sunday Times
Phil Scolari booed as Blues flop
Chelsea 0 Hull City 0
Joe Lovejoy at Stamford Bridge
THEY were not about to admit it, but Chelsea tumbled out of the title race with this bankrupt performance against a team without a win in nine Premier League matches. Hull had some outstanding chances, especially in the second half, and with decent finishing would have won against more celebrated opponents, whose increasingly disillusioned supporters chorused “You don’t know what you’re doing” at Luiz Felipe Scolari as their team stumbled from bad to worse.
Ominously for the Chelsea manager, there was a banner unfurled bearing the legend “Scolari out, Zola/Di Matteo Chelsea Legends.” Against this background, Chelsea dropped to fourth in the table, behind Aston Villa, who are their next opponents in the Premier League.
Before that they travel to play Watford in the FA Cup on Saturday and on this evidence the Championship side cannot be written off.
Hull, without a win since December 6, travelled as no-hopers after sliding into free-fall, but defended assiduously when required to do so, then hit back hard and fully deserved their point.
Chelsea fans were left shaking their heads, unable to come to terms with their team’s decline since coming so close to a clean sweep of honours last season. Scolari swerved to avoid the customary postmatch press conference, leaving it to assistant Ray Wilkins to admit that paying spectators were entitled to express their disapproval.
“Second best is never good enough for Chelsea”, he said. “Whenever someone manages a side like ours, there will always be pressure on them, but it wasn’t very pleasant to hear the booing. It came from a minority. Phil clearly does know what he’s doing, having won a lot of trophies, and it was a tad out of order. I don’t think he understood what was being said, and I won’t be telling him.”
Chelsea gave a debut to Ricardo Quaresma, signed on loan from Jose Mourinho’s Interna-zionale, but played him on the left where, as a right-footer, he was never likely to be at his best. He was more effective than Salomon Kalou, on the opposite flank, but most are.
Kalou had two decent opportunities in the first half, but made a hash of both. Frank Lampard, Quaresma and Michael Ballack also threatened, but Michael Turner and Kamil Zayatte were rock-solid in central defence for Hull, who had the best chance before the interval, when Kevin Kilbane’s header shaved Henrique Hilario’s left-hand upright. In the second half Hull’s artisans were the better team.
They might have scored when Geovanni’s header was blocked and should have done so when the Brazilian broke away and exchanged passes with Craig Fagan, who chose to chip and lofted the ball straight at Hilario when Geovanni was free, in a much better position. Scolari ran through the gamut of substitutions – Belletti, Drogba and Deco – to no avail, and midway through the second half Dean Marney, set up by Geovanni, was tantalisingly close with a shot from left to right.
Kalou tested Matt Duke in the closing stages, but in the 90th minute Ian Ashbee might have won it with a volley after Marney’s corner.
After six successive defeats and a draw with West Brom last week, Phil Brown was “ecstatic”, and praised his players for their “outstanding” work rate. He said: “We could have won it after turning the tide with sheer hard work in the second half. On a good day, Craig Fagan might have had a hat-trick. I thought Geovanni was excellent. I don’t worry about his football, it’s his all-round effort that impressed me today.”
Wilkins tried to sound defiant but was unconvincing when he said: “Every game now is going to be a challenge. We won’t give up the fight for the title until it’s mathematically impossible.”
Booed Phil was conspicuous by his absence. Yesterday, it was Hull’s Brown who was the “Big Phil” at Stamford Bridge.
CHELSEA:Hilario 6, Bosingwa 6, Alex 6, Terry 6,A Cole 6, Mikel 5 (Belletti 57min, 5), Ballack 5 (Deco 73min), Lampard 7, Kalou 5, Anelka 5, Quaresma 6 (Drogba 63min)
HULL:Duke 6, Ricketts 6, Turner 8, Zayatte 8, Daw-son 7, Garcia 6, Ashbee 6, Marney 6, Kilbane 6, Geovanni 7 (France 81min), Fagan 5
MOURINHO TEAM SCORED MORE
If ever there was a game that guaranteed goals then it was this one between the Premier League’s top scorers, Chelsea, and its worst defence, Hull City. Ooops! Despite their so-called more expansive football, Chelsea twice under Jose Mourinho had more goals at this stage of the season than they have at the moment. In his first campaign, 2004-05, they had 49 goals, while in 2005-06 they had scored 52 goals after 25 matches. In 2006-07, his only other full season, they had hit 44 goals, the same as now

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Telegraph:
Chelsea's title hopes left in tatters as fans taunt Luiz Felipe ScolariChelsea (0) 0 Hull City (0) 0 By Jonathan Wilson at Stamford Bridge
Their title hopes are surely gone, and the challenge for Chelsea now is to finish in the top four this season and secure Champions League qualification. There may not have been a fire, but as a rogue alarm drowned out the majority of Ray Wilkins’s post-match press conference, the sense of emergency at Stamford Bridge was real enough. Arsenal will be just three points behind if they win at Tottenham, and with Aston Villa two clear in third, Chelsea’s match at Villa Park in a fortnight is looking increasingly vital.
"You’ll see second, third and fourth change a lot,” said Wilkins - a tacit admission, perhaps, that the title has gone, although he did his best to cover for the slip. “Second is not at any time good enough for Chelsea, and you can’t give up on the title when you look at the quality we have.”
Chants of “You don’t know what you’re doing” rang around Stamford Bridge for much of the second half and if, as Wilkins said, such claims are “a tad out of order” when Luiz Felipe Scolari has a record of success, a certain frustration is readily understandable. Chelsea have dropped 16 points at home this season, and even the usual excuse about opponents who park the bus — as though good defending were somehow a faux pas — didn’t wash.
"When the fans are chanting things like that, I’m not sure managers from foreign countries understand,” Wilkins said. “I won’t tell him.
It’s unnecessary and I don’t think it should be heard round our stands. It’s a minority who start it and others join in. People pay a lot of money and they want to boo that’s up to them.” Dissent may be limited, but it is growing. “Scolari out,” shrieked one banner. “Zola - Di Matteo Chelsea legends.”
Hull have gone nine league games without a victory, and yet by the end they looked the likelier to score. Perhaps they would have folded had John Terry stabbed in from three yards after the Hull goalkeeper Matt Duke had fumbled a Frank Lampard free-kick in the second minute, but he didn’t and they didn’t, instead looking increasingly like the vibrant Hull of the early part of the season. Phil Brown, their manager, even felt confident enough to exchange a joke with Didier Drogba before he went on for his customary ineffectual cameo midway through the second half. “I asked him to take it easy,” Brown said.
These days, you probably don’t have to ask.
Ricardo Quaresma, brought in on loan from Internazionale to add width and creative flair, was fleetingly impressive, although his obvious preference for his right foot — even to the extent of awkwardly scooping in crosses with the outside of his boot — was baffling for a player deployed on the left.
Still, it took a stretching, fingertip save from Matt Duke to deny him a debut goal as he capitalised on Salomon Kalou’s rapid break. It was Quaresma, though, who was withdrawn after 64 minutes for Drogba, in the familiar switch to 4-4-2 that only seems to make Chelsea ;look more disjointed. It’s not just that he and Anelka show little sign of striking up an understanding; they barely seem to acknowledge they’re wearing the same colour shirt.
Wilkins insisted that Chelsea’s problems are to do with anxiety in front of goal, but other flaws are all too obvious. The crossed ball causes Chelsea palpitations, and Kevin Kilbane was unfortunate, having met a Sam Ricketts cross five minutes before half-time, to see his header clip the outside of the post. And then there were the unforced errors — passes carelessly misplaced and possession cheaply squandered.
Individual errors, perhaps, can be attributed to a dearth of confidence, but there systemic failings in Chelsea’s back four as well. The onus Scolari places on his full-backs to provide attacking width is clearly a contributory factor, but with passing game credence is added to the theory that the departure of Steve Clarke, the assistant coach, for West Ham has had a deleterious effect. Chelsea may talk about missed chances, but the truth is that Craig Fagan, Dean Marney and Ian Ashbee all went home last night thinking they had wasted chances to win it.
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Mirror:
Chelsea fans boo off the Blues as title hopes suffer blow from Hull
Chelsea 0 - 0 Hull
Chelsea's fading title aspirations sustained another massive blow as they failed to overcome hard-working Hull and were booed off by their own fans at Stamford Bridge.
Luiz Felipe Scolari's side have now dropped 16 points at home this season and after Aston Villa's win at Blackburn, they slipped into fourth place in the Barclays Premier League.
Hull, without a win in nine league games, became the latest side to frustrate Chelsea on their home turf and with some more composed finishing in front of goal, City may well have taken all three points.
Perhaps the omens were there for Chelsea as early as the second minute when a free-kick from Frank Lampard found John Terry inside the six-yard box.
The Chelsea captain's first instinctive effort was saved by Matt Duke but when the ball rebounded back to him just two yards out, he somehow contrived to send his second shot over the bar.
New boy Ricardo Quaresma, on loan from Inter Milan for the remainder of the season, showed some nice early touches.
Hull were kept relatively quiet in the opening moments but Geovanni was just off target with an angled volley from 20 yards in the 10th minute.
Eight minutes later another quick Hull break allowed Geovanni to try his luck again from 20 yards but his shot was deflected off Terry for a corner.
But the resultant free-kick was cleared and Quaresma almost opened the scoring when Chelsea broke on the counter.
The home side's quick attack had been led by the galloping Salomon Kalou and his pass allowed Quaresma to try and curl the ball around Duke, but the winger's shot was tipped round the post by the Hull goalkeeper.
It was all Chelsea and Michael Ballack was narrowly wide with an angled drive as the Blues stepped up the pace.
Hull were defending valiantly as another Chelsea attack saw a shot from Kalou cleared superbly by Kevin Kilbane.
But Hull responded bravely and John Obi Mikel was booked for a bringing down Geovanni after the City striker had made him look quite pedestrian.
Geovanni could not punish Chelsea from the free-kick which he sent over Hilario's crossbar from 20 yards.
On the half-hour mark, Ballack was sent sprawling by Kamil Zayatte 20 yards from the Hull goal but referee Lee Mason did not produced a card to the fury of the home fans.
Ballack almost made the visitors pay with his free-kick which he curled around the City wall only for it to hit the side netting.
It was the spark for another sustained spell of Chelsea pressure. First Kalou caused panic in the Hull defence when he danced into the area only to see his pass to Anelka intercepted by Michael Turner.
Then a corner from Lampard found the head of Terry but his effort was well saved by Duke.
Another free-kick from Lampard in the 34th minute smashed straight into the groin of the unfortunate Zayatte, who was unsurprisingly left pole axed on the ground.
The Hull player returned to the fray after a spell of treatment and the visitors almost stunned the home side in the 40th minute when Kilbane headed a cross from Samuel Ricketts just inches wide of an upright.
Hull captain Ian Ashbee was booked in the 47th minute for his latest niggling foul on Ballack.
A free-kick by Hull's Dean Marney four minutes later had Chelsea's defence in trouble until Alex managed to clear the danger.
Moments later Craig Fagan beat Mikel to the ball and sped clear of the Chelsea defence but the City midfielder's attempted chip was caught easily by Hilario.
There was little to indicate that Chelsea had the guile to break the deadlock and the home fans were beginning to vent their frustration.
Scolari replaced the ineffective Mikel with Juliano Belletti in the 56th minute, but the initial change did nothing to spark Chelsea and so Scolari opted to replace Quaresma with Didier Drogba in the 63rd minute.
In the 67th minute Hull wasted a gilt-edged chance to open the scoring when Geovanni carved open the Chelsea defence with a perfect through ball for Marney.
The Hull player probably did not realise how much time he had as he screwed his shot just beyond the far post.
Referee Mason waved away penalty appeals from Chelsea when Andy Dawson appeared to handle the ball inside the penalty area.
Chelsea's last change of the afternoon was to replace Ballack with Deco in the 72nd minute.
In the 78th minute, Duke dived low to his left to keep out a shot from Kalou.
Four minutes from time Drogba sent a free-kick wide of the target to complete a miserable afternoon for the Blues.
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Mail:
Chelsea 0 Hull City 0: Scolari in the firing line as Chelsea flop again
By IAN RIDLEY
The mood is turning at Stamford Bridge. For most of the season so far, Luiz Felipe Scolari has received the backing of the home support through some transitional times, but on Saturday he was forced to endure a chorus from a corner of the ground that insisted he did not know what he was doing and, at the final whistle, the jeers of more.The Brazilian could hardly be blamed, though, for the wayward finishing of his labouring side, nor the liveliness of a Hull City side beginning to recapture their inspiring form of early season. Still, Chelsea's title challenge is fading, a debut for the Portuguese loan signing Ricardo Quaresma from Inter Milan failing to add the immediate width and cutting edge they were seeking.Hull will care little. With Geovanni showing neat touches ahead of a resolute defence, they prised a precious point and might even have taken all three had they hit the target, with Hilario looking unsure in the home goal in the absence of the injured Petr Cech.
Who would have thought it - the team with the best goals-for record against the one with the worst goals-against record before kickoff producing a goalless draw!Certainly it looked a foregone conclusion on paper. Prior to last Sunday's defeat at Liverpool, Chelsea had won four in a row while Hull's point against West Bromwich last weekend was their first in seven games, a run that saw them bottom of the form table and in the bottom half of the real table for the first time this season. That win at Arsenal in early season was beginning to look a long time ago.It looked as if it would be even more remote as Chelsea tore at them in seeking to restore quickly any confidence that had drained after Anfield. They should have had a lead inside 90 seconds, indeed, when Frank Lampard swung in a corner from the left which eluded all and forced Hull goalkeeper Matt Duke into a hasty save. From the rebound, John Terry fired the ball over the bar from no more than three yards.
For a while it looked as if it would not matter, that it was only a matter of time before Chelsea took the lead. Quaresma was showing some neat touches, notably in crossing from the left with the outside of his right boot, and saw a curling shot tipped just wide by Duke.Gradually, having survived an early onslaught, Hull became emboldened. In the absence of the injured Daniel Cousin, Craig Fagan was holding the ball well up front and supplying Geovanni, who was replacing the suspended Bernard Mendy, with some decent opportunities. On one occasion the Brazilian flashed a cross-shot just wide before seeing another deflected.Hull also looked dangerous in the air and from set-pieces, with Chelsea still uncertain about their marking system at the back.
Michael Turner got in a header from Dean Marney's corner that was scrambled away before Kevin Kilbane went even closer, his downward header from Sam Ricketts' cross finishing narrowly wide. Chelsea were close when Michael Ballack curled a free-kick into the side-netting but they grew edgier, less composed in front of goal as the half progressed. They needed a goal to quell an anxiety going around Stamford Bridge.It was Hull, though, who went the closer early in the second half.Breaking from a Chelsea corner, Geovanni sent Fagan racing clear but, instead of playing in Marney at the far post, he tried a chip that merely sailed into Hilario's hands.
Marney did get the ball at his feet soon after with just Hilario to beat, from a piercing through-ball by Geovanni. He dragged it across goal, however, with the goalkeeper stranded.Scolari's response to the growing tension had been to send on Didier Drogba for Quaresma to prompt the home support's discontent and then he introduced Deco for Ballack. Nothing was doing, though. Scolari was left shaking his head, the home support shouting the odds.CHELSEA (4-3-3): Hilario; Bosingwa, Alex, Terry, A Cole; Ballack (Deco 73min), Mikel (Belletti 57), Lampard; Quaresma (Drogba 63), Anelka, Kalou. Subs (not used): Taylor, Ivanovic, Di Santo, Stoch. Booked: Ashbee, Garcia.HULL (4-4-1-1): Duke; Ricketts, Turner, Zayatte, Dawson; Garcia, Ashbee, Marney, Kilbane; Geovanni (France 81); Fagan. Subs (not used): Myhill, Doyle, Barmby, Hughes, Halmosi, Manucho. Booked: Ashbee, Garcia. Referee: L Mason (Lancashire).
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Indy:
Fans turn on Scolari as Chelsea settle for less
Chelsea 0 Hull City 0
By Glenn Moore at Stamford Bridge
An hour into this match, with Chelsea labouring against the team with the worst defensive record in the Premier League, a team who had won one point in 21, Luiz Felipe Scolari made a substitution. When it became clear that Ricardo Quaresma was going to have his debut curtailed, the mutiny began.
"You don't know what you're doing," came the accusation from the Matthew Harding Stand, where Chelsea's most dedicated fans sit.
Whether he saw the match on television, or simply reads the result in Pravda, the again-absent Roman Abramovich may himself ask the same question. Unless West Ham do them a rare favour at Upton Park today Chelsea's title challenge must be regarded as all but over. Their failure to beat a Hull team who arrived on an apparently unstoppable downward spiral leaves them four points adrift of Manchester United, who have two games in hand. The issue now is ensuring that they qualify for one of the three automatic Champions' League places, for Chelsea now trail third-placed Aston Villa.
Does Scolari know what he is doing? As it happens, he did in the case in point. Quaresma has hardly played in recent months, having been estranged at Internazionale, from whom he is loaned, and after a bright start had faded. It was risking injury to keep him on.
However, the continued omission of Didier Drogba, and the refusal to adapt his system, invites the question. Scolari refused to answer himself but Ray Wilkins, his assistant, mounted a vigorous defence.
"He does know what he is doing," said Wilkins. "He has been in the game a long time and when you look at what he has won [World Cup, World Club Championship, etc] it is a tad out of order. It is unnecessary and not very pleasant to hear. I don't think it should be heard in our stadium."
All through Wilkins' press conference the fire alarm was ringing. "Is it an emergency, Ray?" he was asked. Acknowledging the question referred to the prospect of Chelsea's season going up in flames rather than the ground, he insisted it was not.
But then he added, in reference to Chelsea dropping to fourth: "You will see a lot of changes between positions two, three and four between now and the end of the season."
What about first? "It will be tough to catch [Manchester United] – but we will give it a go. Second is never good enough for a club of Chelsea's standing. There is no way we will give up with the talent we have in the club."
That talent, however, is not performing. Chelsea have taken 17 points from 12 matches. Mid-table form, at best. Inevitably confidence is fragile, Wilkins admitted the team looked "anxious". They needed a good start, and should have had one.
In the first minute Frank Lampard curled in a free-kick, Michael Ballack flicked on, and Matt Duke parried. The ball fell to John Terry, unchallenged, three yards from goal. Somehow he scooped it over.
"Had that gone in I'm sure we would have gone on and won comfortably," said Wilkins. "We would have come back and won 2-1," said Phil Brown, tongue rather more in cheek.
Hull could have easily won their first match here in more than a century of trying – they were Chelsea's first visitors in 1905 – having made and missed the best chances. Five minutes before the break Kevin Kilbane rose to head a Sam Ricketts cross against the outside of the post. Five minutes after the interval Alex cleared a goalbound header from Geovanni after a Dean Marney free-kick.
Next, from a breakaway, the busy Craig Fagan beat John Obi Mikel to the ball, but, withonly Hilario to beat, chipped weakly into the keeper's arms. Then Marney, after a flowing move between himself and Geovanni, shot just wide.
And what of Chelsea? Quaresma, having unveiled his trademark outside-of-the-foot cross early on, drew a fine save from Duke after 19 minutes following a counterattack.
Ballack hit the side-netting with a free-kick then JohnTerry had a dangerous headerblocked. There was also a penalty appeal after Salomon Kalou's thumping shot had struck Andy Dawson's arm. Finally, with fans making an early exit, Chelsea won a well-placed free-kick.
Drogba and Lampard stood over it, then Drogba thumped well wide. Lampard looked pensive. So too, when the final whistle went soon after to a crescendo of boos and he headed sharpish for the tunnel, did Scolari.
Attendance: 41,802
Referee: Lee Mason
Man of the match: Zayatte
Match rating: 5/10
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NOTW:
CHELSEA 0, HULL CITY 0 BRIDGE TOO FAR - Phil Scolari is under increasing pressure at Chelsea From ROB SHEPHERD
WHEN supporters start taunting the manager with chants of “You don’t know what you are doing”, then he is on a slippery slope.
Luis Felipe Scolari most certainly is — even if the snow has cleared from West London. Chelsea’s title hopes have now disappeared from the landscape, too.
This dire display has surely all but ended their championship challenge. And, once again this season, Big Phil looked on from the sidelines seemingly unable to influence the game in the way Stamford Bridge had become accustomed to under Jose Mourinho.
When Scolari decided in the 63rd minute it should have been Ricardo Quaresma rather than Salomon Kalou, Michael Ballack or even Nicolas Anelka to make way for Didier Drogba, a hard core cluster of fans in the Matthew Harding Stand let rip.
Someone had obviously anticipated another afternoon of angst for Chelsea and had even brought along a “Scolari Out . . . Zola/ Di Matteo Chelsea legends” banner.
It may all seem a bit previous and another sign of the almost impossible impatience of fans who have gorged on success in recent years.
Do real fans turn on a manager quite so soon in his first season?
Or do the taunts — there was also a brief round of boos all around the stadium at the final whistle — come from those supporters who glaze over when you talk about the pre- Abramovich cash-rich era and are totally ignorant of the days when old Second Division leaders Chelsea’s home meeting with Hull in 1989 attracted just 11,289.
Maybe but it will not be long before the protests really start to snowball if there is more of this — especially over the next three games which really will define Chelsea’s season.
The FA Cup trip to Watford, a Premier League journey to Aston Villa then Juventus here in the Champions League. If any of those results go badly wrong then the pressure from the stands on Scolari will be just like it was on predecessor Avram Grant.
Too much for the board to withstand, especially as the owner no longer seems that keen to pump in any more money.
The clamour will grow for Gianfranco Zola and Roberto di Matteo to take over, even if the more experienced Roberto Mancini is a more likely appointment. That is if Chelsea could still afford a manager of his stature . . .
Scolari ducked the post-match Press conference so it was left for assistant Ray Wilkins to face the music.
He said: “Fans pay their money so they have a right to boo but to say ‘You don’t know what you are doing’ given all what he has achieved as a manager is a tad out of order.”
Given Wilkins’ genial demeanour, “a tad out of order” amounts to him blasting the crowd. But this goalless draw means Chelsea have now dropped 16 points.
Big Phil still has not come up with a plan when things don’t go right. The time has come to change the system and go with 4-4-2 but Scolari will not make the switch. Yes, he won the World Cup with Brazil but he has never managed a club side in Europe — and it is starting to show.
His vendetta against Drogba, starting on the bench again, is self-defeating. When you are up against it, Anelka cannot operate as a lone striker and the team cannot afford for Ballack to keep prancing around.
If Frank Lampard is not pulling out all the stops — he was nowhere near his best yesterday — then Chelsea become pretty ordinary as an attacking force and are increasingly suspect at the back.
Even if Hull were on the back foot for a lot of the game, their striker Craig Fagan had two decent chances to have picked the home side’s pockets.
Blues had plenty of possession in the first half and created a string of chances but a lack of conviction around the box and some stoic defending kept them at bay.
After just two minutes, John Terry posted a miss of the season contender when he scooped over after Hull keeper Matt Duke had beaten down a deflected Lampard free-kick.
Soon after, Quaresma cut in stylishly enough from the left but his curled shot to the far post was tame and predictable and Duke pushed the ball around the far post. After that Quaresma, who flitted from flank to flank, showed a few decent touches and a poor final ball but had sufficient charisma to warm the Blues fans.
Hull, who ended a run of six straight defeats with a point against West Brom last week, were understandably in cautious mode.
But it was not merely a case of parking a bus in front of their 18-yard box. With Geovanni tucked in behind lively lone striker Fagan, they offered a threat on the break. Just before the interval, Hull’s Kevin Kilbane went close with a header that shaved a post.
As the game wore on, the Tigers looked the likelier to score but Fagan pulled a shot wide then chipped weakly at Henrique Hilario.
Chelsea made a desperate shout for a penalty late on when a Kalou shot hit Andy Dawson’s arm. But it would have been harsh.
Three weeks ago, Chelsea came from behind to beat Stoke 2-1 in the final few minutes in a spirited fightback. But the towel was thrown in far too early yesterday.
The Blues have dropped to fourth and now face a battle to secure Champions League qualification. Such failure really will be a sacking offence for Scolari.
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Observer:
Chelsea held at home by resistant HullChelsea 0 Hull City 0
Jamie Jackson at Stamford Bridge
Chelsea's debutant Ricardo Quaresma battles with Hull City's Dean Marney during the scrappy goalless draw at Stamford Bridge. Photograph: Rebecca Naden/PA
In the end, Chelsea were a touch fortunate not to lose. Their problem is the one which has arrived this season of finding themselves incapable of alchemising dominance into the scintillating stuff which leads to swaggering or indeed regulation victory.
They went into the break having had nearly all the half their way. And they came off at the end having again enjoyed the better 45 minutes, yet with only a point added to their title challenge.
In fact, to listen to Ray Wilkins in the ensuing press conference it was easy to gain an impression that the league might have already, privately at least, been ­conceded. "I think you'll find 4th, 3rd and 2nd will change places a lot," he said, when asked about the fact that Chelsea now occupy only the final Champions League spot.
The assistant coach went into a swift about-turn when asked if this was an acknowledgement that they cannot be champions come May. "It's difficult to catch Manchester United, but we'll be trying – though they do have a game in hand and points in hand. But we'll give it a damn good go," he insisted.
Until 4pm this afternoon, when they visit West Ham, United actually have two matches in hand. These could yield six points to place sweetly on top of the four they are already ahead of Chelsea. "We have been a power in the Premier League and so we strive to be number one," Wilkins said.
Publicly, of course, that is always a given. But Luiz Felipe Scolari's decision to allow his assistant to do the explaining placed an extra layer on the perception that Chelsea are in serious ­disarray. Again, Wilkins denied there was anything conclusive in a no-show. But whether it showed strong leadership is one for a bar-room argument.
Clearer was a moment that arrived after 63 minutes. "You don't know what you're doing," came the sing-song abuse thrown at the manager when Scolari swapped debutant Ricardo Quaresma – there were flashes of promise, nothing else – for the one-time ultimate golden boy, Didier Drogba.
What did Wilkins think of that? "It's never very pleasant. It was a minority. They pay their money and if they want to boo they can, but given the manager's record, it was a tad out of order."
Also in disorder are the on-field issues facing Scolari. These would include an increasingly hesitant John Terry, who let Kevin Kilbane in after 18 minutes when the winger might have scored; a midfield in which only Frank ­Lampard is ­producing and which had Scolari yanking a half-hearted John Obi Mikel off after the break; and that most troubling of all maladies, an ever-decreasing return of goals.
The head coach, it seems, can no longer rely on his men consistently to play Nicolas Anelka into the areas where before the year's turn he was enjoying his own, private free-for-all. Nearly two months have passed since the Frenchman struck in the Premier League.
Instead, he was starved. And it was the visitors who might have gobbled the three points. "We could've indeed," their manager, Phil Brown, said. While Craig Fagan and Dean Marney both came close for Hull, Salomon Kalou had his own stab at glory 11 minutes from time. But his shot was straight and had City's fans singing deliriously that "This is the best trip I've ever been on".
Scolari might now be wondering about what is fast becoming a depressing sojourn. The boos at the end will echo across the rest of his weekend.

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Express:
SCRAPPING TIGERS PUT THE BITE ON BIG PHIL
By Tony Stenson at Stamford Bridge Chelsea 0 Hull City 0
CHELSEA fans finally turned on manager Felipe Scolari last night.
They chanted ‘You don’t know what you’re doing’ after he took off new signing Ricardo Quaresma and replaced him with Didier Drogba.
They vented their anger on the Brazilian after once again watching their world class players fail to produce. Enough was enough.
How come, they asked, was there no Plan B after long periods of their side dictating the game without result?
Why didn’t their stars come to the rescue? Why was controversial striker Didier Drogba not introduced much earlier as again Nicolas Anelka showed he can only produce when the river flows in his direction?
The bitter chants from Chelsea supporters will no doubt be heard on owner Roman Abramovich’s floating palace.
He has lost billions in the credit crunch and he doesn’t want to lose face, but his side are going nowhere fast.
Scolari has won a World Cup, but we all have sell-by dates.
Chelsea dominated all the game, yet Hull were unlucky not to win when former Spurs player Dean Marney went close near the end.
Scolari stalked the touchline and looked a sorrowful soul sending on A-list players to try to break down a workmanlike side.
Skipper John Terry’s pre-match Churchillian speech fell on deaf ears.
He sounded like Winston in the dressing room in his pre-match talk, telling his failing team-mates: “We need a result, we need a performance, we need a clean sheet – we need a lot of things today.”
Clearly, no one listened.
Chelsea should have had a hatful, restoring pride and showing new boy Quaresma what they were all about.
Instead, we saw the same old fare with long periods of possession but little to show for it.
Mikel is not a midfield creator, while Michael Ballack – good at free kicks but performing only when he wants to – continues to nose-dive.
Frank Lampard can only do so much.
Chelsea are missing a direct, dominant striker. Anelka heads the ball mostly in his own half.
When they attack and cross, there usually aren’t many players in the opposition’s box.
They haven’t learnt the Manchester United lesson – release Cristiano Ronaldo and then thunder forward.
Instead, they have talented stars who simply do not possess the ability to break down a group of decent journeymen.
Chelsea insiders claim the club has not been the same since long-serving No 2 Steve Clarke was allowed to leave to join Gianfranco Zola at West Ham. Hull, meanwhile, were like annoying gnats – buzzing, stinging and refusing to give up lost causes. They could well have won it.
You had to admire the Tigers. They arrived knowing they had been the opposition in the first-ever competitive game at Stamford Bridge way back in 1905. They lost that encounter 5-1 in front of 6,000 supporters. Crowds change. So do results.
Hull gave hope of a new dawn, a former lower league club ready to wrestle with the big boys and bite the noses of distinguished opposition.
They started the season by taking points when they were not expected to do so, and encouraging headlines were written. Then reality kicked in. Now they seem to have turned the corner once more.
Quaresma marked his debut with a 20th minute 18-yard curler, then Lampard’s 25th minute shot was deflected after Hull failed to clear Quaresma’s corner.
But it was a tale of what might have been for Chelsea and Scolari.

Monday, February 02, 2009

morning papers liverpool away 0-2


The Times Liverpool eliminate Chelsea challenge Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0 Oliver Kay As the dust settled and the snow began to stick on the streets around Anfield, only one story truly mattered last night. There had been anguish for Frank Lampard, more humiliation for Robbie Keane, the rebirth of Fernando Torres and the slightest encouragement for Rafael Bentez in his contract negotiations, but, fairly or otherwise, this was the afternoon when Liverpool shrugged off the self-doubt and established themselves once and for all as the only threat to Manchester Uniteds hopes of a third successive Premier League title. Chelsea? Do not bet on it. They left Merseyside cursing Mike Rileys decision to send off Lampard for a challenge on Xabi Alonso on the hour, when they were on course for a goalless draw, but Luiz Felipe Scolari cannot allow that incident to cloud his perception of a team who again came up short when it mattered against one of their main rivals in the Premier League. Beaten by Arsenal at Stamford Bridge, they have taken one point from two matches against Manchester United this season and have now allowed Liverpool to beat them at home and away. It is a damning statistic that, irrespective of the minutiae of this latest setback, will raise questions about the direction that the Scolari regime is taking. In some senses, Chelsea were unfortunate. Lampards red card looked harsh in the extreme - the more so given that Steven Gerrard, the opposing captain, escaped without so much as a yellow card for a similar challenge on John Obi Mikel two minutes earlier - while, even without him, his teammates were able to keep Liverpool at bay until the final moments. Then Torres struck, casting aside the frustrations of the previous few months to give Liverpool the lead with a soaring header in the 89th minute and twisting the knife with a second goal in the fourth minute of stoppage time. When Liverpool won at Stamford Bridge in September, Sir Alex Ferguson said quite pointedly that it was the result he had been hoping for. Recent draws notwithstanding, it is a mark of how far Liverpool have come in the meantime - and of how far Chelsea have fallen - that a scowl is likely to have settled upon the United managers face last night. United are still strong favourites to win the title but, with Torres firing once more, having missed much of the season with recurring hamstring problems, Liverpool suddenly look a rather more fearsome proposition than when being held away to Wigan Athletic four days earlier. The sending-off, though, was a lousy decision. It seemed like a 50-50 challenge between Lampard and Alonso. By the time Alonso got to the ball, it had become 55-45 in the Liverpool players favour. Both players got a piece of the ball, but Riley felt that Lampard, in following through with what looked an unintentional kick at Alonsos foot, overstepped the mark. Perhaps Riley was swayed by an interview on Saturday in which Lampard talked of something between me and Alonso, dating back to when the Liverpool players ankle was broken by Lampards late challenge in a game at Anfield on New Years Day 2005. On that occasion, Riley turned a blind eye. This time he erred in opting for the maximum punishment. To that point, the game had been cagey. Liverpool had been the better team, Petr Cech saving well from Alonso and Albert Riera, but, with John Terry and Alex defending resolutely, they were being kept at arms length. The red card changed the complexion. Within minutes, a shot by Alonso had been deflected on to the crossbar by Alex, and Torres, hitherto quiet, saw an effort acrobatically diverted wide by Mikel. As the game entered its final 20 minutes, with Scolari sending on Deco and Didier Drogba in an ill-judged effort to bring more edge to their attacking play, it was clear that Chelseas resistance would be put to the test. The introduction of Yossi Benayoun gave Liverpool the guile that had been missing, but Gerrard engineered the breakthrough. Seizing control of a move going nowhere, he executed a quick exchange of passes with Dirk Kuyt and sent the ball wide to Fabio Aurlio, whose excellent cross was headed in by Torres, the forward darting across Alex to meet the ball first at the near post. Chelsea knew then that the game was up - with Jos Bosingwa highly fortunate to escape a red card for leaving his studs in Benayouns back - but worse was to follow when Ashley Cole was forced into a mistake by Benayoun and Torres made the scoreline 2-0. Bentez looked delighted afterwards, having gambled on leaving Keane out of the squad again. Tottenham Hotspur have been in touch with Liverpool about taking the forward back to White Hart Lane and it is feasible, though not probable, that a deal could be done before the transfer window closes at 5pm today. Liverpool (4-2-3-1): J M Reina 6 Arbeloa 7 J Carragher 7 M Skrtel 7 F Aurlio 7 J Mascherano 6 X Alonso 7 D Kuyt 6 S Gerrard 7 A Riera 5 F Torres 8 Substitutes: Y Benayoun 7 (for Riera, 74min), R Babel (for Mascherano, 83), D Ngog (for Torres, 90+5). Not used: D Cavalieri, A Dossena, D Agger, Lucas Leiva. Next: Portsmouth (a). Chelsea (4-1-4-1): P Cech 6 J Bosingwa 5 Alex 6 J Terry 7 A Cole 6 J O Mikel 6 S Kalou 5 M Ballack 6 F Lampard 6 F Malouda 3 N Anelka 4 Substitutes: Deco 3 (for Kalou, 69min), D Drogba 4 (for Anelka, 69), M Stoch (for Kalou, 85). Not used: Hilrio, P Ferreira, B Ivanovic, M Mancienne. Next: Hull (h). Referee M Riley Attendance 44,174 Lampard joins the list of Alonsos fall guys Frank Lampard, who broke the ankle of Xabi Alonso in a tackle at Anfield in 2005, is the fifth player to be sent off this season after fouling Liverpools Spaniard, even though the Chelsea midfield player clearly made contact with the ball yesterday, as the picture, below, shows. Seeing red with Alonso Sept 13: Nemanja Vidic, Manchester United Arm in face, second yellow card Sept 27: Tim Cahill, Everton Late challenge, straight red Oct 5: Pablo Zabaleta, Manchester City Two-footed lunge, straight red Oct 18: Antonio Valencia, Wigan Athletic Foul, second yellow Yesterday: Lampard, Chelsea High challenge, straight red ----------------------------------------------------------------- Telegraph: Liverpool's Fernando Torres stuns 10-man Chelsea after Frank Lampard red card Liverpool (0) 2 Chelsea (0) 0 By Telegraph staff Fernando Torres grabbed two late goals as Liverpool reclaimed second place in the Premier League. Chelsea had Frank Lampard sent off for a lunge of Xabi Alonso in the second half, and Liverpool took advantage to complete a league double over Luiz Felipe Scolari's side. Referee Mike Riley booked seven other players as the two teams slugged it out in their attempt to keep the title race alive. All the interest before kick-off was in Robbie Keane, who was dropped. The last time that happened he did not even bother turning up, but he was all smiles going into the home dressing room this time. There was also plenty of interest in the goings on in the stands before the game, with co-owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks sitting well apart in the front row of the directors' box. On the pitch the game started in swirling snow, with Steven Gerrard surging around midfield as Liverpool took the game to Chelsea. Alonso forced the first save from Petr Cech after 11 minutes, seeing a 20-yard drive tipped over. Then Javier Mascherano fired in a low effort from 30 yards that Cech parried, with no Liverpool player near enough to collect the loose ball. Torres and Albert Riera tested the Chelsea defence with their direct running, but this was a very tight contest. After 41 minutes, Riera fired in a fierce drive that was again pushed out by Cech, with Ashley Cole putting the ball narrowly wide of the left post as he cleared. On the hour mark, Lampard was shown a straight red card for a wild tackle on Alonso. He connected with the ball, but also the Spaniard's ankle, and referee Riley reacted instantly. John Terry was booked for protesting but in the current climate such tackles are considered dangerous. However, Chelsea will rightly say that Gerrard was only warned for a similar tackle a few minutes earlier. Alex then deflected an Alonso drive onto the bar as Liverpool sought to claim the advantage. On 69 minutes, Chelsea sent on Deco and Didier Drogba for Florent Malouda and Anelka. Gerrard was booked for diving by Riley as Liverpool cranked up the pressure, with Torres having a shot hooked away by Salomon Kalou. Yossi Benayoun then replaced Riera after 74 minutes, Liverpool searching for some invention to unlock Chelsea's rearguard. It almost came when Benayoun tested Cech from 20 yards, before hooking another effort inches over. Ryan Babel replaced Javier Mascherano after 83 minutes, with Liverpool still searching for the breakthrough. And, with two minutes left, Liverpool grabbed the lead thanks to Torres' first goal in front of the Kop this season. He arrowed a near-post header past Cech from a left-wing cross from Fabio Aurelio. Then, in injury-time, Benayoun got away in the box, the ball broke from a Cole tackle, and Torres fired home from eight yards. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Mirror: Liverpool 2-0 Chelsea: Fernando Torres scores two to keep Reds title dream alive Rafael Benitez's side still trail Manchester United by two points having played a game more, but remain in the hunt after eventually overcoming stubborn Chelsea resistance. Chelsea had Frank Lampard sent off in the second half and from then on Liverpool pounded away in search of the winner. And Torres struck with a near-post header and a simple tap in the final minutes. Liverpool made three changes from the side which drew at Wigan in midweek, with Albert Riera, Dirk Kuyt and Xabi Alonso returning in place of Yossi Benayoun, Ryan Babel and Lucas. Striker Robbie Keane was omitted from the 18-man squad, with teenage striker David Ngog on the bench. Chelsea fielded the same side which beat Middlesbrough 2-0 in midweek, with Salomon Kalou passed fit. Keane did not attend Anfield the last time he was left out of a squad, but was all smiles going into the home dressing room this time, and sat in the directors' box later. But suggestions that he is on his way out of the club cannot be discounted and there was plenty of interest in the other goings on in the stands before the game, with co-owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks sitting well apart in the front row of the directors' box. The pair will be re-opening talks with Benitez over his new contract and attend a board meeting together tomorrow. On the pitch the game started in swirling snow, with Steven Gerrard surging around midfield as Liverpool took the game to Chelsea. Alonso forced the first save from Petr Cech after 11 minutes, seeing a 20-yarder tipped over. Then Javier Mascherano fired in a low 30-yarder that Cech parried away, with no Liverpool man nearby to take advantage. The midfield battle started to get tasty with tackles flying in. Mascherano was booked for flattening John Obi Mikel and soon after Cole was cautioned for a foul on Dirk Kuyt. Torres and Riera both tested Chelsea with their direct running, but it was a very tight contest. Michael Ballack and Frank Lampard were quick to support Nicolas Anelka, putting Jamie Carragher and Martin Skrtel under severe pressure. After 41 minutes Riera fired in a fierce drive that was again pushed out by Cech, with Cole slicing the ball narrowly wide of the post as he cleared. The second period was just a minute old when Alonso was cautioned for a foul on Kalou and Mikel was soon to be in referee Mike Riley's book for a foul on Alvaro Arbeloa. Liverpool were attacking the Kop end now, and Gerrard, despite the bitter cold, was warming to his task. One run produced a corner, with Kuyt hooking wide while off balance. Then Torres saw a shot blocked by Terry. Then on the hour Lampard was shown a straight red card for a tackle on Alonso. He connected with the ball, but also the Spaniard's ankle, and referee Riley reacted instantly. John Terry was booked for protesting and Chelsea will rightly point out that Gerrard was only warned for a similar tackle a few minutes earlier. Alex then deflected an Alonso drive onto the bar as Liverpool sought to claim the advantage. On 69 minutes, Chelsea sent on Deco and Didier Drogba for Florent Malouda and Anelka. Gerrard was booked for diving as Liverpool cranked up the pressure, with Torres having a shot hooked away by Kalou. Benayoun then replaced Riera after 74 minutes, Liverpool searching for some invention to unlock Chelsea's rearguard. It almost came when Benayoun tested Cech from 20 yards before hooking another effort inches over. Babel replaced Mascherano after 83 minutes and Chelsea sent on Miroslav Stoch for Kalou soon after. And with two minutes left, Liverpool grabbed the lead with Torres' first goal in front of the Kop this season. He arrowed a near-post header past Cech from a cross from Fabio Aurelio. In injury-time Benayoun got away in the box after Cole failed to control and Torres fired home from eight yards. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Mail: You just cost us the title: Chelsea boss Scolari's fury at Lampard red card By John Edwards Luiz Felipe Scolari accused referee Mike Riley of derailing Chelseas title challenge with the controversial sending-off of Frank Lampard in yesterdays 2-0 defeat at Anfield. The Chelsea manager urged Riley to review Lampards 60th-minute challenge on Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso and to rescind his straight red card. Scolari, who conceded Chelseas Jose Bosingwa should have been dismissed for slamming his studs into Yossi Benayouns back, admitted the loss had all but counted Chelsea out of the title race - two late goals from Fernando Torres securing a win that lifts Liverpool back into second place. Frank Lampard was controversially sent off for his challenge on Xabi Alonso Chelsea are third, five points behind leaders Manchester United, who have a game in hand. I have not spoken to the referee, but I hope he will perhaps look at a video of the incident and say in his report he made a mistake, he said. It was a foul by Alonso, not Lampard, so I just cannot understand the decision. If it is not overturned, Lampard has to miss three games because of a mistake and that cannot be right. It changed the game one million per cent, because they had so much more of the ball after that and created more. I would have accepted a red for Bosingwa but not Lampard. Frank Lampard was given his marching orders on a miserable afternoon for Chelsea at Anfield 'Whatever happens, we cannot change the result or its effect on our title chances. We will fight to the end but it is more distant for us now. Lampard and Alonso have clashed before but the Chelsea midfielder insisted: I had no intention of injuring the player. It was obvious I touched the ball and there is no way it was a red card offence. Torres scored his first League goals since October, the first a brilliant near-post header in the 89th minute, the second an easy finish four minutes into added time that left Liverpool two points behind United. He said: We knew that this was a massive game. Every player knew that. From the beginning until the very end, we worked really hard with intensity and determination. We are very happy with the 2-0 scoreline. We know that games in England, more than any other league, go for 90 minutes and you can score in any minute and you have to keep going until the end. It is a long race. We know that Manchester United are top of the table but we are going to fight with them until the end. Chelsea had one player less so they needed to defend. A draw was good for them but we needed to win. Once we had one extra player we kept creating more chances. It has brought back some belief and confidence. These were my first two goals since coming back from injury. I have scored at home for the first time this season and to do that against Chelsea was fantastic. Liverpools co-owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett were together in the directors box for the first time in 13 months but they faced an angry demonstration from supporters outside the main entrance after the game, even though Liverpool are hard on the heels of Sir Alex Fergusons leaders. Gillett was also confronted by fans outside Liverpools Marriott Hotel as he left for the ground earlier in the day and the animosity could increase the owners resolve to sell. They plan talks with Benitez over a new contract for the Liverpool manager but will also try to revive negotiations with Nasser al-Kharafi after a member of the Kuwaiti billionaires family attended the match as a guest of Hicks. ----------------------------------------------------------- Indy: Torres strikes after Lampard walks Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0 By Sam Wallace All the elements of the great dysfunctional family that is the Liverpool boardroom were in Anfield yesterday: the Americans and the English, the factions and the grudges. Looking around the directors' box you would find it hard to get that lot to agree on anything, apart from, perhaps, the genius of Fernando Torres. Thanks to Torres, the fight goes on. Liverpool stay in the title race as Manchester United raise their pace to a gallop. The gap may be two points and a game in hand to United but somehow, miraculously, Rafael Benitez's team are still putting up an argument despite the politics of the club, the farce over Robbie Keane and the increasingly erratic behaviour of their manager. They are in with a shout and that in itself is remarkable. Torres cut through the traffic on 88 minutes to head in the decisive goal before he added the second in injury-time to unite this unhappy house of Scouse in joy just when they were beginning to wonder if it really was all over. They did so with the benefit of a deeply questionable performance from referee Mike Riley who sent off Frank Lampard having failed to do the same to Steven Gerrard when the latter had committed a foul of greater severity minutes earlier. The sending off was the match's turning point, when Liverpool's control of the game turned into a siege of Chelsea's goal. It was the point when Liverpool's divided co-owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks, along with their two sets of American guests, freshly decked out from the club shop, sensed that, for all their unfamiliarity with local custom, they were about to witness something very special indeed. From Torres came the moment of brilliance, a service that Gerrard has been too often obliged to deliver of late, and so life was breathed into Liverpool's title challenge. At the same time, there was little sign of a pulse in Chelsea. Amid the rapture at Anfield there was the sense that this team have nothing left to give and for all their bad luck with Lampard's red card the situation is grave. Scolari said that Lampard's tackle did not warrant a red card but he did not do so with the urgency of a man clinging on to his football reputation by the fingernails. Rather he pronounced breezily that, yes, this title race is getting more difficult and that things are looking rather bleak for Chelsea. Does he care? He says that he does but few managers can have remained as calm about a performance as gutless as Chelsea were. Instead the Chelsea manager offered a trade-off to the Football Association in which they rescind Lampard's red card, for a challenge on Xabi Alonso, in exchange for a ban for Jose Bosingwa. As plea bargains go it was bizarre but honest nonetheless which is rare for a manager with his back up against a wall. Bosingwa thrust his studs into Yossi Benayoun's back late in the game out of sight of Riley, an incident that will be reviewed by the referee and should get Bosingwa banned. Where does this leave the Chelsea project? Back at the point where you wonder whether even £100m will fix it this summer, and that is before anyone considers whether Roman Abramovich has the inclination to spend it. Didier Drogba's appearance as substitute, some of it spent on the left side of midfield, looked more like an act of protest. Florent Malouda was ineffectual and Chelsea's first meaningful attempt on goal, from Salomon Kalou, came on 75 minutes. If Lampard misses the next three games, then that might well spell the end of their challenge. Apart from Alex da Costa, who was the man of the match until Torres beat him to the ball for his goal, and Jon Obi Mikel, Chelsea are shrinking. John Terry's booking means he misses the FA Cup game against Watford. The pressure is on Scolari whose record against the three other members of the big four is now a lamentable lost four, drawn one. The game caught light on the hour, two minutes after Gerrard had gone through Kalou with a challenge that showed more than a glimpse of the Liverpool captain's studs. It was reckless. Riley looked hard for a moment and let it go, which was a moment longer than he gave himself to make his decision on Lampard. That time the Chelsea man went in with his studs up, played the ball and Alonso went over him. The flash of studs was what Riley must have seen, he cannot have got sight of the clean contact Lampard made with the ball, if anything it was the Chelsea man who was the victim, caught on the shin by Alonso's trailing leg. But by then Riley was already reaching in his back pocket. There is no love lost between Alonso and Lampard, Lampard broke his ankle in a challenge on New Year's Day 2005 and Alonso has never forgiven. Yesterday Alonso made sure that he stayed down long enough to make it look like Lampard's challenge had really hurt. Lampard's only hope will be that the FA overturn the red card as quickly as they did for Paul Robinson, sent off for West Brom against Manchester United on Tuesday. Then came the siege. Alex had done a brilliant job on Torres until the striker got to Fabio Aurelio's near post cross a fraction before the Brazilian and headed past Petr Cech. Ashley Cole gave away the second, letting in Benayoun, then tackling him and inadvertently squaring the ball to Torres who scored. Can Liverpool do this every week? If they want to keep up with United they may have no choice. Goals: Torres (88) 1-0; Torres (90) 2-0 Liverpool (4-2-3-1): Reina; Arbeloa, Carragher, Skrtel, Aurelio; Mascherano (Babel 83), Alonso; Kuyt, Gerrard, Riera (Benayoun 74); Torres (Ngog 90). Substitutes not used: Cavalieri (gk), Dossena, Agger, Leiva. Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Alex, Terry, A Cole; Mikel; Kalou (Stoch 85), Ballack, Lampard, Malouda (Deco 69); Anelka (Drogba 69). Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Ivanovic, Ferreira, Mancienne. Referee: M Riley (Staffordshire). Booked: Liverpool Mascherano, Alonso, Gerrard. Chelsea A Cole, Mikel, Terry. Sent off: Lampard. Man of the match: Torres. Attendance: 44,174. --------------------------------------------------------------- Guardian: Lampard's red card gives Liverpool green light for victoryWin puts Bentez's team within two points of Manchester United at top of Premier League Liverpool 2 Torres 89, Torres 90 Chelsea 0 Ambition and desperation are intertwined for Liverpool. While they deserved the win that puts them two points behind Manchester United, who have a game in hand, Rafael Bentez's team thrived on the luck of a mistake by the referee, Mike Riley. Fernando Torres broke the deadlock in the 88th minute, with the first of his goals, but Chelsea had lacked Frank Lampard for the last half-hour following a red card. With his departure Chelsea had to make increasingly desperate blocks to keep Liverpool at bay. Lampard was sent off despite making contact with the ball before the collision with Xabi Alonso. Even if the official could argue that the midfielder's studs were raised, he had done no more than speak to Steven Gerrard for a more reckless foul on Mikel John Obi shortly before. Alonso had been the serious offender in the incident with Lampard but this was a jumble of a match that seemed too much for the officials. Shortly after Liverpool's opener, the Chelsea full-back Jose Bosingwa put his boot into the back of Yossi Benayoun without receiving any punishment. It was a mostly inept occasion and the efficiency at the heart of the opener hardly belonged here. The left-back Fabio Aurlio flighted the ball to the near post and Torres' header glanced it into the far corner of the net. The Spain centre-forward struck again in stoppage time when a stretching challenge by Ashley Cole accidentally laid the ball into his path. Liverpool will be heartened by a first League win since December 28. Conversely Chelsea have cause for introspection. Luiz Felipe Scolari said that his side had been inferior all afternoon. Maybe that could have been rectified if Lampard had been around until the close but Chelsea have extracted one point from five League meetings in this campaign with United, Chelsea and Arsenal. While there continue to be several formidable footballers on the books at Stamford Bridge, Scolari suffers from an unbalanced squad. Resources in attack are meagre. Nicolas Anelka hardly registered and the substitute Didier Drogba does not appear fully engaged in the cause. Creativity has been restricted not only by Joe Cole's injury but also because of the failure of Florent Malouda and Deco. Liverpool, by comparison, were probably feeling good about themselves last night. It will have slipped their minds that this was an occasion of frenetic scuffling. The omission from the squad of Robbie Keane, for the second time in three games, will provoke gossip but it may have been in the Irishman's interests to duck this. No one's standing was raised here. --------------------------------------------------------------- Sun: Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0From SHAUN CUSTIS at Anfield Published: 01 Feb 2009 IT is amazing what happens if you leave your £22million striker on the pitch. Liverpool boss Rafa Benitez has come in for criticism for subbing Fernando Torres recently as his side have drawn vital Premier League games. The managers argument was that Torres has been tiring late on as he works his way back to full fitness following a lengthy lay-off from hamstring trouble. But this time Benitez kept him going almost until the final whistle and was rewarded with two goals and three vital points to get the Reds title challenge back on track. Torres pounced after 89 minutes to head in at the near post then made it safe in the third minute of injury-time after an Ashley Cole howler. It is the first time Liverpool have done the double over Chelsea since 1990, which coincidentally was when the Kop last won the championship. For the Blues, one point out of 15 against the so called Big Four tells its own story. Liverpool controlled the match but were helped in no small measure by referee Mike Rileys controversial decision to dismiss Frank Lampard on the hour. Lampard although his studs were showing won the ball as he slid in on his old adversary Xabi Alonso but at the same time the Liverpool midfielder kicked his shin. The free-kick could have gone either way but from Rileys position it looked like the Chelsea midfielder was at fault and the red card was out. The pair have some history. Four years ago Lampard accidentally broke Alonsos ankle and, despite subsequent attempts to apologise his victim, would not listen. Lamps team-mates were furious about his dismissal and skipper John Terry talked himself into a yellow card as he argued the toss. But it was not just the sending off they were annoyed with. There was also the fact Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard escaped punishment only a couple of minutes earlier when he went flying in studs up on Salomon Kalou. Gerrard enjoyed a charmed life. He could have been booked twice inside the first 10 minutes. When he was finally cautioned it came for a desperate dive on the edge of the Chelsea penalty area. From the moment the shaky Petr Cech saved from Alonso, Liverpool were on top. Kop owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett made a special trip from the States to watch the game. They shared a common frustration with the fans who want them out as chances went begging. Cole almost put through his own goal just before half-time and, soon after the restart, Dirk Kuyt volleyed past the post after Alex missed a clearing header at a corner. Then came Lampards red card, which puts him out of the romantic FA Cup meeting against Watford where his dad Frank Senior is on the coaching staff, unless the authorities take pity on him an uphold an appeal. Liverpool cranked up the pressure but Alex was putting his body in front of every shot. The way he flung himself across the area to deflect Alonsos drive on to the top of the bar was typical. Kalous shot on 75 minutes, which was straight at Pepe Reina, brought howls of derision as it was Chelseas first of the game while there was little attacking threat from the surly sub Didier Drogba. The introduction of Yossi Benayoun added an extra dimension to Liverpool and the Israeli exploited the space available, forcing a diving save out of Cech. Benitez replaced Javier Mascherano with Ryan Babel to belie the Spaniards normally cautious approach and you sensed the home side believed victory was there for the taking. And so it came to pass as Fabio Aurelio stormed down the left and whipped in a near-post cross. For once, Alex was caught napping as Torres got in front of him to divert a header past Cech. It was the first goal he had scored at Anfield since his winner against Manchester City last May. He did not have to wait long for No 2 as Cole hesitated dealing with a through ball. Benayoun robbed him and although Cole got back to win the tackle, he only succeeded in diverting the ball across the area for Torres to tap in. Cole will hope England boss Fabio Capello, who left the game five minutes before the end, does not see the highlights. Jose Bosingwa has little hope the FA ignore replays of his outrageous foul near the end. Riley and his linesman failed to spot him planting his studs firmly in Benayouns back who was shielding the ball by the corner flag. Lampard may yet win a reprieve but Bosingwa deserves to be banned.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

morning papers middlesbrough home 2-0


The Times
Salomon Kalou gets stumbling Chelsea back on trackChelsea 2 Middlesbrough 0Alyson Rudd at Stamford Bridge
Although some of the chances spurned by Chelsea were laughable, others pitiful and several plain unlucky, Luiz Felipe Scolari would have been more interested in his first clean sheet in seven games last night and that it leaves his side well prepared psychologically for the visit to Anfield on Sunday. Two second-half goals from Salomon Kalou condemned Middlesbrough to yet more misery at the foot of the Barclays Premier League but livened up the title race — particularly in the light of Liverpool’s draw away to Wigan Athletic.
The songs at Stamford Bridge came only when the big screen flashed the news that Wigan had equalised. Suddenly, the balance of power between Chelsea and Liverpool had shifted, suddenly the talk is not of how vulnerable Scolari’s defence has become but of how his team have snatched second place from the Merseyside club. Suddenly, the game at Anfield feels as if it may be a defining match of the season — if not, as Manchester United may care to point out, the most critical.
But the game, curiously, did not end with the Chelsea manager smiling and full of bonhomie. He opted not to shake Gareth Southgate’s hand at the final whistle after an incident involving Mohamed Shawky. Having been shown a yellow card for an early foul on Florent Malouda, the Middlesbrough midfield player was penalised for a handball, but not booked. Scolari jumped to his feet and appeared to wave an imaginary card, which incensed Malcolm Crosby, Southgate’s assistant manager.
“It’s a pretty emotional game,” Ray Wilkins, the Chelsea assistant first-team coach, said. “Passions run high on their bench and they ran high on ours. It’s a nothing situation. If the referee had felt he [Scolari] needed to be sent to the stands, he would have done so and he didn’t do so.”
Nobody much cares when a team in the bottom three struggles at set-pieces, but Middlesbrough finally succumbed to two corner kicks and have not won in the league in 11 matches. All the while that Chelsea have been lampooned for being a soft touch at set-pieces, they have at least shown they know how to score from free kicks and corners of their own; last night was no exception.
Southgate, the Middlesbrough manager, labelled it “unforgivable” that his team should have conceded goals from two corners as they “didn’t really get carved open” otherwise. But such was the bombardment of corners and free kicks that there was a sense of inevitability that they would succumb.
Yet despite the home side’s early dominance, a free kick from distance by Gary O’Neil still drew an audible intake of breath as Petr Cech punched rather than claimed the ball. It will take some time yet before Chelsea are totally rid of the tag of a team who struggle at set-pieces.
Chelsea seemed to panic on the few occasions that Middlesbrough forged a counter-attack and conceded more free kicks than was necessary. Malouda spent much of the first half on his knees bemoaning trips and tugs on his shirt, so the overall impression was one of a side who ought to have more self-belief than they exhibited.
That Malouda failed to reappear for the second half did not come as a shock and Didier Drogba, his replacement, marked his arrival with a scuffed shot. In the 55th minute, Chelsea spurned their best chance of the game so far, when Kalou nodded over from close range a header from Alex.
Three minutes later, Kalou made amends with a volley that beat Turnbull after yet another corner from Lampard had been only partially cleared by David Wheater under pressure from Drogba. Immediately, Southgate prepared for a double substitution that gave his team a more attacking look. Between them, Afonso Alves and Tuncay Sanli instantly injected a sprightliness that had been lacking before.
The prize for the least-accomplished moment in front of goal went in the end, ironically, to Kalou. Once Turnbull had spilt a free kick by Lampard, the Ivory Coast forward had time and space to pick his spot, but instead barely connected and sent the ball comically in the opposite direction.
Yet Kalou was in the mood to atone and, in the 81st minute, headed home another corner from Lampard after Turnbull rushed to claim the ball and failed. Kalou’s handcuff-style goal celebration with Drogba, his compatriot, remained enigmatic. Conjecture that he was displaying support for an Ivorian journalist recently released from jail was denied by the player, who said he was trying to find his own style. Whether Chelsea have found theirs of old will be determined only on Sunday.
Chelsea (4-1-2-2-1): P Cech — J Bosingwa, J Terry, Alex, A Cole — J O Mikel — M Ballack, F Lampard — S Kalou (sub: Deco, 82min), F Malouda (sub: D Drogba, 46) — N Anelka (sub: M Stoch, 89). Substitutes not used: Hilário, B Ivanovic, P Ferreira, M Mancienne.
Middlesbrough (4-5-1): R Turnbull — A McMahon, C Riggott, D Wheater, E Pogatetz — A Johnson, G O’Neil, M Bates, M Shawky (sub: Tuncay Sanli, 64), S Downing — M King (sub: Afonso Alves, 64). Substitutes not used: B Jones, J Hoyte, M Emnes, R Huth, J Arca. Booked: Shawky, Riggott.
Referee: L Probert.

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Telegraph:
Salomon Kalou brace sends Chelsea into secondChelsea (0) 2 Middlesbrough (0) 0 By John Ley at Stamford Bridge
Chelsea set up an enthralling trip to Anfield, on Sunday, when on a nervous, rain-soaked night at Stamford Bridge, Salomon Kalou scored twice to take his side back into second place, thanks in part to Liverpool’s failure to beat Wigan.
News that Wigan had scored against Liverpool drew the biggest cheer on a night when hesitation and nervousness made way for confidence and belief that Chelsea still have a say in the destination of the Premier League pennant. The teams are now level on points, with Chelsea boasting a better goal difference.
Chelsea went into the game having beaten Middlesbrough in their previous four meetings, scoring 11 goals and conceding none. Indeed, when the teams met at the Riverside, in October, Chelsea left with a 5-0 rout.
Middlesbrough arrived with the lowest goals scored in the division, with just 18, and had not won in 10 League outings, since beating Aston Villa in early November. They had failed to win in 20 previous visits, and 34 years of trying.
Gareth Southgate gave a debut to Marlon King, on loan from Wigan after leaving Hull, while captain John Terry returned for Chelsea after missing the previous two games with a back injury.
With the London rain pouring, Chelsea took the early initiative, their speed on the ball causing Middlesbrough problems from the outset. Frank Lampard’s early free-kick was blocked by a wall of red shirts before Salomon Kalou burst through a possee of defenders before running the ball into touch.
Middlesbrough’s Mohamed Shawky was cautioned for upending Florent Malouda as the visitors, without a clean sheet in seven Premier League games, found themselves under constant pressure.
Chelsea came close to an opening goal with only 13 minutes played and it featured both full-backs, with Jose Bosingwa’s lofted cross, from the right, finding Ashley Cole, but the left-back succeeded only in finding the side netting.
Soon afterwards, Middlesbrough goalkeeper Ross Turnbull could only deflect a Michael Ballack shot with his chest, but he coped better with a rakish attempt from Lampard.
But after the initial impressive start, Chelsea reverted to type witnessed in too many home games this season. Chelsea’s form at Stamford Bridge has been so disappointing at times that there was a generally muted atmosphere about the place.
The dismal weather may have contributed, but there was little Samba flair on show as one-time World Cup winner Luiz Felipe Scolari watched on, unimpressed with his team’s failure to break down an ordinary side, who had placed a massed wall of red shirts behind the ball whenever Chelsea pushed forward..
In their previous Premier League outing here, Chelsea struggled to beat Stoke, winning only thanks to two late goals. And the signs, as the game progressed, were hardly more encouraging.
The game deteriorated in the rain, with Chelsea limited to long range attempts – Lampard wasted another free-kick before half-time – and Middlesbrough, with King their lone striker, rarely breaking into the Chelsea half.
The most entertaining aspect of the first half, sadly, was a touchline altercation between Scolari and Middlesbrough coach Malcolm Crosby. Fourth official Steve Bennett intervened, but had his work cut out calming the Brazilian down.
The half time whistle provoked a chorus of booing and Scolari headed straight for Crosby, before bodies got between the pair. His frustrations, seemingly over referee Lee Probert’s failure to award a handball and Crosby’s response, only served to highlight Chelsea’s frustrations.
With the players in the dressing room, the on-pitch announcer revealed that Liverpool – Chelsea’s opponents at the weekend -- were winning 1-0 at Wigan, adding: “We need you to get behind the team.”
Scolari responded by introducing Drogba, for Malouda, for the second half and, within 52 seconds, he had a chance, but screwed his shot wide when he should have done better.
Drogba took Nicolas Anelka’s place as the lone striker with the Frenchman dropping into more of a wide midfield role on the right.
And in the 55th minute Chelsea wasted their best chance so far. Lampard’s corner was headed on by Michael Ballack and directed goal-bound by Alex. But in attempting to finish it off, Kalou directed the ball over, and Chelsea remained frustrated. Alex went close again soon afterwards, his free-kick deflected off target for a corner.
And Chelsea’s increased pressure paid off in the 58th. Another Lampard corner, high and teasing, was met by the head of the troublesome Alex and when Davis Wheater’s clearance fell only to Kalou, he responded with a marvellous right-foot volley for his seventh goal of the season.
Having taken the lead, Chelsea had chances to add to their tally, the best when Anelka broke clear on the right before crossing for Lampard who, uncharacteristically, sliced wide. And before the end, Turnbull parried a Lampard free-kick but Kalou, with Anelka unmarked in front of an open goal, slipped and miss-kicked in embarrassing fashion.
But Kalou ended the night in positive fashion, scoring his and Chelsea’s second goal, with a simple header, from a Lampard corner, with nine minutes remaining.
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Mail:
Chelsea 2 Middlesbrough 0:
Salomon's brace settles Chelsea's nerves
by NEIL ASHTON
Mauled at Manchester United a little over two weeks ago, Chelsea are somehow back in the hunt for the Barclays Premier League title. That is the beauty of English football.
To think that Luiz Felipe Scolari’s team were majestically swatted aside at Old Trafford, punished with embarrassing ease, and this morning they sit just two points behind United. Incredible.
They are even ahead of Liverpool, their opponents at Anfield on Sunday, and threatening to play their part in the most thrilling chase since Steve McQueen raced through San Francisco in Bullitt.
They were booed by their own supporters at the break. The Stamford Bridge faithful were frustrated with their favourites’ failure to break down a Middlesbrough team without a victory in their previous 10 League games.
But, by the final whistle, the fans were celebrating Salomon Kalou’s two strikes as if they had secured the title itself. Such fickleness is a Premier League phenomenon, certainly not confined to the 40,000 supporters at Stamford Bridge.
Kalou’s clever goals powered Chelsea into second place and Sunday’s clash against third-placed Liverpool will be a battle royal now, with memories stirred of the classic Champions League encounters under Jose Mourinho and Avram Grant.
There is also the chance for Chelsea to settle a score from earlier in the season, the 1-0 defeat against Liverpool that ended the thought this team was invincible on home soil.
They looked anything but unbeatable last night, struggling to break down Gareth Southgate’s unambitious Middlesbrough team and yet still picking up three points.
Boro are in big trouble. They are in the bottom three and the alarm bells are ringing at the Riverside. Their game plan last night was based around building a brick wall in front of Ross Turnbull’s goal.
Southgate said: ‘We lost to two set pieces and that is what disappoints me so much. We knew we would get carved open a couple of times, but that is unforgiveable.
‘We’re not where we’d like to be in the table, but we’ve had a tough run and I don’t think anyone in the country expected us to get anything at Chelsea. We have players who can get us out of the situation we have put ourselves in.’
Boro are desperate for points after 11 games without a win, scrapping with the alley cats running wild at the foot of the table. To do it, they will need Gary O’Neil to shelve his move back to the south coast until the summer so that he can continue to graft in midfield.
The same can be said of Stewart Downing, as talented a player to represent this club since Gary Pallister emerged as one of the country’s finest central defenders under Bruce Rioch in the mid-Eighties. They still have some tough cookies in the team, hustlers like Mohamed Shawky, who was booked for a cynical foul on Florent Malouda as Chelsea set the tone for a one-sided first half.
It turned into a melodramatic training-ground exercise — defence against attack — as Chelsea prodded and probed, applying pressure against a team who made no apology for the way they played.
Boro had to buckle, they simply had to. Frank Lampard’s free-kick hit the wall, another dipped menacingly over Turnbull’s bar and Ballack’s effort from the edge of the area took the keeper by surprise.
Scolari was rattled, continuing his touchline feud with Boro’s assistant manager Malcolm Crosby at the break when he waved an imaginary red card at Shawky following an innocuous handball.
Southgate said: ‘Scolari seemed upset about something and he wanted to get one of my players booked. He seemed to have a real problem with it and didn’t want to shake my hands at the final whistle, but that is up to him.’
Chelsea’s manager ducked the issue, sending out his assistant Ray Wilkins to put his foot straight in his mouth. ‘I’m all for the RESPECT campaign, but opposition supporters call Frank Lampard a ‘Fat *******’ wherever he goes, even when he is with England.’
At least Chelsea’s manager regained his composure, replacing fall-guy Malouda with Didier Drogba at half-time, and suddenly Chelsea had some menace about them, a threat in front of goal that paid off when Kalou scored the first goal after 58 minutes.
David Wheater failed to clear Lampard’s corner and Kalou, unmarked inside the area, volleyed his effort sweetly beyond Turnbull. That made up for an earlier effort, inexplicably headed over Turnbull’s crossbar from close range, but he added a second goal when he met Lampard’s corner in the 81st minute, steering his header into an unguarded net.
He may be in trouble with the FA after his celebrations, a scandalous handcuff salute in honour of Assale Tiemoko Antoine, an Ivory Coast political rebel who was released from prison last week.
After this result, he is not the only one who just got out of jail.
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Indy:
Kalou strikes as Chelsea hold nerve
Chelsea 2 Middlesbrough 0
By Sam Wallace
As Luiz Felipe Scolari jabbed his finger in the direction of the Middlesbrough bench and had to be restrained by the fourth official, it looked at one point as if, to paraphrase a famous chant, Big Phil was cracking up. But after the pressure came Salomon Kalou's goals which gave Chelsea victory last night and now a remarkable moment awaits Scolari.
Beat Liverpool on Sunday and Chelsea will put three points between them and Rafael Benitez's side. Already they are ahead of Liverpool in second place by virtue of their vastly superior goal difference and if they win at Anfield then suddenly the complexion of the title race will look very different. In fact it will look like Chelsea are the serious contenders to catch Manchester United.
Not that this was a marquee performance from Chelsea who were bailed out by Kalou's two second-half goals when there was precious little imagination from elsewhere. Didier Drogba made a difference this time, however, coming on at half-time to shake up the Middlesbrough defence. It was his second substitute's appearance since his two exclusions from the Chelsea squad and at last he looks like he might have something to offer.
It takes some imagination to break down a side like Middlesbrough, who come to defend and precious little else, and in the first half it was the kind of imagination that Chelsea badly lacked. Florent Malouda sparkled in the early stages of the game, Kalou went on a jinking run that ultimately led nowhere and so Chelsea settled into an uncomfortable mediocrity.
Gareth Southgate's side came to Stamford Bridge having lost their previous four away games so who could blame them for being cautious, but it was about as interesting as watching the rain fall. The most memorable moment of the first half came about three minutes before the break when Scolari became involved in a spat with Southgate's assistant Malcolm Crosby.
Soon after that it was Scolari and Southgate who were rowing over what seemed like a few trivial fouls but it demonstrated just how tense the Chelsea manager was. He carried on the argument as he went down the tunnel at half-time. It had started over a foul by Mohamed Shawky, part of a five-man midfield which Chelsea were struggling to break down.
Ashley Cole missed a back-post header from Jose Bosingwa's cross from the right and Chelsea could conjure little more. On came Drogba at half-time in place of Malouda, who had looked ever more uninterested after taking a kick early on in the game. It required a change from Anelka who was shunted to the right side of midfield to preserve Chelsea's 4-1-4-1 formation. Drogba's first act was to handle the ball as he challenged David Wheater, an act that went unpunished. He bore down on goal and hit a terrible shot that told you everything about his lack of sharpness.
The low point for Chelsea came a few minutes later when Michael Ballack's lazy pass was intercepted by Emanuel Pogatetz and he got down the wing to cross for Matthew Bates. Ashley Cole intervened. Three minutes later Chelsea scored, Alex headed down a corner, Wheater half-cleared and Kalou slammed in the ball.
Kalou's second was a wretched error from Ross Turnbull who allowed a corner to drift over his head and the Chelsea winger was there to nod it in. The winger's cross-wrist gesture was in support of the Ivory Coast activist Antoine Assal Tiemoko. By then Southgate had thrown on Alfonso Alves and Tuncay Sanli. His team remain in the bottom three and, given their lack of ambition last night, they can hardly complain.
Goals: Kalou (58) 1-0; Kalou (81) 2-0.
Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Alex, Terry, A Cole; Mikel; Kalou (Deco, 82), Ballack, Lampard, Malouda (Drogba, h-t); Anelka (Stoch, 89). Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Ivanovic, Ferreira, Mancienne.
Middlesbrough (4-5-1): Turnbull; McMahon, Riggott, Wheater, Pogatetz; A Johnson, Bates, O'Neil, Shawky (Tuncay, 64), Downing; King (Alves, 64). Substitutes not used: Jones (gk), Taylor, Emnes, Huth, Arca.
Referee: L Probert (Wiltshire).
Booked: Middlesbrough Shawky, Riggott.
Man of the match: Kalou.
Attendance: 40,280.
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Observer:
Scolari loses his cool but calm Kalou guides Chelsea through the grind
Chelsea 2 Kalou 58, Kalou 81 Middlesbrough 0
Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge
The grind goes on. Chelsea's latest league victory chiselled from stubborn opponents has hoisted Luiz Felipe Scolari's above Liverpool and into second, though this occasion's most raucous cheer was reserved for Wigan's equaliser at a distant JJB stadium rather than anything conjured by the hosts. It was a measure of the excruciating frustration on show that an agitated Scolari ended up accused of attempting to have the visiting midfielder Mohamed Shawky sent off. Dignity rather drained as the pressure mounted.
In many ways this was as unconvincing a success as that achieved against Stoke City in Chelsea's previous league game. It merely lacked the staggering late drama of that turnaround. Middlesbrough, a side now without a league win in 11 matches stretching back to early November, had contained and confounded for almost an hour with frustration welling in the stands and Scolari, apoplectic on the touchline, reduced to squabbling with the visitors' assistant manager, Malcolm Crosby, when Shawky escaped a second yellow card for a deliberate handball. The fourth official, Steve Bennett, stepped in, though it took a brace from Salomon Kalou truly to lance the tension.
The Ivorian's goals not only changed the complexion of this game, but also shifted the sense of momentum among those clubs clambering after Manchester United at the summit. Chelsea travel to Merseyside on Sunday above their hosts in the table. The focus and pressure will be squarely on Rafael Benítez and not Scolari, the onus entirely on Liverpool to prise the Londoners apart and rekindle their own challenge. Chelsea will enjoy a gameplan based upon the counter-attack, for once, after weeks spent squeezing reward from massed defence. It should be a very different encounter from this one.
For so long, Boro had scented reward. Theirs was an admirably rugged and committed display, the frenzy of tackles mustered by a back four and a midfield quintet disrupting Chelsea's rhythm and fuelling a sense of desperation. The first wailed discord echoed around the stands just after the half-hour as yet another laboured home attack ran aground on ranks of red. This was all too familiar, the lack of invention driving the locals to despair and Scolari to dispute with Crosby as tempers boiled over in the dug-outs after Shawky's unpunished second misdemeanour.
The finger-wagging was comical, though tempers remained frayed to the end. "There were words between my assistant and Phil Scolari," Gareth Southgate said. "He seemed to want to get one of my players booked. He didn't shake hands at the end. That was a strange reaction, but that's his prerogative."
Scolari sent his assistant, Ray Wilkins, to conduct the post-match interviews, though the incident had rather passed the latter by. "If the referee had felt Luiz needed to be sent to the stands, he would have done that, but he didn't," said the No2 when it was pointed out that players are supposed to be sanctioned for waving imaginary cards at officials, so why not managers? "The referee obviously feels quite comfortable with the situation, and Steve Bennett was on the side and he ­obviously felt that same."
The incident said more for the exasperation which ate away at the hosts until just before the hour-mark. The home side had conjured little other than Ashley Cole's header into the side-netting before Didier Drogba's introduction at the interval. The Ivorian duly served to unsettle, challenging David Wheater in the air after Alex had nodded down Frank Lampard's corner, with the loose ball ­dispatched emphatically by Kalou. Boro were prone thereafter, their gameplan wrecked, and might have shipped another before an unmarked Kalou benefited from Ross Turnbull's misjudgment to nod in Lampard's corner. Both goals were celebrated by the striker with his wrists crossed, though Kalou later denied that constituted a show of support for the political activist Assalé Tiémoko Antoine, recently released from prison back in the Ivory Coast.
As it was, the visitors departed deflated and the wrong side of the relegation cut-off. Chelsea, for their part, remain a side lacking pizzazz and creation but retain that dogged desire to prevail. Confidence is pepped ahead of Sunday's trip to Merseyside.
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Sun:
Chelsea 2 Middlesbrough 0
By IAN McGARRY at Stamford Bridge
MAYBE, just maybe, Chelsea are showing their mean streak when it matters.
Victory over a woeful Middlesbrough side stuck in the bottom three is barely anything to crow about.
But on a night when nothing but three points was good enough, Big Phil Scolari’s side delivered a win.
Ivory Coast ace Salomon Kalou scored both goals — his seventh and eighth strikes of the season — in a one-sided contest.
But forget the performance, feel the result.
Chelsea moved above Liverpool to second in the Premier League, reminding champions Manchester United they will not have it all their own way.
Given their poor home form — they have dropped 14 points at Stamford Bridge — this was as big a win as any this season.
It keeps them in touching distance of Alex Ferguson’s side and eased them ahead of Rafa Benitez’s Reds before the Blues go to Anfield on Sunday.
While Liverpool have dropped from the top like a stone, Chelsea appear to be rising to the challenge.
Under par and under performing, they somehow managed to dig out a win against a team who came to London to practise defending.
In fact, at times it was just like watching Jose Mourinho’s side.
They kept their shape, held their nerve and when the moment came to inflict punishment they did not disappoint.
Predictable
Well, you would have been hard pressed to convince the home support of that at half-time.
After an opening period when chances were more scarce than good news on the money markets, value was hard to find.
For Middlesbrough, having lost six and drawn four of their last 10 Premier League matches coming into the match, it was predictable they would look to shut up shop at the back.
Gareth Southgate’s men showed very little attacking ambition from the outset by leaving Marlon King on his own in attack.
In fact, the pattern was underlined in the opening exchanges when the Chelsea full-backs were even in the hunt for goals within 15 minutes. Jose Bosingwa provided the cross to the back post which found Ashley Cole.
But his header was very much a defender’s effort as he put it into the side-netting and not between the posts.
The England man buried his head in his hands in frustration and chief Scolari did the same on the sidelines.
Florent Malouda was someone who saw a lot of the ball but failed to do anything very creative with it.
As the rain came down in torrents in West London, the Chelsea boss stood screaming instructions at his players.
His attention turned to Boro assistant boss Malcolm Crosby who complained Scolari had tried to get Mohamed Shawky booked.
Big Phil responded by gesturing to Crosby in the traditional way — as in “do you want some?”
He followed that challenge up by waiting for Crosby in the tunnel at the break only to be thwarted by a steward who eased him toward the dressing room.
As the home fans booed, the manager took stock and decided on a change.
His reaction was to try to give his team more bite in the second period by replacing Malouda with Didier Drogba.
The striker ran free within a minute of the restart but his attempt on goal was closer to the corner flag than the goalposts.
Impact
Six minutes later, Alex came much closer with a header from Frank Lampard’s corner only to see Kalou get in the way and head it over the bar.
This season has seen the African used more as an impact player than in the starting line-up.
And though Scolari was cursing his header on that occasion, it was just two minutes until he broke the deadlock.
The circumstances were almost identical. Lampard crossed an outswinging corner which was met by Alex.
This time the defender’s header was cleared by David Wheater but only as far as Kalou who blasted home a volley from 10 yards.
After the jeering at the interval, the home supporters were barely in the mood to cheer and so even the goal was greeted with muted applause.
For the players, however, the lead was significant for just one thing — and that was the fact they were back in the hunt for the title picture.
Kalou should have made the game safe with a second goal after 72 minutes.
Lampard tried his luck from distance with a free-kick which keeper Ross Turnbull spooned out to the Chelsea striker complete with a gift tag.
But, with a comedy swing of his right boot, Kalou kicked fresh air while the ball deflected off his left peg and out for a goal-kick. Embarrassing? You bet, though the mishap did not undermine the rest of the night.
After 81 minutes, he headed home unchallenged from Lampard’s corner.
For the second time, Kalou celebrated with a handcuff gesture backed up by Drogba who were apparently expressing support for the Ivory Coast political activist, Assale Tiemoko Antoine.
Antoine was released from prison last week but it was Chelsea who got out of jail last night.
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Sunday, January 25, 2009

sunday papers ipswich fa cup 3-1


Times
Ballack double helps calm Chelsea nerves Chelsea 3 Ipswich Town 1
Brian Glanville at Stamford Bridge
AMID all the swirling rumours about Chelsea’s corporate future, the team stuttered, then succeeded against a resolute Ipswich Town. For 25 uncomfortable minutes after the visitors equalised, the Blues seemed to be heading for a miserable sequel to cap their 3-0 thrashing at Old Trafford and the humiliating home draw in the 3rd round of the Cup against Southend.
As it was, without ever achieving full fluency and plainly missing Joe Cole, Chelsea and Michael Ballack recovered to win without excessive pain. The recovery in Ballack’s case was that he had missed an early chance before he twice found the net. The error came after nine minutes when Nicolas Anelka, who moved constantly into different positions throughout the match, crossed from the left. David Wright, the Ipswich left-back, jumped for the ball but couldn’t connect. Ballack, unmarked, had an excellent opportunity to settle the nerves but whacked it wide.
He substantially atoned for that piece of profligacy, though, and this is a competition he is taking a fancy to, after a superb strike at Southend. In that match he came to his team’s rescue when they were behind and he is beginning to make a habit of being a man for a crisis. His first goal here came after 16 minutes when Frank Lampard sent a diagonal pass with great accuracy to Ashley Cole on the left. His cross found Ballack, who scored smartly.
The second goal was somewhat more spectacular. It arrived after 59 minutes when Owen Garvan, the industrious Ipswich midfielder, was punished for a foul on Anelka. Ballack struck his free kick expertly with his right foot and into the top left-hand corner of the Ipswich goal.
Afterwards, assistant manager Ray Wilkins, back at the Bridge where he was once a player, praised the German midfielder. “The Michael Ballack you saw today is what a top-quality footballer is all about. It was very doubtful he would play after he took a nasty kick in the week but he turned up this morning sore, wanted to play and was fantastic.”
Ipswich, much to their credit, had hit back to equalise after 34 minutes, again casting doubt on Chelsea’s ability to defend free kicks effectively.
Garvan crossed from the right and with Chelsea’s central defenders Ricardo Carvalho (later forced off with an injured hamstring) and Alex confusing each other, the ball bounced around the area and ran to the perfectly positioned Alex Bruce, who scored. At that moment you could not help but come to the conclusion that the Bridge was going to suffer another day of anxiety.
In the second half Richard Wright, once an England goalkeeper, was dealing resolutely with a series of shots and Chelsea were beginning to fret. On 57 minutes there were cheers from the crowd when Chelsea sent on Didier Drogba but he wasn’t to be the saviour, just a mere spectator for Ballack’s strike, which arrived just two minutes later.
Chelsea began to play with more freedom once they regained the lead and it was the start of a busy period for the Ipswich goalkeeper. On 64 minutes, Salomon Kalou, filling in on the flank for the absent Joe Cole, served by Lampard, shot at point-blank range, but Wright was commendably fast to dive on the ball. Two minutes later, the keeper blocked a shot he couldn’t hold and then smothered a rebound effort.
By this time Chelsea were dictating the game and when Lampard, increasingly influential, crossed from the right, the ball reached Kalou, ideally placed on the far post, only for him to head a good chance wide. Lampard and Chelsea, however, would have the last word when, on 84 minutes, a memorable right-footed free kick by the midfielder from the best part of 30 yards soared out of Wright’s reach.
Jim Magilton, the Ipswich manager, said: “I think we gave a really good account of ourselves. I thought we had some really good opportunities, scored a good goal from a set piece and, with a little bit of quality on the ball, could have got something more.”
Star man: Michael Ballack (Chelsea)
Yellow cards: Ipswich: Bruce, Garvan, Lisbie
Referee: A Wiley
Attendance: 41,137
CHELSEA: Cech 7, Bosingwa 6, Carvalho 6 (Ivanovic 70min), Alex 6, A Cole 6, Belletti 6, Ballack 7 (Deco 79min), Lampard 7, Malouda 6 (Drogba 58min, 6), Kalou 6, Anelka 7.
IPSWICH: R Wright 7, D Wright 6, McAuley 7, Bruce 6, Garvan 7, Miller 6 (Quinn 81min), Counago 6, Norris 6, Balkestein 7, Haynes 6 (Lisbie 60min), Walters 6 (Stead 71min)

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Telegraph:
Chelsea nervous but convincing victors against Ipswich TownChelsea (1) 3 Ipswich Town (1) 1 By Jonathan Wilson at Stamford Bridge
Perhaps in the Cup all that matters is progress, and Chelsea did achieve that, but if they were hoping mid-table Championship opponents would give them an opportunity to rediscover their swagger, they were disappointed. Home is still an uncomfortable place for Chelsea.
Yes, they were much the better team. Yes, they had hatfuls of chances.
Yes, Richard Wright, the Ipswich goalkeeper, made a number of impressive saves. Yes, it would be impossible to argue that this was anything other than a deserved victory. And yet there was an edginess about Stamford Bridge, largely because, for all this was a routine victory, it followed a worryingly familiar pattern.
John Terry was missing with a back injury and Mikel Jon Obi was suspended, but this was as close as possible to a full-strength Chelsea side. Accordingly, they did what Chelsea always do these days: dominate, and fail to make the most of it.
They even had Didier Drogba, exiled for the last two games, back on the bench to come on with half an hour remaining and trot about ineffectively. Still, they looked comfortable when Michael Ballack, having already missed one very presentable chance, converted an Ashley Cole cross after 16 minutes.
Ballack’s contract expires at the end of the season and, despite a perception that he has underwhelmed this season, the suggestion from Ray Wilkins on Saturday was that there will at least be talks over an extension.
“Michael is what we saw today. It was very doubtful whether he would make it, but the professional in him meant he turned up and there were no problems,” Chelsea’s assistant manager said.
“Even when he’s not performing at to top quality, he contributes to the team effort. He covers more acreage than anybody else in the team.”
Once again, Chelsea were almost undone by their phobia of the dead-ball. Ricardo Carvalho perhaps could not be criticised for his startled reaction as Owen Garvan’s free-kick was flicked into his chest at close range, but Alex Bruce was unmarked as the ball dropped to him inside the six-yard box, and he calmly scooped the ball over Petr Cech.
Was it zonal marking? Was it man-to-man? Whichever, it was desperately slipshod. Carvalho later went off with a sore hamstring, but it is not thought to be serious.
“We gave a really good account of ourselves,” said the Ipswich manager Jim Magilton. “With a little more quality on the ball we may have had something more.”
There was, though, always the sense that Chelsea, for all their anxiety, would prevail. Two free-kicks — both “exquisite” to use Wilkins’s term – confirmed the win, Ballack bending in from 25 yards, before Frank Lampard crashed in a third from 10 yards further out.
A comfortable win in the end, but not necessarily a convincing one.
Match details
Chelsea: Cech, Bosingwa, Carvalho (Ivanovic 70), Alex, Ashley Cole, Belletti, Ballack (Deco 79), Lampard, Malouda (Drogba 58), Kalou, Anelka.Subs: Cudicini, Ferreira, Mancienne, Stoch.Goals: Ballack 16, 59, Lampard 85.
Ipswich: Richard Wright, David Wright, McAuley, Bruce, Garvan, Miller (Quinn 81), Counago, Norris, Balkestein, Haynes (Lisbie 60), Walters (Stead 71).Subs: Supple, Bowditch, Shumulikoski, Thatcher.Booked: Bruce, Garvan, Lisbie. Goals: Bruce 34.
Ref: A Wiley (Staffordshire).
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Mail:
Chelsea 3 Ipswich 1: Lampard and Ballack spoil Town dreamBy IAN RIDLEY
Ipswich had been working with a hypnotist before this tie. For a while, their fans must have thought they were the ones in a trance as their side threatened the sort of upset to which Chelsea have looked vulnerable this season.Michael Ballack gave Chelsea a lead but Alex Bruce, son of Wigan manager Steve, emulated his dad's goalscoring prowess when patrolling Manchester United's defence. Ipswich even fashioned a chance to go ahead. Had that hypnotist convinced them they were all Pele?
Perhaps the manager didn't trust himself to address the press and sent his assistant, Ray Wilkins, instead. 'He's come in for stick but unnecessarily so,' said Wilkins. 'He's enjoying his job and feeling under no pressure.'Wilkins, among the most supportive of coaches, also defended Ballack, whose two goals were his first at Stamford Bridge this season.
The German, out of contract in the summer and criticised for his fitful contributions, had played though nursing an injury, and Wilkins said: 'His quality is what he gives you when he is not at the top of what he can produce. He probably covers more acreage than any other Chelsea player.'
The view from the outside might have been that Chelsea have been in turmoil this season, with their home form patchy and Didier Drogba, who started on the bench yesterday, a distraction.Championship side Burnley had prevailed here in the Carling Cup, and Southend pinched a late draw in the last round before Chelsea won through in a replay. It could just be, however, that Chelsea are getting stronger at the right stage of the season, though another hamstring injury to Ricardo Carvalho is a concern.Ipswich have now lost their last 10 games against Premier League sides. 'This should be more motivation to get promoted,' said their manager, Jim Magilton. Ballack made quick amends after shooting wide from close range. Lampard picked out Ashley Cole on the left with a neat floated ball that the left-back turned back across goal for Ballack to slide home. But Ipswich struck back.Carvalho fouled Pablo Counago 35 yards out and, from Owen Garvan's free-kick, the ball bounced off Carvalho on to Gareth McAuley before falling to Bruce, who drilled it in from close range.Scolari was furious, first at the free-kick, then with a defence who seemed unsure again whether to mark zonally or man-for-man. His mood darkened when Ipswich almost took the lead just before the break, Danny Haynes wastefully scooping over from Jon Walters's low cross.
The hour-mark approaching and Chelsea struggling again to unpick a tight defence, Scolari turned to Drogba, and within two minutes Chelsea were ahead.Nicolas Anelka set off on a determined run that Garvan halted only with a late tackle some 25 yards out. Cue Ballack. Chelsea sealed the game with an equally exciting goal by Lampard after David Norris had fouled Drogba.
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Independent:
Wright stuff is not enough to thwart brilliant Ballack
Chelsea 3 Ipswich Town 1
By Chris McGrath at Stamford Bridge
In what was presumably intended as an introduction to metropolitan wit, the stadium announcer declared that the 6,000 Ipswich fans had "probably come here by tractor". Not that they minded. One of their banners pronounced them to be "anti-modern football". And you could see their point, after their team – winners of this competition under Bobby Robson in 1978 – succumbed to three goals from two of the sport's most expensive midfielders, Michael Ballack and Frank Lampard. On the other hand, anyone could see that their respective strikes from free-kicks reflected only glory on the contemporary game.
Ipswich had apparently been assisted in their preparations by an Australian hypnotist, but began in a condition dangerously resembling somnambulism. They watched timidly as their lordly opponents, suave and energetic, created a series of early openings. It required barely a minute for Florent Malouda to force Richard Wright into the first of many saves, while Ballack, deftly picked out in the box by Nicolas Anelka, flashed wide in total isolation. Juliano Belletti, replacing the suspended Jon Obi Mikel in front of the defence, brought immediate assurance to the role, and within a quarter of an hour the dam had crumbled. Lampard chipped high into the box where a sliding prod from Ashley Cole was met, with another timely skid, by Ballack. Whether or not complacency infected their hosts, it is to Ipswich's credit that they now grew conviction, rather than otherwise. Petr Cech was relieved to see Tommy Miller's free-kick curl over the bar after Alex's clumsy hack on David Norris, but the next transgression, a difference of Iberian opinions between Ricardo Carvalho and Pablo Counago on the right, had rather graver consequences. Carvalho compounded matters by failing to deal with Owen Garvan's free-kick, which ricocheted on to Alex and into the path of Alex Bruce, who from six yards probably found his incredulity harder to conquer than the helpless Cech. Perhaps Ipswich had sensed that they were in danger of betraying their own, refined football pedigree. Jim Magilton, their manager, wants his players to be worthy of the knightly legacy of Alf Ramsey and Robson.
Chelsea's recent cup embarrassments here, at the hands of Burnley and Southend United, ensured that the home fans never relaxed. There were relieved cheers when Didier Drogba, banished for the two previous games, emerged from the bench as the hour approached. And within two minutes, Chelsea were ahead.
Luiz Felipe Scolari apparently views Drogba and Anelka as too dysfunctional a pairing, but disclosed his anxiety about the scoreline by instead replacing Malouda. Sure enough, it was Anelka who promptly won a free-kick 25 yards out, tripped by Garvan as he skipped through the middle. Wright was excellent all afternoon, but never had a prayer with Ballack's masterpiece.
And even that was surpassed, five minutes from time, when Lampard produced a still finer confection. To Ray Wilkins, Scolari's assistant, it was just icing on the cake. "Did you notice, at 3-1, the way he sprinted back 75 yards to make a tackle over the halfway line?" he asked. "And Michael covers probably more acreage than anyone else in the side – the work he puts in for the team is untouchable."
Ipswich, meanwhile, were sent back to the Championship knowing that things just ain't what they used to be. "I thought we gave a good account of ourselves, and had some really good opportunities," Magilton said. "I hope the experience of coming here should make the players even more motivated to get back in the Premier League. We want to come to places like this every week."
Attendance: 41,137
Referee: Alan Wiley
Man of the match: Ballack
Match rating: 7/10
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Observer:
Ballack double helps Chelsea plaster over deficiencies
Chelsea 3 Ballack 16, Ballack 59, Lampard 85 Ipswich Town 1 Bruce 34
Duncan Castles at Stamford Bridge
This ain't the job Luiz Felipe Scolari signed up for one sunny summer's day in Switzerland. Back then the Brazilian detected a squad of world-class players in search of a leader and expected the riches of Roman Abramovich to remain on tap for a little considered remedial work. What he did not envisage was the cascade of problems that has ensued.
Money for just one transfer of his choosing. None for a January when his squad are in obvious need of attacking reinforcement. A swathe of cutbacks on club expenditure that has irritated his players. Two ruptured cruciate ligaments plus a series of intermittent injuries that have affected almost every one of Chelsea's stellar names. And a group of players who compare his managerial moves with a trophy-winning predecessor.
There are difficulties in every game, set-piece goals conceded aplenty plus a worrying inability to brush aside lower-league opposition. Burnley have won here, Southend United drawn here and yesterday Ipswich Town came back from a goal down to fray Chelsea nerves once more. If two second-half free-kicks of unquestionable quality saw Scolari's team into the FA Cup's fifth round, they did not appear a team set fair to win that trophy.
"I thought we gave a right good account of ourselves," said Ipswich manager Jim Magilton correctly. "Scored a good set-piece goal and with one or two moments where with more care on the ball could have had even more."
Nought of any genuine concern, argued Ray Wilkins, after assuring us that Scolari "doesn't feel under pressure at all". "They did have a good spell, but we weren't too worried," said the Brazilian's assistant. "We've had similar circumstances with Burnley this year, Southend made it very tough for us, and this was always going to be exactly the same. But you're not too worried when you think of the quality we have. There was always going to be a period when we'd take hold of the game and create some chances."
For all Scolari's efforts to preach spirit over style, there was an early inertia to his team. Passes drifted astray – notably when José Bosingwa ­initiated an Ipswich attack that culminated in a free header for Danny Haynes – and the attack operated as individuals, not a unit. In their favour was the visitors' unadulterated ambition; Jim Magilton taking 4-4-2 Championship shape to the Bridge and opening the midfield to Chelsea.
On the quarter-hour, space was converted into advantage as Frank Lampard passed perceptively beyond Ipswich's right-back and Ashley Cole squared first time for a sliding Michael Ballack to score. The comfort of the finish, unfortunately, spread to his team.
Chelsea decelerated, content to hold possession and pick their shots from outside the area. Loose passes proliferated and ill-considered tackles ceded free-kicks. From one, David Wright curled the ball into a phalanx of static ­markers, its ricochet falling for Alex Bruce to shoot past Cech. Though Florent Malouda almost found an immediate reply, Chelsea remained susceptible. Sprinting away from a home attack, Owen Garvan and Jon Walters teed up Haynes for a strike the winger should have kept under the crossbar. Chelsea responded with more long-range shots.
Their predictability was broken by the return of Didier Drogba from two matches of first-team exclusion. The striker's mood improved by the knowledge that Manchester City valued him enough to offer to double his £91,000-a-week wages, his first touches worked Nicolas Anelka towards the Ipswich penalty area, where the Frenchman was halted by Garvan. ­Ballack assessed the distance and lifted the free-kick over wall and into top corner.
A couple of strong Ipswich chances and a tweaked Ricardo Carvalho hamstring later, Drogba won a set piece himself – Lampard converting from 35 yards with an audacity to match Ballack's elegance. The relief, you fear, may be temporary.
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NOTW:
CHELSEA 3, IPSWICH 1 Lampard thunderbolt lights up Stamford Bridge t From ROB SHEPHERD at Stamford Bridge, 24/01/2009
EVEN when Michael Ballack turns in an imperious match-winning display Frank Lampard comes along and steals the German’s thunder.
Having given Chelsea an early lead, Ballack then put his side back in control following an Alex Bruce equaliser.
Just when it seemed Ipswich might force a replay or even pull off a shock and win the game, Ballack produced a stunning 59th-minute free-kick that would have been the highlight of most games.
Ballack, who hadn’t exactly pulled all the strings but was Chelsea’s most influential player, soon took his bow.
Until then Lampard had been very low key by his standards.
His shooting had been wayward and quite frankly after his emotionally-charged match-saving display against Stoke the previous week, the adrenalin wasn’t pumping.
But in the 85th minute Didier Drogba, who had come in from the cold and off the bench, won a free-kick more than 35 yards out and right of centre.
It was so far out that Ipswich didn’t feel the need for a full wall. Surely, Lampard would send over a cross. But no. He strode up and unleashed a savage thunderbolt.
The shot was so hard and true that even the tiniest of deflections barely altered the trajectory as it flashed way beyond the reach of Richard Wright and into the far corner.
Ballack’s dead-ball effort had oozed class but Lampard’s simply had the greater wow factor.
Free
When Ballack arrived on a free transfer from Bayern Munich three years ago earning £130,000 a week, many suggested Lampard would be left in the shadows — or even forced out.
Lampard responded not only by becoming Chelsea’s talisman but also their top earner, with Ballack playing second fiddle.
And with the German’s contract up at the end of the season, he may have to face the prospect of taking a pay cut or moving on.
Certainly, on the face of it, Ballack has done little so far this season to make a case that Chelsea would be foolish to let him go on a free. He has yet to score in the Premier League, his only strike before yesterday having come in the 4-1 replay win at Southend in the previous round.
Assistant coach Ray Wilkins admitted: “Yes, that’s surprising but a lot of people don’t always see the contribution Michael makes.
“He covers more acres than anyone, in that regard he is untouchable.”
Untouchable? Maybe for Germany but not for Chelsea. Yesterday, though, he made his most significant contribution this season.
Phil Scolari had put out a strong side and it appeared as though it would be a cakewalk when Ballack slid home a low Ashley Cole cross in the 16th minute.
But while Ballack looked up for more, the rest around him — Lampard included — took their foot off the gas.
Gradually, Ipswich worked their way back and in the 34th minute punished Chelsea, not for the first time this season, for lax defending at a set-piece.
An Owen Garvan free-kick bounced off Ricardo Carvalho, who later suffered a hamstring injury, to Steve Bruce’s son Alex and he lashed the ball home from close range.
Either side of half-time Ipswich showed flashes they might pose Chelsea problems with striker Pablo Counago producing some deft and threatening touches.
But just before the hour Ballack curled home a glorious free-kick from 22 yards.
After Jon Stead then Kevin Lisbie went agonisingly close to nicking a replay, Lampard made sure he retained the free-kick bragging rights with that stunning late strike.
It was bliss for him and the Chelsea punters but, er, a kick in the Ballacks for their German midfielder.
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