Monday, November 08, 2010

liverpool 0-2





Independent:

Torres tears Terry apart to give Hodgson the tactical honours
Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0

By Ian Herbert at Anfield

Carlo Ancelotti has not reserved his eloquence for Fernando Torres in the past few weeks. While his memorable description of how Steven Gerrard wears his Liverpool shirt "inside him" was part of a paean that sounded suspiciously like a proposition a few days ago, the Italian has persistently rejected the notion of courting the Spaniard. "I've always said Fernando Torres is not our aim for the future," Ancelotti said last week.
It would take a particularly obdurate manager to maintain that indifference today towards a striker whose willingness this summer to stay on for another season at Anfield is understood to have come at the price of a gentleman's agreement, which allows Torres to leave at the end of the season if a strong offer comes in. It was not just two goals of the top order which reminded us of the Torres who has been missing – the dissection of John Terry yesterday was a throwback to the ritual humiliation of Nemanja Vidic at Old Trafford 20 months ago – but the swagger, the movement, the holding play and the spirit he engendered in others. The only other player on the field yesterday capable of create a sense of apprehension like this is Didier Drogba and indeed you could hear the groan around Anfield when he appeared stripped for action after the interval, the dot matrix board telling that the fever which had left him afflicted on Saturday night had abated. Without Drogba's momentum, Pepe Reina may not have required the two top-class saves which contributed to the course of the afternoon.
But Torres had done enough by then; so much, in fact, that you wondered why the crying need for a player operating alongside or just behind him – it was virtually a 4-4-2 formation in the way the returning Dirk Kuyt started – had not been attended to by Roy Hodgson before the whole sorry saga of Liverpool's last three months had unravelled. Now for Wednesday night at Wigan – a venue where, in the course of a bad defeat last spring, Torres revealed in himself the worst of the introspection which you feel contributes as much to his struggles as his fitness. Only when the delivers against the rest as he does the best – and Ancelotti's indifference to Torres certainly gave him a point to prove – can we assess if we are witnessing the return of the genuine article.
For a day though, Torres was back, and he hauled a fair others along for the ride. Lucas Leiva, a maligned and unfashionable player who has for the last month been quietly dispelling the notion that he has only ever been at Anfield because of Rafael Benitez's misguided loyalty, contributed much to Chelsea's supply line being cut off. Raul Meireles left Anfield to an ovation. And for 45 minutes Gerrard did wear that Liverpool shirt "inside him" and gave Chelsea's Ramires the same kind of welcome he received in defeat at Manchester City in September. At both ends of the M62, the Portuguese never quite recovered from being left on the seat of his pants on the turf.
It is tempting to ascribe Chelsea's defeat – a genuinely extraordinary one given how listless Liverpool have been of late – to the discomfiting effect of sides who press them hard away from home, though Ancelotti's pragmatic – and impressive – response last night seemed a reasonable one. He had actually encountered a perfect Mersey storm. No side can enter a game minus Michael Essien, Frank Lampard and Drogba and be entirely unaffected.
The failure to send Ashley Cole and Yuri Zhirkov up against the rookie right-back Martin Kelly more often seemed the only tactical oversight. But that also had something to do with Kelly, selected after Glen Johnson and Sotirios Kyrgiakos called off sick yesterday morning. Older heads than the 20-year-old, whose sole experience of Premier League football was the 19 minutes Benitez gave him in March when Liverpool against Portsmouth, would have been overwhelmed by a full League debut against the champions. But Kelly's two cool headed interceptions early on set the tone. He was not out of his league, despite blagging Florent Malouda's shirt at the end.
Not even Hodgson could have anticipated the support act he had laid on for Torres delivering quite so precisely according to plan when Kuyt, taking on a short pass from Jamie Carragher on 11 minutes, looped a pass over Terry's head for Torres to take down with a wonderful piece of right-foot control and crash into the ground and home, to Petr Cech's right. The second strike was finer. Lucas had just conceded possession, when Meireles won it back and found Torres who required five delicate touches before curling into the top right-hand corner.
Drogba's arrival after the interval created an immediate tension in Liverpool. A minute and a half had elapsed before Martin Skrtel, previously assured, was clattering into the back of him. Reina turned away a powerful shot from Zhirkov, then got his chest in the way of Malouda's point-blank effort from Drogba's low cross. When Drogba's shot under Reina's body deflected up against the crossbar Chelsea knew it was not their day.
Torres believes the best might be yet to come and reflected last night that "I'll be at my best sooner or later, I'm sure." Hodgson, whose job is under scrutiny just like any manager under new ownership, is banking on it being the former.

Match facts
Man of the match Torres Match rating 8/10
Possession Liverpool 56% Chelsea 44%
Shots on target Liverpool 8 Chelsea 5
Referee H Webb (S Yorks) Attendance 44,238

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Mail:

Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0: Fernando Torres gives Blues double trouble as Reds' revival continues

By Matt Lawton

What a remarkable transformation. In Fernando Torres, in Liverpool, even in Roy Hodgson.
It was only 21 days earlier, after all, that Hodgson watched his side stutter to an utterly demoralising defeat at Everton.
He sat in the press conference that followed, the manager of a Liverpool team seemingly drowning in the bottom three of the Barclays Premier League, and tried to defend a display so abject that a watching John W Henry must have wondered exactly what £300million had just bought New England Sports Ventures.
At Anfield, Henry and his colleagues must have been feeling rather more pleased with their purchase. They do have some players capable of matching their considerable ambition. Not least in the form of a striker who, only a week ago, looked like a poor imitation of one of the world's finest. From Bolton to here, the change in Torres was extraordinary. At the Reebok he was wretched. At Anfield he was awesome, scoring two quite brilliant goals to condemn Chelsea to only their second League defeat of the season and propel Liverpool to ninth in the table.
In the execution of both his firsthalf strikes there were flashes of the player we have grown to admire; the same player who followed a brilliant first season at Liverpool with the winning goal in the final of Euro 2008; who was then voted among the top three footballers on the planet. If there remain concerns about his pace, and whether those knee and groin problems have robbed him of the ability to accelerate in the same fashion, he has certainly rediscovered much that is good about his game. The predatory instincts were back, as was the intelligent movement and the touch of a genius. It was best demonstrated in the first goal, even if the finish for the second was more spectacular. For Hodgson, it was obviously a relief to mark Henry's first League game at Anfield with such a memorable victory. 'Until this, my most enjoyable day at the club was when I arrived in the summer,' he said as he celebrated his first ever win against Chelsea. 'And it's been downhill ever since.'
The difference in his team was obvious. Confidence. The confidence that was missing for the first two-and-a-half months of the season but began to return with that defeat of Blackburn and now appears to be back in abundance.
Four straight wins is some run for a team who were on thier knees at Goodison and you sense they can now build on this, despite the fact that a shortage of top-level players will undermine their chances of seriously challenging for honours. Even Henry must realise that. Even Henry, with his limited knowledge of his new sport, must have recognised that yesterday they beat a Chelsea team weakened significantly by the absence of key individuals. Didier Drogba's entrance was delayed until half-time - Carlo Ancelotti said he was suffering with a fever on the eve of the match - but it was in midfield that the game was lost. With no Michael Essien or Frank Lampard, Chelsea lacked their usual strength and power, and Liverpool benefited enormously as a result. Lucas, too often a lightweight at this level, actually looked quite dominant at times.
There were a number of good Liverpool performances. While Dirk Kuyt was outstanding for a player just back from injury, Raul Meireles had one of his best games for the club, as did young Martin Kelly as emergency cover for Glen Johnson at full back. It was Kuyt, though, who provided the ball for that opening goal from Torres in the 11th minute with a delightful diagonal ball that the Spaniard anticipated brilliantly. First came the touch to bring it under control, then the combination of speed and strength to escape the clutches of John Terry and finally the finish, lifted over the advancing Petr Cech. Chelsea finished the game having enjoyed 60 per cent possession, mainly because Liverpool struggled to retain the ball after the break. But they offered little in response and paid for a lack of urgency and finesse with the goal Torres then produced just before the interval. What started with Ashley Cole losing the ball to Meireles continued when the Portuguese midfielder delivered an excellent pass into the path of Torres, who took two or three strides before unleashing a curling right-footed shot that squeezed through blue shirts and between a flat-footed Cech and his left-hand post. It was the Spaniard's 44th goal in 47 League appearances at Anfield, further proof that Henry must do all he can to keep him at the club. With the arrival of Drogba came an improvement in Chelsea's football and with it the need for some fine defending, not least from Pepe Reina, who excelled in denying Florent Malouda from close range in the 66th minute.
In fairness to Liverpool, Cech had to produce a similar save to stop Kuyt from increasing Liverpool's advantage eight minutes after that. But when Nicolas Anelka then saw a shot bounce off Reina and strike the underside of the crossbar, only the rapid reactions of Jamie Carragher prevented Drogba from reducing the deficit. Understandably, Hodgson was as delighted as Ancelotti was disappointed to see his side's lead at the top of the Premier League cut to two points. Hodgson has been under enormous pressure since Henry and his business partners bought this football club and even on Friday, when the American held court with a selection of reporters in London, he could not give the former Fulham manager many guarantees. This, and indeed the three straight wins that came before it, will have bought Hodgson some time, and a quick glance down the fixture list would suggest they can climb higher still over the next fortnight. After trips to Wigan and Stoke they will host West Ham. 'I'll enjoy ninth for a little while,' said Hodgson with a smile.
It's not the kind of statement a Liverpool manager would usually make, but it's a measure of just how desperate a situation Liverpool were in as recently as three weeks ago.

MATCH FACTS

LIVERPOOL (4-4-2): Reina 8; Kelly 7,Carragher 8, Skrtel 7, Konchesky 6;Meireles 7 (Spearing 90min), Gerrard 7,Lucas 7, Rodriguez 6; Kuyt 8(Shelvey 84), Torres 9 (Ngog 87).Subs not used: Hansen, Wilson, Poulsen, Jovanovic. Scorer: Torres: 11, 44.

CHELSEA (4-3-2-1): Cech 7; Ivanovic 6(Bosingwa 70, 6), Alex 6, Terry 6, Cole 6;Ramires 5, Mikel 6, Zhirkov 5(Sturridge 76); Kalou 6 (Drogba 46, 6),Malouda 6; Anelka 6. Subs not used: Turnbull, Ferreira, McEachran, Kakuta. Booked: Zhirkov, Alex.
Man of the match: Fernando Torres.

Referee: Howard Webb 8.Attendance: 44,238.

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Guardian:

Fernando Torres strikes twice as Liverpool stun Chelsea
Liverpool 2 Torres 11, Torres 44 Chelsea 0

Kevin McCarra at Anfield

A chilling darkness was to be expected on this wintry evening but Chelsea had other causes to shiver. This after all was exactly the sort of occasion to give the Premier League leaders a true insight into their condition.
The outcome will be of particular encouragement to their closest pursuers, Manchester United, who are two points adrift, because it seemed to show that the losers may lack energy.
There is a cadre of veterans in Carlo Ancelotti's team and while their wisdom looked a great asset when Spartak Moscow were beaten 4-1 at Stamford Bridge in the Champions League on Wednesday, they had not saved anything like enough vigour to withstand Liverpool. Fernando Torres, scorer of the goals, gave a magnificent display and his clincher was superb.
So far as schedules are concerned it is worth noting that the victors had a day's less rest after their European League win over Napoli. It might be sensible for the Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich, to treat this fixture as a window through which he could take a very clear view of the task to come.
There will be a need for rebuilding and although the vast means he employed after completing his takeover are not expected to made available again the cost could still be rather high.
Stirring as the teenager Josh McEachran is, there is no sight of a whole gang of fearless young men bursting through to seize their destiny. As it was, Ancelotti did not turn to youth when making his substitutions until the last of them, the 21-year-old Daniel Sturridge. A second loss in the League does not doom their bid to retain the title but it was a reminder that the scope for developing the side is restricted at present.
Although the addition of Torres would have been a spectacular opening to such a project for Chelsea, his employers hung on to him and that will be critical to the club's hopes. Liverpool looked tireless but when they eventually did retreat it was done to some extent on the grounds that Torres's goals had already been scored by the interval.
This outing marked a resurgence for the Spaniard. He had not struck twice for his club in any match since April. Torres had already been crucial to Liverpool in other respects during this campaign, but it was clear he was still a little short of peak form.
That may have reflected the aftermath of injury that had hampered him at the World Cup, even if a winners' medal must have been therapeutic. Chelsea should feel that they encouraged him further.
It was hard for them to cause any concern to Liverpool since Didier Drogba remained on the bench until the second half after suffering with a fever during the night. Even so, Chelsea's means should continue to be too great for that to be seen as a cause for despair and Nicolas Anelka could hardly be dismissed as a makeshift replacement. The Stamford Bridge side have suffered at this ground before but their anonymity in the opening 45 minutes came as a shock. Although the energy levels rose thereafter, it felt as if there was a mental fatigue.
Torres would have had any opponent making a mental note to check his pension plan but Chelsea were jaded for too long and a revival went unrewarded, with Drogba's effort breaking off José Reina and on to the bar.
It is only proper, all the same, to see the vigour of a confident Liverpool as the key factor. Their striker was uncontainable. Torres's return to health and multiple goal-scoring ways is a key factor contributing to the team's overall ability. That was certainly expressed in the confidence of a side clinching their fourth victory in a row.
Roy Hodgson's formation was bold by modern standards, with Torres accompanied by another outright forward in Dirk Kuyt. And indeed it was the Dutchman who released Torres to burst through from the right in the 11th minute and dink his finish beyond Reina.
The surprise in the remainder of the first half lay in the passivity of the visitors. Liverpool's glowing self-belief illuminated their second goal in the 44th minute. After Ashley Cole had lost his balance Raul Meireles found Torres and the striker beat Branislav Ivanovic before curving a beautiful shot across Petr Cech.
Chelsea, with Drogba introduced, were much improved but Liverpool had readied themselves to guard the lead, even if that had to entail an outstanding parry by Reina in the 66th minute from Florent Malouda after a cross from the substitute. There might even have been a third for Liverpool but Cech pulled off a save from Kuyt.
Hodgson remained phlegmatic when Liverpool looked incapable of winning a game and, conversely, will hardly suppose the club has now been transformed but the atmosphere in which he now works will be stimulating.


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Sun:

Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0

By PHIL THOMAS

IF this is Fernando Torres when he is still to hit his peak, heaven help the rest when he does. Reports of the Spaniard's demise - and, for that matter, Roy Hodgson's - are clearly wide of the mark.
A quick word with John Terry, Ashley Cole and Co would soon back that up after the Liverpool hitman tore them to shreds - and blew the title race wide open into the bargain.
At this rate all those body-language experts who have been so quick to put the boot in are soon going to be out of business!
A week ago, Hodgson found himself having to defend Europe's deadliest finisher once again after a toothless show at the Reebok.
While the world and his dog were jumping on the Torres bandwagon, Kop boss Hodgson was adamant the Reds golden boy was close to hitting top form.
Well, if the last laugh is indeed the loudest, you would have heard the guffaws from the manager's office echoing all the way across Stanley Park last night.
Rivalled only, in fact, by the bellows of delight along the M62 as Alex Ferguson raised a glass of the finest red in honour of his fiercest rivals.
If the Manchester United chief was already on Cloud Nine at Arsenal's defeat, it will take a week to get his feet back on the ground after Chelsea followed suit.
Yes, the champions were indeed truly awful as they lost it in the first half. But that was more down to Liverpool's own magnificence than their own clangers.
And tormentor in chief, as he has been so often against them in the past, was Torres, with two finishes that stuck two fingers in the face of all those hinting he was on skid row.
Strike one came after only 11 minutes, with a goal that had Carlo Ancelotti tearing his hair out at its simplicity.
Dirk Kuyt's long crossfield ball drifted over the head of Terry, and Torres - after taking one touch to control - slipped it easily past Petr Cech.
It certainly brought a smile to the face of John W Henry in the directors' box - although co-owner Tom Werner had to rely on TV replays after getting to his seat 60 seconds after the opener.
Strike two came bang on half-time, with a sublime strike as good as you will see here all season.
The fact it arrived courtesy of a Cole cock-up only heightened the pleasure for Kopites. Heightened it, in fact, for just about everyone outside of Chelsea.
The England left-back slipped as he meandered into midfield, Lucas fed Torres and the Spaniard took one step to his right before unleashing an unstoppable shot into the far corner.
And that was effectively game, set and match even before they had taken a sip of the half-time cuppa - certainly the way Chelsea had played.
Outrun, outbattled and out-thought in just about every area of the pitch - but in midfield in particular. Brazilian workhorse Lucas - so often the butt of cruel jokes in his Anfield career - was only a gnat's you-know-what behind Torres with a magnificent display.
Yet naturally the Spaniard's heroics stole the show - and continued his own devastating record against the Blues as he did so.
Eight times the striker has lined up against them and six times he has found the net. If, as the mischief-makers have suggested, the Kop hotshot would eventually like to chance his arm at Stamford Bridge, he could hardly have written a better application.
But really this was far, far more than a one-man show.
There were 11 heroes in red and not far short of the same number of headless chickens in blue.
The fact Pepe Reina did not have a serious shot to save until the 65th minute was proof of that. And when the Liverpool keeper was called into action, what an intervention it was, somehow scooping Florent Malouda's point-blank effort to safety.
Mind you, if there was any justice, the Reds would have already been out of sight by then anyway, they were THAT much in control.
Maxi Rodriguez had half-volleyed another fine chance over, Martin Kelly's screamer was bound for the corner until it struck Terry's knee, while Yuri Zhirkov survived a serious handball scare in the penalty area. Yes, Chelsea did pick up after the break, but they genuinely could not have been as bad again.
And for their part, Liverpool were content to hold what they already had and rely on the odd counter to maybe pinch another on the break.
Besides Reina's wonder save to deny Malouda, he deflected a Nicolas Anelka strike on to the bar, while Jamie Carragher somehow nicked it away from Didier Drogba as the Ivorian - on as a half-time sub - waited to pounce on the rebound. But even then the Reds could have added to their own haul, Cech mirroring his opposite number's great stop with one of his own to thwart Kuyt.
Not that it mattered a jot by then. Liverpool were home and dry, while Chelsea bore the look of men who knew it simply was not going to be their day.
When you are as bad as they were in that first period, it did not take a genius to have come to that conclusion already.

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Star:
LIVERPOOL 2 - CHELSEA 0: SEXY TORRES GIVES ROY HODGSON BIG SMILE

By Kevin Francis

A HOLLYWOOD superstar was watching – but it was red-hot Fernando Torres who stole the show at Anfield yesterday.
Sex in the City star Kim Cattrall, who was born in Liverpool, was a guest of the club as a Torres-inspired Liverpool continued their revival.
And she saw Torres receive a standing ovation from the Kop when he left the pitch after rediscovering the goal-scoring form that has been eluding him this season.
Quite simply, he was brilliant in a game where he scored twice and took his tally to 44 goals in 47 games at Anfield.
His efforts sank the champions and earned Liverpool their third League win on the trot – and it was certainly the best win enjoyed so far by manager Roy Hodgson.
Much of the credit for that must go to the determination of a Liverpool team that is clearly growing in confidence.
Steven Gerrard was in typically inspirational form with a real sleeves-rolled up display.
Torres struck first in the 11th minute with a goal that contained the kind of class and composure we all know he possesses.
Dirk Kuyt, back in the side after injury, threaded a lovely pass through to him just inside the penalty area.
Despite the close attentions of John Terry, the Spaniard calmly collected the pass before striding forward.
He then stroked the ball past keeper Petr Cech for his fourth goal in three League games against Chelsea at Anfield.
Torres pounced again in magnificent style after 45 minutes with a stunning shot that gave Cech no chance.
Raul Meireles set Torres off and the striker squared up defender Branislav Ivanovic. Then, without even appearing to look up, he curled a marvellous right foot shot into the far corner of the net with Cech completely stranded.
The goal came at an ideal time for Liverpool against Chelsea who had left recovering flu victim Didier Drogba on the subs’ bench. But, with that two-goal deficit at half-time, they pressed him into service after the interval in the hope of getting them back into the game.
Liverpool entered the match on the back of an unbeaten three-match run that had done much to raise hopes of better things to come.
And they certainly are playing with much more confidence these days as they strive to jettison memories of their woeful start to the campaign.
They took the game to the table-toppers at every opportunity with Torres the player who always a real menace. His goal certainly had a galvanising effect on his team-mates, who pushed upfield whenever the opportunity arose.
Liverpool’s pressure was so great, in fact, that Chelsea did not win their first corner until the 39th minute!
They did mount considerably more pressure in the second half with Ramires heading over the bar in one near miss.
Then, in the 61st minute, keeper Pepe Reina did well to palm away a cracking shot from Yury Zhirkov.
Reina was at his brilliant best a few minutes later to block a Florent Malouda shot that looked certain to find the back of the net. Liverpool, although more on the back foot in the second period, still managed to pose all kinds of problems for the visitors.
They almost increased their lead with a delightful shot from Kuyt in the 75th minute that flashed into the side-netting.
Chelsea came desperately close in the 87th minute when a Nicolas Anelka shot hit Reina and spun up, hitting the underside of the bar.
It didn’t go over the line and that summed up Chelsea’s day – one that most certainly belonged to Liverpool.

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Telegraph:

Liverpool 2 Chelsea 0

By Henry Winter

Somebody in the Liverpool dressing room either has a mischievous sense of humour or a surprising weakness for late Seventies soft rock. Fernando Torres, Steven Gerrard, Lucas and company celebrated this victory with repeated playings of Sultans of Swing. Dire Straits at Anfield? Only on the dressing-room iPod.
This great old stadium was certainly rocking on Sunday, revelling in the sight of Torres back in goalscoring business, taking his league tally to 60 in 90 appearances, a ratio that speaks eloquently of the Spaniard’s heavyweight quality. Torres’s brace also provides a timely reminder of the sporting adage that form is temporary, class permanent, and he is a class act.
Nobody here will get carried away by three league wins on the spin but a new mood of cautious optimism does permeate Anfield. There is new ownership and a new impetus about the place. There is certainly a new spring in Torres’s step. And in the Kop’s. Liverpool fans were bouncing up and down, relishing the striker tearing the champions’ defence to little blue pieces.
His first goal was of particular embarrassment to Ashley Cole and John Terry, while his second left Petr Cech a bemused bystander as the ball swept inexorably home. Some of the rockets set off last night could have been distress signals in the Chelsea back line.
As well as lifting Liverpool spirits, a deserved triumph rooted in collective endeavour, the right game plan and the resharpened cutting edge that is Torres also carried a wider significance. No longer are the Premier League’s chasing pack choking on Chelsea’s vapour trails.No longer are the champions looking invincible. In stifling Carlo Ancelotti’s side, Liverpool matched Manchester City’s work-rate. Yuri Zhirkov and Ramires simply lacked the power to deal with Gerrard and Lucas. Didier Drogba, restricted to second-half action, was struggling with a fever.
Chelsea’s defence certainly caught a cold from the whirlwind called Torres. For all the praise inevitably lavished on this elegant conquistador, plaudits also need bestowing on others who march to the Mersey beat. When Chelsea sought to lay siege to Liverpool’s goal in a breathless second period, Pepe Reina stood defiant, denying Nicolas Anelka and Florent Malouda. Jamie Carragher rolled back the years to extra-time in Istanbul in 2005, again thwarting an Ancelotti side with his tackling and marvellous will to win.
To Carragher’s right, Martin Kelly delivered a far more secure defensive performance than Glen Johnson might have done. England’s right-back reported for work complaining of a groin problem, which might have proved a blessing in disguise for Liverpool. Barring one memorable occasion, Kelly showed no inclination to cross the halfway line as Johnson does. He just stayed fully focused on frustrating Malouda and Ashley Cole.
Kelly’s first mistake did not arrive until the 77th minute, when Drogba tricked him. Tirelessly shielding Kelly was Raul Meireles, stationed on the right of a 4-4-2 formation but occasionally drifting inside to good, creative effect.
The king of midfield, even eclipsing Meireles and Gerrard, was Lucas, the Brazilian who seized the responsibility demanded of a central two against Chelsea’s three. Lucas was immense, tackling relentlessly, closing down John Obi Mikel, Zhirkov and Ramires, cutting the supply lines to Malouda, Anelka, Salomon Kalou and, later, Drogba.
Lucas was assisted by the selflessness of Dirk Kuyt, who kept dropping back into midfield while always being quick to support Torres.
Tactically, Hodgson had sprung a surprise, starting Liverpool in a 4-4-2 system clearly designed to get bodies closer to Torres. Kuyt buzzed between the lines, disrupting Mikel’s attempts to launch attacks, but always looking to release Torres.
As in the 11th minute. When Martin Skrtel drilled a free-kick forward, Kuyt accelerated it down the inside-right channel to Torres. Gone was the sluggish striker of recent times, banished was the shadow of a world-class striker. This was the real Torres, sharp and hungry, darting through, his strength and pace accounting for Cole and Terry and then a calm finish defeating Cech. Confidence flooded through the Spaniard as if the strike were a shot of adrenalin. He promptly tried his luck again, this time from range, this time over.
Liverpool were leading, the Kop was bouncing, but Chelsea are Chelsea, worthy champions and deserving of great respect. Kalou went close with a header. Kelly made three important interceptions, his commitment and awareness drawing wild applause. On the other flank, Paul Konchesky has yet to win over the Liverpool faithful but one closing down of Terry earned a prolonged salute.
Liverpool were so up for this. Whenever a blue shirt attempted to dwell on the ball a red swarm stormed in. Whenever Liverpool had possession, they charged through the gears. Lucas drove through until cynically blocked by Zhirkov. Kelly cut in and saw a shot blocked by Terry.
Torres was causing Alex and Terry no end of problems. Such was the menace emanating from Liverpool’s No?9 that Terry lost all composure, deciding to stop his tormentor with a high knee to the back that demanded a card. Leniency came from Howard Webb, who otherwise handled a manic game well.
Torres was mainly inflicting pain, striking again a minute before the interval. When Cole slipped near the centre circle, Meireles pounced, advanced and swept the ball left to Torres. His response was majestic.
Branislav Ivanovic seemed turned to stone as Torres turned inside, before dispatching the ball into the net.
Chelsea called for the cavalry, to Drogba, and they were undoubtedly energised, forcing Liverpool on to the back foot for large periods of the second half. The pressure built and built but they never broke through. Drogba sent a free-kick wide. Ramires headed over. Malouda was thwarted only by a remarkable reaction save from Reina.
Liverpool fought hard, their commitment embodied by Kuyt. Like Torres, the Dutchman received the compliment of a flattening by Terry. Kuyt made light of the offence, soon bringing a superb save from Cech, before departing to a standing ovation. Gerrard was working overtime putting out fires, running back to cut out an Anelka cross from the left. The Frenchman then attacked from the right, forcing Reina into another fine save, the ball diverting on to the bar.
The storm withstood, Liverpool almost added a third but Cech pulled off an exceptional save from Maxi. Soon it was all over bar the singing.
Fernando stings Blues . . . and he’s a big hit with John Barnes tooTorres made it seven goals in eight games against Chelsea with his double at Anfield on Sunday.
2007-08Aug 19 2007 First competitive goal for Liverpool, opener in a 1-1 league draw at Anfield.April 30 2008 Equaliser in away leg of Champions League semi-final, to take tie into extra-time, but Liverpool lose 3-2 (4-3 on aggregate).
2008-09Feb 2, 2009 Scores both goals in a 2-0 league home win.April 8, 2009 On target in the 3-1 home defeat in Champions League, quarter-final, first leg.
2010-11Nov 7, 2010 Both goals at Anfield in 2-0 win against league leaders.
Sky TV informed the world during Sunday’s half-time break that the wife of their pundit and former Liverpool player John Barnes had just given birth to a baby boy, named Alexander. “No, no, it’s baby Fernando,” joked Barnes.

Thursday, November 04, 2010

spartak moscow 4-1




Independent:

Drogba returns to fire rampant Chelsea into the knockout stages
Chelsea 4 Spartak Moscow 1

By Mark Fleming at Stamford Bridge

The buzz at Chelsea at the moment is all about giving youth a chance to shine, but when push comes to shove, it is still the club's reliable old pros who step up and deliver. With John Terry rested and Frank Lampard still injured, it was a rejigged Chelsea team that took on the Russian visitors. However, after a goalless first-half display in which Chelsea struggled to find their rhythm, a wonderful goal from Nicolas Anelka and a penalty from Didier Drogba put the result beyond doubt and put Chelsea through to the knock-out stages with four wins out of four in Group F.
At the end of the game, Josh McEachran, Gaël Kakuta and Daniel Sturridge were all on the pitch, trying to impress manager Carlo Ancelotti. However, if Chelsea are finally to achieve their unfulfilled ambition of lifting the Champions League trophy this season, it is to Terry and Lampard, Drogba and Anelka that Ancelotti will be turning.
Victory over Spartak Moscow affords Chelsea's experienced Italian manager the chance to rotate more of his players in the last two group games. But when the business end of the Champions League kicks off in the middle of February, he will need his best, most experienced players to be fit and flying if Chelsea are finally to win Europe's premier prize.
Victory over Blackburn at the weekend earned Ancelotti his 50th win as Chelsea manager in his 71st game since accepting Roman Abramovich's offer to give his team "personality". It took Ancelotti four more games to reach the landmark than Jose Mourinho managed in 2004-05. In the past, that kind of statistic might have been used as evidence the Italian was not quite up to the standards set by the Special One, but winning the Double last season of Premier League and FA Cup has put paid to those comparisons.
Ancelotti has barely put a foot wrong in his 17 months in charge at the Bridge, the one glitch being Chelsea's elimination to Internazionale in the first stage of the Champions League knock-out stages in March, when Chelsea lost both legs of the tie and were made to look powerless. In their attempt to make good this year, Chelsea are intent on making as few mistakes as possible in the competition, to control "the details", as Ancelotti described his intention in the build-up to this match.
Yet it was with an eye on Chelsea's trip to Anfield on Sunday that Ancelotti decided to rest both Terry and Michael Essien, who has a slight toe injury, from the starting team to face the Russians. In the absence of Terry, and also Lampard, who sources say will not be fit to face Liverpool, the armband was passed to Drogba, making his first Champions League appearance of the season following a two-game suspension and then illness.
Drogba, such a key performer for Chelsea, has been a little off colour in recent weeks after a flying start to the season. At times in recent games he has seemed too concerned with creating chances for others, drifting wide or dropping too deep. It was noticeable in the opening exchanges last night that he stuck more rigidly to his role as the team's main goal threat.
He pounced quickly on a short pass from Ramires but his shot was saved by Spartak goalkeeper Andriy Dykan at his near post. Drogba then found himself clean through, put in by a long ball from John Obi Mikel, but after brushing off the challenges of two Spartak defenders, he scuffed his shot at Dykan.
Soon after, another chance fell to Drogba, but the Ivory Coast international headed over the crossbar from Yuri Zhirkov's corner. Chelsea continued to push Spartak on the defensive and Alex missed from a matter of yards from another corner, the ball skewing off his shin and high into the crowd.
Anelka also curled an early shot not too wide of the far post, as Chelsea dominated. Yet Spartak showed they were not coming to London merely to allow their hosts to roll them over and Petr Cech in the Chelsea goal had to get down sharply to save an attempt from 25 yards from Spartak's Brazilian captain Alex.
Chelsea took the lead four minutes into the second half, when Anelka produced a moment of genius. Starting on the right, the French forward passed inside to Salomon Kalou and continued his run to receive the ball from the Ivory Coast international. Anelka's momentum had seemingly taken him too close to the byline but as Dykan rushed out recklessly from his goal the Chelsea man produced a finish of the highest quality.
Ramires, who is gradually starting to find his feet following his £17m move from Benfica in the summer, unleashed a perfect 50-yard ball to the toe of Drogba, who was brought down by Evgeni Makeev. With Lampard sidelined, responsibilities for the penalty fell to Drogba, who found the bottom corner of the net for his first Champions League goal of the season. In all, Drogba's record in Europe bears comparison with the very best of the recent past, with 32 goals in 61 Champions League appearances.
Chelsea ensured their passage to the knock-out stages with a third goal in the 66th minute. Drogba floated over a free-kick from the right side and Branislav Ivanovic was left unchallenged to score with a powerful header.
Spartak pulled a goal back with four minutes left, although substitute Nikita Bazhenov looked suspiciously offside as he took the ball from Welliton's cross and fired past Cech. Ivanovic added a fourth for the home side in stoppage time, from a goalmouth scramble, to give Chelsea a comfortable passage to the knock-out stages.
Afterwards, Ancelotti singled out Anelka for praise. "Anelka was the key to opening the game," he said. "He scored a fantastic goal. He has experience. He maintains very good skill, ability, speed. Overall he is in the best moment of his career."


Match facts

Chelsea (4-3-3): Cech; Ferreira, Ivanovic, Alex, Cole; Ramires, Mikel (McEachran, 68), Zhirkov; Kalou, Drogba (Sturridge, 76), Anelka (Kakuta, 76). Substitutes not used: Turnbull (gk), Van Aanholt, Terry, Bruma.

Spartak Moscow (4-2-3-1): Dykan; Makeev, Pareja, Suchy, Ivanov; Ibson, Sheshukov (Drincic, 67); D Kombarov, Alex (Kozlov, 68), McGeady (Bazhenov, 79); Welliton. Substitutes not used: Belenov (gk), Sabitov, Khodyrev, Ananidze.

Booked: Chelsea Mikel Spartak Moscow D Kombarov, Ivanov.
Possession Chelsea 57%, Spartak Moscow 43%.
Shots on target Chelsea 6, Spartak Moscow 5.
Referee: Cuneyt Cakir (Turkey).Attendance 40,477.
Man of the match Anelka. Match rating 7/10.

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Guardian:

Branislav Ivanovic leads Chelsea's charge as Blues beat Spartak Moscow

Chelsea 4 Anelka 49, Drogba (pen) 62, Ivanovic 66, Ivanovic 90
Spartak Moscow 1 Bazhenov 86

Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge

Chelsea are quietly lethal. The victory over Spartak Moscow that clinches their place in the last 16 of the Champions League was comprehensive, yet the drubbing was methodical rather than ferocious. Despite all the attention paid to the club under Roman Abramovich's ownership, it is low-key expertise that makes his side such a force.
Goals mount up almost as an inevitability. There have been a dozen of them for Chelsea so far in Group F, and there were moments here when it seemed they could summon them at will. After the Spartak substitute Nikita Bazhenov had knocked in a low ball from Welliton with four minutes remaining, there was still a riposte as Branislav Ivanovic slammed home his second goal of the evening, in stoppage time.
It will mean little to Spartak but their goal was the first Petr Cech has conceded on this ground in 956 minutes – since Aston Villa scored against him in March. Chelsea were to be breached here, but they had never intended to be at their absolute peak.
Carlo Ancelotti had preferred to draw on the reserves of credit available to him after banking the full nine points from the first three matches in Group F. John Terry was an unused substitute, with the manager mindful of Sunday's Premier League fixture at Liverpool.
Even, so the Stamford Bridge team could not be wholly dismissive of the Russians. Spartak may have lost to Chelsea at home but they had been competent enough to win the two previous games in the group. Prior to this match it had suited both managers to dwell on the second half of the encounter at the Luzhniki stadium. Valeri Karpin drew comfort from his side's improvement since then while Ancelotti employed the memory of that period to warn against complacency.
All the same, the bald truth of that night was that Chelsea had the solace of two goals prior to the interval and won 2–0. This match was more unsettling since there was some threat to the hosts early in the contest. Purposeful attacking on the right after eight minutes saw Evgeni Makeev and Nicolás Pareja disturb Chelsea before the former Celtic midfielder Aiden McGeady bent a drive wide.
Finesse was hard to come by at first, although a curler by Nicolas Anelka that went past the far post in the 15th minute showed intent. A half-hit drive soon followed from Didier Drogba, who ought to have had an appetite for this tournament. The Ivorian had been absent from the earlier group fixtures through a suspension incurred last season and then illness.
There was an incentive to make up for lost time and he also sported the armband in this game. Spartak, for their part, had a degree of expertise and took the play to Chelsea when feasible. In the absence of high stakes, so far as the hosts were concerned at least, there was an agreeably open quality to the game.
It was Karpin's men who came closest to a goal in the first half, when the Spartak midfielder Alex hit a firm drive that had Cech diving to his right to parry. There was sufficient intensity, too, for Chelsea's Mikel John Obi and Dmitri Kombarov each to receive a booking in separate incidents before the interval.
At half-time this was the one Champions League fixture of the night to lack a goal.
There had been a hint of a breakthrough when Ivanovic flicked on a Yuri Zhirkov corner kick but Alex misconnected and scuffed the ball over the bar from close quarters in the 34th minute. Spartak, with a little more to lose, looked from time to time as if there was a superior intensity to their work.
It was the expertise and understanding in Ancelotti's line-up that broke the deadlock. Four minutes after the interval, Salomon Kalou drew opponents with him as he moved from the flank to the centre and the Ivorian then put a reverse pass back to Anelka. From an angle on the right the striker forced home a drive at the near post.
The Spartak goalkeeper Andriy Dykan had been unimpressive in the incident, but Karpin's players were not immediately disheartened. News of Marseille's easy win elsewhere in the group would have reached them and they understood that progress to the last 16 of the Champions League is not to be taken for granted, even if they will be at home when they meet the French side in their next group fixture.
There was, even so, little that Spartak could extract from this encounter. Once they are in front, Chelsea show a lethal patience and the lead was extended efficiently.
Drogba ran at Makeev, was brought down by the right-back and got up to slot away the penalty to the goalkeeper's right in the 62nd minute.
The relevance of this fixture had vanished for Spartak, who were breached once more by a firm downward header by Ivanovic from a Drogba set-piece. This had been no onslaught, yet the sheer thoroughness must chill the blood of most opponents.


Didier Drogba lacks fire but fuels Chelsea win over Spartak Moscow
Chelsea's captain for the night made his belated Champions League bow without any theatrics but with an inevitable goal
Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge
Stamford Bridge had to wait until just after the hour for Didier Drogba to signal his return. The Ivorian emerged from his customary autumn hibernation away from the group stage of this competition, a legacy of misdemeanours sparked by elimination the previous year, to face Spartak Moscow. With their talisman restored, Chelsea's latest pursuit of this trophy feels as if it is gathering pace.
This was a gentle welcome back, lacking the emotion of the visit of Internazionale in March that had seen Drogba rake his boot down Thiago Motta's achilles to prompt a red card. Three campaigns in a row have begun with a ban, not a bang.
The fever that kept him out of the trip to Moscow having subsided, Drogba eased his way back in here, stirring midway through the second half to ensure his side's passage into the knock-out phase.
He had been drifting somewhat in the early stages of the half, before he snapped awake to induce Evgeni Makeev's foul in the area after 61 minutes. The penalty was dispatched comfortably for a 32nd goal in 61 Champions League appearances. Moments later it was Drogba's free-kick that was headed down and in by Branislav Ivanovic to add gloss to the scoreline. In truth, Drogba's display – occasionally almost uninterested, at other times alert and productive – summed up his campaign to date.
If there has been a vague criticism of the forward this season it would be of his apparent desire to supply rather than score. Selflessness is rarely cause for concern but at times, when Chelsea have been strolling against the lesser lights in the Premier League, Drogba has meandered out of the centre and sought to present team-mates with opportunities. It is as if scoring has become too easy, as if he considers the goals to be somewhat devalued.
That should hardly constitute an annoyance. Florent Malouda and Nicolas Anelka have benefited – the Ivorian's lay-off for the latter at Ewood Park on Saturday was immaculate – and Frank Lampard's absence has gone relatively unnoticed with his goals being supplied by others in this supremely effective team. The manager sees the value in Drogba's assists.
"He is a striker, but I think he has always shown unselfish behaviour on the pitch," said Carlo Ancelotti.
Yet, on a humdrum occasion such as this it would have been refreshing for Drogba to rampage again, his focus fixed solely upon swelling his own tally as it was on the season's opening day, against West Bromwich Albion. There had only been three goals since that hat-trick before last night, including his customary score against Arsenal. The sight of Drogba at his best generates its own drama. This return to European competition had offered a platform.
There were hints of urgency in his first-half performance. Chelsea's better opportunities, Alex's horrible miss from a yard out aside, had generally been provided by their captain, though Drogba had rather scuffed Yuri Zhirkov's early free-kick and then seen Andriy Dykan block a near-post attempt. His free header over the bar from Zhirkov's corner was wasteful. More impressive was his collection of Mikel John Obi's punt, barging a passage between Nicolas Pareja and Aleksandr Sheshukov before Dykan stifled his shot.
Thereafter, frustration threatened to set in and he was rather overshadowed by Anelka's slickly taken goal – his fifth in four Champions League games – before he roused himself. Ancelotti had pointed to the positive impact the Ivorian can make on this competition if he can keep his temper. Feistier nights lie ahead; for now, Drogba will be content to be back.


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Mail:

Chelsea 4 Spartak Moscow 1: Branislav Ivanovic at the double as Blues cruise into knockout stages of Champions League

By Matt Barlow

Tube chaos gripped the capital and for a while it seemed Chelsea had fallen under its paralysis.Cue a pair of trusty strikers to get things moving and ease Carlo Ancelotti’s team into the last 16 of the Champions League with two group games still to play.
First there was Nicolas Anelka, the Frenchman so often charged with carrying the Blues through thearduous early rounds of the competition.Second Didier Drogba, who these days tends to ease himself into European football somewhere inmid-autumn.Branislav Ivanovic popped up to add two late goals and give the scoreline a generous gloss but, unlike the thrills at White Hart Lane 24 hours earlier, this was not easy on the eye.The first goalless 45 minutes were turgid but boss Ancelotti managed to generate a better tempo after the break and Anelka provided the spark early in the second half.l
It was the 10th goal of the season and the fifth in four Champions League games for Anelka, who collected the ball on the left, turned and glided across the turf on a diagonal run. He traded passes with Salomon Kalou to unlock the Spartak defence and clipped a clinical finish over goalkeeper Andriy Dykan, who came sliding from his line to tighten the angle.It was a beautiful goal from Chelsea’s best player, although he was soon forced to concede penalty-taking rights to Drogba, who was captain in the absence of John Terry, rested on the bench, and Frank Lampard. Having served a two-match ban for a red card against Inter Milan last season and missed the game in Moscow two weeks ago with a fever, Drogba was back in European action.When he was hacked down in the penalty area by Evgeni Makeev and Turkish referee Cuneyt Cakir pointed to the spot, he leapt to his feet to take it. There was no mistake from a striker who scored 37 times in all competitions last season.The penalty punctured Spartak’s spirit. Ivanovic, who scored a vital winner in the Barclays PremierLeague at Blackburn on Saturday, found himself unmarked to nod in the third direct from a corner.Kalou should have added the fourth but missed the target from 10 yards.
Ivanovic smashed in his second of the night but not before Spartak substitute Nikita Bazhenov had pulled one back, tapping in Welliton’s cross from the right. It was the first goal conceded by PetrCech at Stamford Bridge this season, the first in more than 16 hours of football, a run stretching back to a goal scored by John Carew for Aston Villa back in March.Anelka and Drogba were replaced once their work was done. Ancelotti spoke on the eve of the game about the importance of qualifying as soon as possible, to enable him to manage his squad through a congested fixture list.
As well as leaving out Terry, he started without Florent Malouda and Michael Essien, who were bothnursing injuries. Essien has a slight toe problem but Ancelotti insists he will be fit to play at Liverpool on Sunday. Malouda’s twisted ankle will rule him out at Anfield.Lampard is still not back from a hernia operation in August and Chelsea’s midfield lacked its usualmuscular presence here.
The early signs were worrying as Ramires, Yuri Zhirkov and John Obi Mikel were swamped by the Russians and Mikel collected a cheap booking as he worked harder to impose himself. Cech had to save well from Spartak’s Brazilian playmaker Alex but Drogba and Anelka always gave the Premier League champions a vicious cutting edge.Anelka, in the form of his life according to Ancelotti, drifted to the left, then checked back on to his right foot, skipped past Nicolas Pareja and Makeev and hit a shot which curled a only fraction too late to make it inside the far post.Chelsea’s Alex also went close before half-time, arriving late to meet a Zhirkov corner flicked on by Ivanovic, but somehow the ball struck the Brazilian’s knee and flew high over the bar.Chelsea took control after the interval and did not look in trouble once they took the lead. Youngsters Josh McEachran, Daniel Sturridge and Gael Kakuta came on and can expect more European experience in the final two group games.The Blues still require a point from their final two games — at home to Zilina and away in Marseille— to be certain of winning Group F and going into the draw for the last 16 as a seeded team.But, even with a seriously weakened side, it is hard to see how that will not come against Zilina at Stamford Bridge in three weeks.

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Star:

CHELSEA 4 - SPARTAK MOSCOW 1: ANELKA MAGIC WORKS LIKE A CHARM

By Danny Fullbrook

CHELSEA must hope Nicolas Anelka has turned into their Champions League lucky charm.
The French striker smashed home a brilliant goal to open the floodgates last night as the Blues hit four second-half goals to secure their place in the knockout stages.
The 31-year-old hitman has now scored in all four of his side’s European ties this season, and this was his fifth in total for the campaign.
Once he had set Chelsea on their way, Branislav Ivanovic scored twice and Didier Drogba converted a penalty.
But it was Anelka’s strike which was the best, and most crucial, as the opener.
Of course, every Blues fan will remember John Terry’s tears and his missed penalty in the 2008 Champions League final in Moscow against Manchester United.
But some neutrals might forget that Anelka missed from the spot that night in the driving rain.
So it looks like he is almost on a one-man mission this season to make up for his mistake.
Anelka started and finished last night’s brilliant effort which lit up what had been a dull game until that point.
He drove at the heart of the Russian defence before slipping a ball into the path of Salomon Kalou, who gave it straight back to him out wide in the area.
But the tight angle did not bother Anelka. With the goalkeeper flying off his line, he arrowed his shot home.
The goal led to a deluge as Spartak capitulated.
Drogba won a penalty with a spirited run into the area where he was upended by Evgeni Makeev.
Skipper for the night with Terry on the bench and Frank Lampard still missing, Drogba picked himself up to stroke the penalty home in the 61st minute.
It was his first goal for over a month for Chelsea in his first European game of the season after suspension and illness kept him out of the first three.
The temperamental striker has ended up with two red cards and a retrospective ban at the end of the last three campaigns, which has meant he has been absent for the opening stages of the next one.
It has not been a major problem, but manager Carlo Ancelotti pointed out that considering the slim margins which have left Chelsea cursing their luck in recent years, Drogba needs to make sure he is on the pitch as much as possible this season.
Spartak were cheered on by a noisy group of fans, but their night got worse just five minutes later.
This time Drogba was the provider as he whipped a free-kick into the area from the right and Ivanovic was allowed a free header which he planted past Andriy Dikan to bring the Bridge alive.
These sort of games have, historically, not been much of a problem for Chelsea. The powerful west London side have fairly motored through the group rounds in recent seasons.
It has been the big sudden death games which have caught them out and caused so much heartache.
They have lost four semi- finals and the United final in the past seven years. That alone has instilled an incredible desire among these players to finally nail this competition.
It has been a personal frustration of Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich, that despite the £300m-plus he has thrown at Chelsea, they are yet to land the Holy Grail of the Champions League.
This year his players have vowed it will be different. And given they are five points clear at the top of the Premier League, they are showing signs of the form to do so.
Ancelotti could afford to rest a host of players last night for Sunday’s game against Liverpool, as three wins in the competition already had helped them put one foot in the knockout stages.
Terry was the only senior player on the bench, while Michael Essien and Florent Malouda were left out altogether. And after the third goal Ancelotti was able to take off Anelka and Drogba.
At that point it was difficult to predict Spartak would get a goal back given their pathetic second half showing.
But with just four minutes left the Russians narrowly beat the offside trap with Welliton crossing the ball for sub Nikita Bazhenov to stab the ball home.
Chelsea were not quite finished, though, and managed to add a fourth in stoppage time.
After a goalmouth scramble Serbian defender Ivanovic turned and knocked the ball home for his second of the night.
It was a comprehensive victory, like most up to this point in the competition. It is the knockout stages where the mental scars start to show for Chelsea, but if Anelka keeps this form he might just help his side heal them this season.


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Sun:

Chelsea 4 Spartak 1

By ANDREW DILLON

THE French will be getting their grubby hands on our aircraft carriers and nuclear secrets but their most potent weapon is already in English hands.
And Chelsea have no intention of sharing Nicolas Anelka with anyone else.
His classy goal steered them through choppy waters and set them up to advance into the last 16 of the Champions League. Anelka has turned his back on France after his infamous World Cup bust-up and it is paying huge dividends for boss Carlo Ancelotti.
Chelsea effectively now have 3½ months off from Europe to focus on retaining the Premier League title, safe in the knowledge they are already in the hat for the Euro knockout stage in mid-February.
It is an added bonus that Ancelotti's boys have become the first of the four English teams in the competition to qualify for the second phase.
The remaining two games in Group F will be used merely as practice for Ancelotti to run the rule over a few of his European squad's reserves and kids.
With Slovakian minnows MSK Zilina next up at Stamford Bridge, fresh from a 7-0 home hiding by Marseille last night, it is also a fair bet Chelsea will not find it too difficult to collect the point required to win the group and secure a top seeding in the draw for the next round.
Anelka underlined his importance to Chelsea with his 10th goal in 13 games this season, five of which have come in Europe. His 49th-minute goal, which broke the deadlock to put his team 1-0 up, was not just stylishly taken.
It was also vital in that it lifted the game out of the doldrums and put sluggish Chelsea on course for what was ultimately a comprehensive victory.
Didier Drogba announced his return to Champions League action after a two-game ban and illness by converting a penalty and Serbian defender Branislav Ivanovic scored twice in a rare run of form in front of goal. He has scored three times in two games.
But the plaudits belong to Anelka, who seems to hate France, love England and enjoy scoring magical goals that can turn a match on its head.
He arrived in England at just 16 years of age to sign for Arsenal. Now 31, he has spent all but a few of the years in between playing in the Premier League and is now an honorary Brit.
And after such a drab first half, boy did the Chelsea fans need him to show a bit of English grit and carve out the all-important opener, which set the tone for a flood of goals after the break.
To be fair to Chelsea, the soulless and goalless first 45 minutes was in stark contrast to their previous European matches. And it was clear a stern talking-to from boss Ancelotti at the break had blown away the cobwebs and sparked them into life.
Yet the Italian must shoulder some responsibility for the half-hearted opening with his team selection.
Even before kick-off, Ancelotti had placed confidence in his team to come through eventually on the night with the all-important win.
He clearly had Sunday's trip to Liverpool on his mind when he decided to rest a couple of his key men for this latest game.
John Terry was kept on the bench to step in if needed, while tank-like midfielder Michael Essien missed out altogether.
Chelsea seemed to believe all that was required was to turn up to collect three more points. But despite their overwhelming superiority in terms of possession and chances, the Blues looked lightweight and vulnerable on occasions.
Instead of cruise control, it was more a case of snooze control.
Spartak's Scottish wideman Aiden McGeady had the first chance of the game and curled a shot inches wide of Petr Cech's post on six minutes.
Spartak skipper Alex also brought a fine save out of Cech, who dropped to his knees to punch clear a wickedly swerving effort.
Chelsea's Alex then wasted a superb chance to put the home side ahead just before half-time, somehow shinning the ball over from virtually under the bar.
Fortunately, Anelka took command of the ship and got the Blues underway when he started and finished a neat move with Salomon Kalou. It ended with him racing to the by-line and cracking a shot past keeper Andriy Dykan to open the floodgates.
A relieved Chelsea poured forward and Drogba's surging run into the box was halted by a trip from Evgeni Makeev.
A typically powerful Drogba penalty made it 2-0.
Ivanovic then met Drog's outswinging free-kick on 66 minutes but the Serb defender lost concentration to allow Spartak sub Nikita Bazenhov to grab a consolation with four minutes left.
While the game started at half-speed it finished full steam ahead, with Ivanovic netting his second.

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Telegraph:


Chelsea 4 Spartak Moscow 1
By Henry Winter

Some strikers can get things moving in London. After fans endured problematic journeys to the Bridge due to industrial action on the Tube, Nicolas Anelka and Didier Drogba eventually sent Chelsea smoothly on their way into the knock-out stage of the Champions League, their progress accelerated by a fine double from Branislav Ivanovic.
For 45 minutes, Chelsea were as stop-start as the Underground but normal service was resumed in the second half. Maybe it was the sight of Charlie Cooke being paraded to fans at the break that instilled a greater spirit of adventure into the heirs to his rich tradition.
Anelka’s finish was terrific, the ball threaded through the eye of a particularly thin needle while Drogba’s penalty brooked no argument in creation or execution. Ivanovic’s goals were a well-taken, well-received bonus, a typically powerful header and then a neat shot. Of his six goals for Chelsea, four have come in the Champions League (the other European pair being against Liverpool).
One more point guarantees Chelsea top spot, so avoiding other group winners in the draw for the last 16, but Carlo Ancelotti will surely start some of his richly promising youngsters, particularly Josh McEachran, in the next Group F tie, the Nov 23 visit of modest Zilina.
Sent on for the final 21 minutes here, McEachran delivered another cameo appearance that spoke eloquently of his talent as a central midfielder of commitment and composure. Gael Kakuta and Daniel Sturridge also came on and buzzed around, although without quite the same eye-catching impact of McEachran. The boy can play.
Even if Ancelotti aims to use such prospects against Zilina and Marseille, it is hard to see the Italian denying Drogba an emotional trip to Stade Velodrome on Dec 8. Anelka, a former Paris St-Germain player, is unlikely to be greeted with so many garlands. He deserves a break, having begun this season so strongly, impressing particularly here. Eventually.
After the fireworks at the Lane, this was a damp squib at the Bridge until Anelka’s magnificent finish shortly after the restart. Until then most energy had been expended by the Spartak supporters, two of whom rolled up their sleeves to flex tattooed biceps like Muscovite Popeyes.
Until Anelka struck, Chelsea’s usual fluency was seen only fitfully. Michael Essien’s drive in midfield was particularly sorely missed in the first half. The Ghanaian, apparently nursing a knock, was rested by Ancelotti, who also kept John Terry in reserve with one eye on the trip to Liverpool on Sunday. Terry was so unfamiliar with being a sub that he forgot to don a Uefa bib when warming up.
Mistakes crept into the English champions’ play. A loose pass from John Obi Mikel, the ball played blind across midfield, gifted possession to Valeri Karpin’s side. Here was a situation that the flaxen-haired Karpin would have enjoyed in his own playing pomp. Spartak poured forward, the ball soon at the clever feet of Aiden McGeady, who failed to trouble Petr Cech.
Chelsea woke up, beginning to put together some promising ventures. Anelka and Drogba went close. Alex missed horribly from close range. Things could only get better. Fortunately for Chelsea they did. Ancelotti shook his players up at the break, sending them out teeming with far more purpose. Four minutes into the new period, with a new mood suffusing Chelsea, Anelka created and finished the first. Finding Salomon Kalou with a good pass, Anelka darted down the inside-right channel, running on to the return ball.
There was still much to do. Spartak’s keeper, Andriy Dykan, sped out but left a chink of light between him and his left-hand upright. Anelka needed no second invitation, drilling the ball through the small window of opportunity. It was a brilliant goal, a strike that almost defied geometry.
A wave of relief flooded through the Bridge. Chelsea were now relaxed, now more assertive in their attacking. Drogba cut in from the left after 62 minutes, twisting this way and that and panicking Evgeni Makeev, Spartak’s right-back, into fouling him. Drogba punished such an intemperate challenge with a penalty that flew past Dykan.
Drogba then turned creator, lifting in a 66th-minute free-kick from the right for Ivanovic, so deadly in the air, to head home. Karpin cursed the fates, but he could also have admonished his markers. Nicolas Pareja had singularly failed in his assignment of sticking to Ivanovic.
The tie won, the qualification secured, Ancelotti rang the changes, sending on McEachran, Kakuta and Sturridge. The Russians also sent on somebody, a chubby pitch invader emerging from the away corner of the Shed before slipping over in the centre-circle. Spartak fans also lobbed a couple of bottles at their Chelsea counterparts.
A more positive move came from the visitors’ Welliton, the striker racing down the right with four minutes remaining and crossing for the unmarked Nikita Bazhenov to score the first goal Cech has conceded at the Bridge in 963 minutes.
Bzehenov, the Spartak sub, looked offside but Chelsea were hardly going to complain, particularly as they added a fourth in stoppage tme. When Kalou crossed, Sturridge tried to hook the ball goalwards but it eventually rebounded to Ivanovic, who finished expertly. Passage to the Champions League knock-out stages was guaranteed, allowing Chelsea to focus on keeping the home fires burning through the winter.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

blackburn rovers 2-1


Independent:

Ivanovic hits the front to punish profligate Rovers
Blackburn Rovers 1 Chelsea 2

By Tim Rich at Ewood Park

Football talks of points being chiselled out, but this was a Mount Rushmore of a victory. Chelsea would have been happy with one. They flew back to London with three.
Branislav Ivanovic's winner may have been so much against the grain of the game that it left splinters but it was superbly executed. Throughout the afternoon, Blackburn's crosses were of a significantly higher quality than the champions' but, under pressure and in mid-turn, Yuri Zhirkov produced a wonderful delivery that found Chelsea's right-back unmarked.
Moments before, Blackburn, who had produced perhaps their finest performance of the season, had been handed an equally inviting opportunity when Jason Roberts was played clean through. As his manager, Sam Allardyce, remarked with the resigned sigh of a man who knows he should have won, everything about the way Roberts created the opening was perfect except for the finish, which went six inches the wrong side of the post.
"It was one of those days when you play as well as you possibly can but we needed to convert chances into goals at the right time," Allardyce reflected. "We got the ultimate kick in the teeth when you don't punish the opposition."
It was a result that might be compared to Manchester United's victory at Stoke last Sunday as a win at one of the Premier League's more forbidding minor venues. However, Blackburn performed far better than Stoke and Chelsea far worse than United had done. Even when Nicolas Anelka equalised, the match refused to run to a predictable pattern, and had Mame Biram Diouf arrived fractionally sooner to meet Morten Gamst Pedersen's low free-kick, Blackburn would have had a second before Roberts squandered his chance.
"It was very difficult to play here and it was important to get a result and stay top," said Chelsea's manager, Carlo Ancelotti, afterwards. "Blackburn put us under pressure; we didn't find the space in the middle of the pitch, although in the second half we took more of a risk on the counterattack."
With Allardyce employing a Diouf on either flank, Chelsea were harried, denied space and opened up continually with some high-class crossing. The sight of Benjani operating asthe lone striker had, however, drawn a metaphorical sigh.
His best days were long ago and far away at Portsmouth, nobody ever quite figured out what he was doing at Manchester City and the hamstring injury that forced him off at half-time showed why Allardyce might have had second thoughts about the deal.
And yet the Zimbabwean still has something about him. It was not just his goal, the way he squeezed between Chelsea's two centre-halves, Alex and John Terry, to head home El-Hadji Diouf's wonderfully precise cross. The breakthrough had been coming; moments earlier, Benjani had thundered through and shot against the goalkeeper's legs.
Petr Cech was at least more in control of that move than he had been when Mame Biram Diouf attempted what appeared an innocuous chip into the Chelsea area. Cech slipped and had to palm the ball away one-handed.
"The thing about Chelsea is that when they are being outplayed, they hang in there and hang in there," said Allardyce.
Zhirkov, who was supposed to be an indulgent buy at the behest of Roman Abramovich, threatened constantly and had a shot brilliantly saved by Paul Robinson, while Anelka was a familiar threat.
Chelsea's equaliser, like their winner, may have looked simple but was beautifully executed. Florent Malouda's long ball was skilfully taken down by Didier Drogba and swept in by Anelka for his 11th goal in 15 appearances against Rovers, to whom he must seem like an avenging angel.

Attendance: 25,836
Referee: Peter Walton
Man of the match: Zhirkov
Match rating: 7/10

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Observer:

Branislav Ivanovic heads Chelsea back from behind at Blackburn Rovers

Blackburn Rovers 1 Benjani 21 Chelsea 2 Anelka 39, Ivanovic 84
Paul Wilson at Ewood Park

Sam Allardyce rates Nicolas Anelka the best finisher he has worked with, and reckons if the Chelsea striker was at Blackburn he would score 15 goals per season and enable Rovers to comfortably finish in the top half of the table.
Unfortunately for the Blackburn manager, matters are not presently arranged along those lines and he has to make do with Jason Roberts instead. After Anelka had equalised the home side's early lead, the substitute had a great opportunity to win the game when magnificent work from Mame Biram Diouf on the right found him in front of goal nine minutes from time. Roberts neatly cut inside his marker yet still missed the target with only Petr Cech to beat, and Blackburn's chance was gone. A minute later, Anelka helped on a Yuri Zhirkov cross from the left for Branislav Ivanovic to secure all three points with a free header.
Victory kept Chelsea five points clear at the top of the Premier League and though one could not say they did not deserve it, they were flat and somewhat uninspired and would have been punished by deadlier finishers. Allardyce's side did most of the hard work, matched their opponents and made several chances, yet not for the first time failed to find the killer punch.
"We were a little bit lucky," Carlo Ancelotti was honest enough to admit. "Blackburn had a chance to close the game just before we scored. I liked the way Yuri set up the winning goal, he is a very efficient player, but we could have been out of it. It was an important win. Every team finds it difficult here."
That is still true. After a minute's applause to mark Ronnie Clayton's passing, Rovers took the game to Chelsea in the opening stages, with Benjani Mwaruwari finding plenty of space. It was from his pass that Mame Biram Diouf almost caught out Cech with a delicate chip in the 15th minute, then a minute later Benjani tested the goalkeeper. Chelsea could hardly complain when Benjani put Blackburn in front midway through the first half, beating John Terry and Alex to a cross from El Hadji Diouf to register his first goal in almost two years. Cech then needed to stretch to prevent Mame Biram Diouf putting Rovers two up on their next attack, from another searching cross from his namesake.
When Michael Essien poked a shot narrowly wide shortly before the interval, it came as something of a shock to realise it was Chelsea's first serious attempt. Yet as Allardyce wearily remarked afterwards, when you have quality you don't need to dominate, and the visitors equalised with a goal of sublime simplicity. Florent Malouda hoisted over a cross from the left, Didier Drogba knocked it back across goal from the far post, and Allardyce's favourite striker swept the ball into the net without opposition.
To no one's enormous surprise, Benjani did not reappear for the second half, making way for another infrequent performer in Roberts. Ashley Cole put a good chance wide before Zhirkov brought a fine save from Paul Robinson on the hour, drilling a shot straight at the goalkeeper after Drogba had squared across the six-yard line.
Blackburn attempts were becoming scarce, yet Mame Biram Diouf still had the opportunity to restore their lead when Morten Gamst Pedersen's free-kick came through to him at the far post, only for his touch to send the ball the wrong side of the upright from no more than a foot out. Then came what Allardyce termed the golden chance.
"I can't really fault Jason, he did everything else right but he put the ball six inches wide," the Blackburn manager said. "In this game you have to be ruthless, and that's why Chelsea are at the top and we are near the bottom. We gave them a good game, but if you don't punch opponents when you have the chance, you are asking for a kick in the teeth. That's exactly what we got."

THE FANS' PLAYER RATINGS AND VERDICT

MARCUS TATTERSALL, Observer reader

Ronnie Clayton would have been proud of them. Rovers were wonderful. We didn't play to the usual Rovers manual; we took the game to the opposition, we were inventive and, with Mame Biram Diouf and Emerton providing support for the excellent Benjani, who totally justified his selection, we carried the game to Chelsea. My only criticism would be Pedersen's distribution from free-kicks. We didn't bully Chelsea; we played them off the park with very good football, which shocked and surprised us. I hope that losing doesn't put Allardyce off adopting this approach again.

The fan's player ratings Robinson 8; Salgado 7, Samba 7, Nelsen 7, Givet 6 (Olsson 35 6); Jones 7; MB Diouf 8, Emerton 8, Pedersen 6; EH Diouf 8 (Dunn 79 n/a); Benjani 9 (Roberts ht 5)

TRIZIA FIORELLINO, ChelseaSupportersGroup.net

We made hard work of it. In the first half Blackburn had us really under the cosh. We made a better fist of it in the second half but we could have been 3-0 down at one point. Cole, Zhirkov and Ivanovic were excellent. Ivanovic almost single-handedly won us the game – he seemed to be making up for everybody else's lack of energy. Terry had an off day and Drogba had a diva day. Every so often we have a game like this, it's nothing to do with not liking to come to places like Blackburn. It was a bit of a smash and grab, and the Rovers fans will be disappointed, but that's why we're champions.

The fan's player ratings Cech 7; Ivanovic 9, Alex 8, Terry 7, Cole 8; Essien 7, Mikel 7, Zhirkov 8; Anelka 7 (Ferreira 90 n/a); Drogba 6, Malouda 6 (Sturridge 72 8)

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Mail:

Blackburn 1 Chelsea 2:
Branislav Ivanovic's late header caps Blues' comeback
By Bob Cass

In one wanton act of carelessness, Jason Roberts showed just why teams like Blackburn Rovers are more likely to suffer the pangs of injustice rather than the euphoria of ultimate victory.
Opportunity knocked for the Rovers striker nine minutes from the end of a match in which the home team had proved the difference between the top and the bottom of the Premier League was mathematical rather than inferior.
Roberts, a half-time substitute, collected a superb crossfield ball from Mame Diouf, then killed and controlled it in a second with a flick which also bamboozled the greatest left-back in the world.
With Ashley Cole stranded in his wake, another shimmy sold Petr Cech an even better dummy, leaving him with the goal at his mercy.
And then, carefully and with the utmost precision, he guided his shot six inches wide of the left-hand post.
Roberts looked to the heavens in abject misery; Sam Allardyce screamed in frustrated agony. The golden chance to take three points from the all conquering boys in blue had slipped through their fingers.
And if the Rovers manager thought that was bad enough, there was worse to come.
Two minutes later Yury Zhirkov, in spite of intense pressure from three Blackburn defenders, somehow managed to get in a high cross that saw Branislav Ivanovic steaming in at the far post to head the Chelsea winner.
'It was the ultimate kick in the teeth,' moaned Allardyce with some justification. 'It's pleasing that we were able to create so many chances against a team of such high calibre and give them a good game. But when you don't punish a team as good as Chelsea when you get the chance, they are able to take full advantage of it.
'That's just what they did. It's disappointing when you think of the performance that we gave and the result that we've got. The only consolation is to be able to tell the players that if we can compete at this level, the results will look after themselves.'
Chelsea have already shown they can win in style but it is scrapping ugly wins like this one which will be just as significant when the prizes are handed out at the end of the season.
Carlo Ancelotti knew his team had snatched victory from the jaws of defeat. 'We were fortunate but we have a lot of confidence to go and get a lot of benefit from this,' said the Chelsea manager.
'Blackburn put us under a lot of pressure in the first half when we were unable to find any space, but in the second we were better.'
In spite of assertions in the match programme from chairman John Williams that the Indian takeover would go ahead next month and the presence of representatives from the bidding Venkys conglomerate in the directors' box, speculation abounded at Ewood Park about the £46million deal fouling up because of unforeseen technicalities.
Allardyce is hardly salivating at the prospect of a £5m transfer market budget being put at his disposal in the January transfer window should the chickens finally come home to roost - that's the sort of small change Chelsea spend on decorating the dressing room rather than populating it.
But you have to wonder, given his shrewdness in assembling a team more than capable of competing against the Premier League pacesetters, what the Rovers manager could do with something not so paltry from the poultry people. And he might need to.
Rovers had more than enough possession and chances to take something from the game but they were punished because they were wasteful in front of goal and seriously lacking in defence in the game's pivotal moments. Benjani's first goal in two years in the 21st minute gave Rovers an overdue lead.
But for three magnificent saves from Cech, the home team could have been at least three up by then. But the defence was caught ball-watching when Florent Malouda slung a high cross for Didier Drogba to set up Nicolas Anelka for a 37th-minute equaliser.
While Chelsea are maintaining a signficant gap between themselves and their rivals at the top, Allardyce knows he needs a few wins to get them away from the bottom three.
He admitted: 'Unfortunately, it leaves us in a dangerous position after a quarter of the season. The points on the board are not good enough. The pressure comes on you now and we've really got to start putting it right.'

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Telegraph:

Blackburn Rovers 1 Chelsea 2:
By Graham Chase at Ewood Park

Having been the venue where they took a huge step towards Jose Mourinho's first title, Ewood Park has become an increasingly frustrating venue for Chelsea but Branislav Ivanovic's late winner ensured this game could not be added to that list.
Last season they were dumped out of the Carling Cup and a draw in the Premier League looked to have given their title chances a huge blow before they were victorious at Old Trafford.
Carlo Ancelotti can at least take satisfaction from the fact that his side should have been behind by more than Benjani's goal – his first in almost two years - before Nicolas Anelka pulled the champions level just before the interval.
But, so unlike a side that went into the game averaging almost three goals for each Premier League match, they rarely threatened to take the lead themselves, until Ivanovic headed in with eight minutes remaining to preserve their lead at the top of the table.
Blackburn Rovers's recent form has been dreadful and that looked set to continue as they barely touched the ball for the first 10 minutes.
The visitors had an early scare when Petr Cech slipped before palming away a chip from Mame Biram Diouf but with Benjani, making his first start for Blackburn, in fine form, Chelsea were struggling to cope with the pace and width of the home team's attacks.
Blackburn pulled level when Chelsea failed to clear Morten Gamst Pedersen's cross and when El-Hadji Diouf clipped the ball back in and after John Terry failed to get a decent contact, Benjani glanced into the corner to score the first goal against Ancelotti's side for more than eight hours since the 4-3 Carling Cup defeat to Newcastle last month.
They continued to pile forward and might have doubled their lead without Cech's fine tip to Diouf's cross after another quick break.
But just before the interval, Chelsea pulled level with a fine effort of their own. Cech clipped the ball out to Florent Malouda who hit a cross-field pass to Didier Drogba, who knocked down thanks after Ryan Nelsen and Martin Olsson ran into each other.
Anticipating the flick ahead of Phil Jones, Anelka guided past Paul Robinson for his first league goal since August.
After the restart, Blackburn continued to look the most likely other than Robinson having to save from Yuri Zhirkov.
But in the 83rd minute, Zhirkov looped a cross to the far post and Ivanovic headed in to earn Chelsea all three points.


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Star:

BLACKBURN 1 - CHELSEA 2:

ROVER-DOSE OF BRAN! By Mike Whalley at Ewood Park

CARLO ANCELOTTI may have a point when he argues that his ­Chelsea side still have plenty of room for improvement.
The Premier League leaders may have won thanks to Branislav Ivanovic’s late strike but they could easily have been beaten.
And had Blackburn sub Jason Roberts not fluffed a glorious one-on-one chance seconds before Ivanovic’s 83rd-minute headed winner, it probably would have been a Rovers win.
Chelsea may be the best team in England and they may yet run away with the title but they aren’t turning it on away from home.
And Blackburn nearly gave them another away day to forget in a week when most of the talk at Ewood Park has been of a pending £46million takeover by Indian poultry firm Venky’s.
Rovers’ display would have made a good ­impression on Venky’s bosses Balaji and Venkatesh Rao as they watched from the stand.
The prospective owners’ pledge of just £5m for boss Sam Allardyce to spend in January is ­nothing compared to the fortunes spent at ­Stamford Bridge over the last few years. But then it’s a long time since Blackburn were the big spenders of the Premier League.
Allardyce looked to free transfers and loan deals to bolster his squad over the summer.
And one of those signings, Benjani, came up trumps for him midway through the first half to end Chelsea’s run of 503 minutes in all ­competitions without conceding a goal.
There were a few eyebrows raised when ­Allardyce sent out the Zimbabwean but when Chelsea failed to deal with Morten Gamst ­Pedersen’s short corner midway through the first half, El-Hadji Diouf returned the ball for Benjani to turn it in with his shoulder.
The lead was no more than Rovers deserved. It was as if they were determined to put on a show as a fitting tribute to club legend and former England captain Ronnie Clayton, who died on Friday at the age of 76.
Even before Benjani scored, Mame Biram ­Diouf nearly embarrassed Chelsea keeper Petr Cech, who lost his footing dealing with a chipped cross-shot and just managed to flip the ball away. After Benjani’s strike, the two Dioufs combined to cause Chelsea more trouble, Mame Biram ­just ­failing to meet El-Hadji’s terrific left-wing cross.
Chelsea had to wake up at some point and Nicolas Anelka struck six minutes before half-time.
The Frenchman could be forgiven for rubbing his hands with glee whenever he faces Rovers.
When he raced in to finish off Didier Drogba’s knockdown from a superb Florent Malouda pass, it was his 11th goal in 15 Premier League games against them.
Even then, it wasn’t straightforward for Chelsea. Yes, home keeper Paul Robinson had to make a smart stop to deny Yuri Zhirkov but Mame Diouf almost turned in a Pedersen free-kick.
Chelsea sub Daniel Sturridge went close with a long-range effort and then Roberts missed his big chance for Rovers, before Ivanovic headed in ­Zhirov’s left-wing cross for the winner.
Ancelotti admitted his side were lucky to come away with a victory.
“Blackburn played well in the first half,” he said. “They put pressure on us and we were a bit lucky.”
Allardyce said: “It’s one of those days where we’ve played as well as we can play.
“But we got the ultimate kick in the teeth.”

blackburn: Robinson 8; Salgado 7, Samba 8, Nelsen 8, Givet 7 (Olsson (35th) 7); M Diouf 8, Emerton 7, Jones 8, Pedersen 7; E Diouf 8 (Dunn 80th), Benjani 8 (Roberts (46th) 7)
chelsea: Cech 6; Ivanovic 6, Alex 6, Terry 7, Cole 7; Essien 6, Mikel 6, ­Zhirkov 6; Anelka 7 (Ferreira 90th); Drogba 6, Malouda 7 (Sturridge (72nd) 7)
STAR MAN: Mame Biram Diouf
Ref: P Walton

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People:
Blackburn 1-2 Chelsea: Ivanovic nicks it for Chelsea
by Alan Nixon, The People

CHELSEA fans sang ‘That’s why we’re ­champions’ after watching Carlo Ancelotti’s side somehow turn trash into triumph.
The Blues were more like chumps and could have been beaten out of sight, yet marched off victorious thanks to a late winner from ­defender Branislav Ivanovic.
Blackburn’s prospective new owners, the chicken-breeding Rao brothers, saw plenty of pluck from the team they are about to buy but in the end they were left painfully stuffed.
Ancelotti knew his side had got out of jail, saying: “They put us under strong pressure and we were not able to play football.
“The equaliser was important and we were much better in the second half – but even then we were lucky.
“We were brave and took risks and Blackburn could have scored before our winner. But we knew it would be difficult here ... every team finds it difficult.”
A week ago, Blackburn forgot to turn up at Anfield but on home soil yesterday they were at Chelsea’s throats from the off as striker Mame Biram Diouf forced Petr Cech into an athletic save from a clever chip.
Then Benjani twice went close to putting Rovers ahead as Chelsea struggled to find their rhythm.
And it was Benjani, a ­free-transfer arrival at Ewood, who opening the scoring in the 21st minute.
He escaped the shackles of John Terry to plant a header from ­El-Hadji Diouf’s cross past Cech.
Chelsea were sluggish until Nicolas Anelka finally woke them from their slumbers with a super-smooth equaliser in the 39th minute.
Florent Malouda drilled a glorious deep cross ­beyond the Rovers ­backline for Didier Drogba to find space and ­cleverly head down. Anelka was ­lurking on his own to beat Paul Robinson with a smart finish.
Chelsea’s fans broke into their ‘That’s why we’re champions’ chant and it was hard to argue because the sheer quality of the goal had been dredged from pure dross.
Blackburn’s cause was not helped by the loss of Gael Givet before the goal and an injury to scorer Benjani that forced him off at half time.
Buoyed by the goal, Chelsea moved up a gear after the break.
Ashley Cole never stopped running and broke forward time and again, a tactical move that swayed the game Chelsea’s way. Yuri Zhirkov also came alive while John Obi Mikel at last found his touch.
Cole then fluffed a chance to grab the lead ­before Zhirkov made Robinson push away his effort in a storming second half. Drogba ­almost knocked out Mort Pedersen with a volley as the pressure mounted.
Chelsea sub Daniel Sturridge was fractions away from a goal-of-the-month contender soon after coming on, waltzing across the park and shaving a post with a 25-yarder.
The closing stages were ferocious as both sides pressed for a winner.
Mame Biram Diouf fluffed ­another chance before sub Jason Roberts shot wide with just Cech to beat – a real howler from the ­experienced front man.
The miss was to prove so costly because in the next attack Ivanovic rose at the far post in the 84th minute to powerfully nod in a cross from Zhirkov after the Russian had brilliantly wriggled into space. Ancelotti admitted the game was defined in those madcap-turned-magic minutes.
He said: “Blackburn could have closed the game out, but then it was fantastic play by Zhirkov.”
It was not the result Allardyce wanted as the Blackburn takeover draws near and he seeks assurances about his future.
The Ewood chief said: “When Chelsea are not playing well they hang in there.
“Look at the first goal, pure ­quality. They were not in the game, not looking like scoring, but two passes later we’re a goal down.
“That is how good they are. They don’t have to play better than you, it is just down to their outstanding ability.
“It leaves us in a very dangerous position. Performances have been OK but the points total is not good enough and it puts us at the wrong end of the table.”

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Sunday, October 24, 2010

wolves 2-0



Independent:

Kalou's killer instinct cures Chelsea blues

Chelsea 2 Wolverhampton Wanderers 0: Ancelotti blames trip to Moscow for lacklustre display as only poor finishing lets down Wolves

By Steve Tongue at Stamford Bridge

Anyone investing even a modest sum on Wolverhampton Wanderers to win here at something around 20-1 would have received an unexpectedly good run for their money. It was tighter than many a fixture between League leaders and those down among the dead men at the bottom, without in the end even denting Chelsea's extraordinary home record. Like all Premier League visitors since Aston Villa last March, Wolves failed to score, but few if any can have had more opportunities to do so. A finish was simply not there, bringing to mind last season's feeble total of 32 goals, the worst of any team.
Steven Fletcher, bought from Burnley in the summer, has been hired to help Kevin Doyle in attack but Fletcher and the heavyweight – in every sense – Sylvan Ebanks-Blake did not appear until the last four minutes, when Salomon Kalou's goal had made the game safe for Chelsea, sending them five points clear of Manchester City who meet Arsenal today. Florent Malouda had scored the first, although even that was bookmarked by half-chances, and sometimes better at the other end.
Matt Jarvis, a young winger highly regarded and watched by Fabio Capello's lieutenant Franco Baldini, found Ashley Cole a meaner opponent than most he normally meets, and was replaced before the end. Meanwhile, the danger of pushing forward, Wolves discovered, was exposure to counter-attacks of pace and verve, which nevertheless tended to break down despite the return of Didier Drogba to the home attack.
"It is important to win when you are not 100 per cent," Chelsea's manager Carlo Ancelotti said, acknowledging that his team were a good few percentage points below that. "It was a difficult week because of the travelto Moscow. Our position is good, but tomorrow Manchester City can be two points behind."
For Wolves, Mick McCarthy had reason to be pleased with the performance against the side he rates as "the best in the League", while bemoaning a lack of "devilment" in front of goal. The visitors managed half a dozen reasonable chances in the first half alone. Almost all, however, were directed at Petr Cech and too many were weak headers, notably by Dave Edwards, Doyle and Jelle van Damme. The last of those, midway through the half, was heavily punished when Chelsea immediately broke to score. Nicolas Anelka led the counter, feeding Yuri Zhirkov, who from the byline cut the ball back across goal for Malouda to drive in his seventh goal of the season.
Other than that, and Anelka's shot into the side-netting after an equallyquick break out of defence, the most likely Chelsea scorer for a long time was the improbable figure of Jose Bosingwa. Returning to start a game for the first time in a year since his serious knee injury at Villa Park, the Portuguese full-back forced two good low saves from Marcus Hahnemann, the goalkeeper using his foot each time to concede a corner.
Hahnemann, an extrovert American, is clearly proud of his footwork; later he would tackle Drogba outside the penalty area when the striker was clean through on to Branislav Ivanovic's immaculate pass. Stephen Hunt, still reviled here for the incident at Reading four years ago that caused Cech a nasty head injury, appeared as a substitute and pantomime villain for the second half and almost stunned his abusers with a goal inside two minutes. One of the numerous Wolves corners fell nicelyfor him to aim a diving header which would have crept inside the far post had Michael Essien not blocked it.
Kalou, in gloves for autumn, replaced Malouda and when Chelsea used his flank for a more coherent move a fine goal resulted. The substitute started it all with a pass inside to Drogba and kept running as the Ivorian fed Essien, whose pass was perfectly placed and weighted for Kalou to slip past the goalkeeper.

Attendance: 41,752
Referee: Lee Probert
Man of the match: Bosingwa
Match rating: 6/10

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Observer:

Chelsea make hard work of Wolves but go five points clear at the top

Chelsea 2 Malouda 23, Kalou 81 Wolverhampton Wanderers 0

Paul Doyle at Stamford Bridge

From Russia without oomph. Chelsea tackled this domestic chore as if drained by their midweek trek to Moscow and, although they eventually stretched their lead at the top of the Premier League to five points and extended their 100% record at Stamford Bridge for the campaign, this was a far-from-perfect performance.
"We didn't play so well," admitted Carlo Ancelotti, who at times winced from the sideline. "We did not play as clearly as we have done at times this season but it was a difficult week with the travelling to Moscow. It is important to win when you're not at your best."
The sight of Steven Fletcher, Wolves' joint top-scorer, on the bench before kick-off may have indicated that Mick McCarthy had abandoned the adventurous formation with which he has been experimenting in recent weeks but it quickly transpired that his team had not come solely to defend.
The visitors began boldly and monopolised possession for the first five minutes, which were played entirely in the hosts' half. However, Chelsea, who have yet to concede a goal at home this term, remained unruffled throughout that brazen start by the visitors and soon, with minimal effort, gained a degree of control. At no point, however, could they be considered dominant, and slovenliness was often apparent. That, as well as neat play by McCarthy's men, meant their victory was at times in jeopardy.
The home team did produce the game's first shot on target, in the 11th minute, but Marcus Hahnemann saved well from José Bosingwa, the right-back who looked sprightly during his first start after almost a year out with torn knee ligaments. Yet too many of his team-mates were guilty of occasional negligence as Wolves, always tidy and thoughtful if a little too predictable, were able to forge intermittent chances.
The conception of the one in the 19th minute was especially artful, as an intricate move culminated with a Kevin Foley cross from the right and a powerful downward header from an unmarked Dave Edwards was saved by Petr Cech . Wolves replicated that manoeuvre a couple of minutes later and Cech was again forced to intervene.
Within seconds Chelsea made Wolves rue those misses. With Yuri Zhirkov responsible for raiding down the left, Florent Malouda was deployed in a more central role than usual and he frequently found space in the middle, most tellingly for the opening goal. Nicolas Anelka combined neatly with Zhirkov before the latter picked out Malouda unmarked near the penalty spot, and the Frenchman sidefooted nonchalantly past Hahnemann.
Anelka fired into the side-netting from the edge of the area after a flowing move in the 26th minute and Drogba went close after a short free-kick from Malouda ten minutes later.
Between those two efforts Nenad Milijas kept Cech on his toes with a couple of shots from long range. Wolves' best chance came just before the break, when Doyle eluded his marker but mistimed his header after a dainty chip from Matthew Jarvis.
Those opportunities were enough to further embolden McCarthy, who rejigged his team during the break to make it more attacking. Withdrawing the left-back Jelle Van Damme also enabled the winger Stephen Hunt to make his injury-delayed debut for Wolves following his summer move from Hull. The Irish winger was greeted with boos by the locals, who still hold him responsible for the fractured skull suffered by Cech in a collision with him in his Reading days, in 2006.
Hunt nearly made himself even more unpopular with the home crowd by scoring within moments of his entrance, but Michael Essien cleared his diving header off the line in the 47th minute.
Typically, it was Essien who led the attempts to rouse Chelsea from their lethargy. He embarked on a trademark charge through midfield in the 58th minute, only for his shot from the edge of the area to be inadvertently blocked by Malouda. Just after the hour he ventured forward again, and this time fed Anelka, who rifled over from 20 yards.
The most substandard Chelsea player was Didier Drogba, who was returning to the team after a virus. The 64th minute brought an indication that his recuperation is not complete, as he raced on to a long pass from Branislav Ivanovic and then, with Hahnemann stranded outside the box, dawdled uncharacteristically, allowing the goalkeeper to scramble the ball away.
"He [Drogba] was not precise in his play, he lost a lot of balls," Ancelotti said. "But after the illness he needed to play with the team and get comfortable on the pitch."
Ancelotti introduced Salomon Kalou late on in a bid to kill Wolves off and, in the 81st minute, the Ivorian obliged. Drogba linked slickly with Essien before the Ghanaian slipped the ball into the path of Kalou, who slotted calmly under Hahnemann from eight yards. Relief for Ancelotti, regrets for McCarthy.
"It was a very good performance, we just lacked a bit of devilment in front of goal," the Wolves manager said.

THE FANS' PLAYER RATINGS AND VERDICT

KAREN CHILDS Observer reader

We've got used to steamrollering sides at home in the league but this was different. It felt very lukewarm: we coasted throughout but we got the job done. Wolves played very well and Cech had to make a couple of decent saves before we scored. But I was surprised they didn't put on Ebanks-Blake earlier as he looked very dangerous. Once we scored, we seemed to be in the comfort zone. We had a touch of the Arsenals - lots of touches but no final product. However, young McEachran got the crowd buzzing when he came on and he showed a lot of promise again. But it was just good to get the points.

RATINGS Cech 7; Bosingwa 8 (Ferreira 78 6), Ivanovic 7, Terry 7, Cole 7; Essien 7, Mikel 6, Zhirkov 7 (McEachran 82 8); Malouda 7 (Kalou 72 7), Drogba 7, Anelka 8 Subs not used Turnbull, Bruma, Sturridge, Kakuta

LOUIE SILVANI MyWolvesblog.com
We might have lost but we played the best football I've seen from us for a while. We played the ball to feet right from the back and we had most of the play. The only difference was that Chelsea had the clinical touch that we didn't. I think the fact Milijas played made us more creative but Jarvis was our best player – he gave Ashley Cole a very hard time. We've got three more tough games against the top clubs but if we carry on playing like this I can see us getting a lot of points after those matches. It was very promising and I came away feeling quite positive, even though Chelsea weren't at their best.

RATINGS Hahnemann 7; Foley 8, Stearman 7, Berra 8, Van Damme 7 (Hunt ht 7); Jones 8, Milijas 7; Jarvis 9 (Fletcher 87 n/a), Edwards 6, Ward 6; Doyle 7 (Ebanks-Blake 86 n/a) Subs not used Hennessey, Elokobi, Mouyokolo, Davis

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Mail:

Chelsea 2 Wolves 0: Blues stride clear, but Carlo Ancelotti's playing it cool

By Rob Draper

While Chelsea’s immediate rivals in Manchester have allowed themselves to be distracted by the Wayne Rooney saga, it may have escaped their notice that the Blues are quietly accumulating a significant lead in the title race.
Yesterday, though not without its troublesome moments, was eventually an entirely routine victory, even if its outcome remained in doubt until Salomon Kalou’s late strike finally put the game beyond Wolves.
While the result would have been expected, for now Chelsea’s defence of their Premier League title continues unabated. With a relatively benign run of fixtures to come for the Londoners — Liverpool away from home having lost its potency of late — Manchester United may find themselves some way adrift by the time they visit Stamford Bridge just before Christmas.
Carlo Ancelotti, however, is buying none of this at present. ‘The difficult moment will arrive,’ the Chelsea manager cautioned yesterday. ‘When it does, we have to be ready. We have a good advantage at the moment but Manchester City can be within two points if they win, so it’s too early to say we have enough points. We’ve started the season well, that is all.’
And, as Ancelotti went on to point out, there were times when this game threatened to diverge from the script. ‘It was a tough game and we didn’t play so well,’ he said.
Indeed, Wolves were something of a revelation yesterday. It is true that at times they fulfilled their villainous role as the league’s dirtiest team, notably when Richard Stearman produced an agricultural challenge on Didier Drogba which had neither the slightest intention nor hope of playing the ball. Yet for long periods, they also passed the ball crisply and caused Chelsea some discontent.
For manager Mick McCarthy, pitted against the team he believes will win the league, that remained a source of both pride and frustration.
‘I think Chelsea are the best team, no question,’ he said. ‘They have loads of ability, they are toughphysically and clever with the runs they make. They look one way and pass the other. They are a fantastic team ... and we should have scored against them!’
Yes, they should have. Throughout they produced chances, from the 20th minute, when Dave Edwards headed a Kevin Foley cross goalwards only for Petr Cech to save smartly, to the 71st, when Chelsea’s goalkeeper was again alert, plucking Kevin Doyle’s glancing header from a David Jones corner.
‘It was a good performance but we probably needed a bit more devilment in front of goal,’ said McCarthy.
They did have a serial irritant in Stephen Hunt, still a bête noire to Chelsea fans for his challenge on Cech while at Reading four years ago. He came on at half-time to predictable rhyming obscenities.
‘He relishes that,’ said McCarthy. ‘I was glad anyway, because if they were going to give anyone abuse it was going to be him and not me.’
He was a thorn in his opponents’ side and had almost scored within three minutes, stooping low with a diving header that Michael Essien was forced to clear off the line.
Doyle then forced a smart save on 52 minutes before the Czech keeper collected well from a Nenad Milijas effort on 63 minutes.
Nevertheless, this was ultimately a day of general good news for Chelsea. Not only did they extend that lead at the top of the table to five points but Jose Bosingwa, who sustained a knee ligament injury against Aston Villa almost a year previous to the day, made his first start since then.
Incredibly, he looked as fresh and inventive as ever, his attacking intent complementing Ashley Cole on the opposite flank. And within 13 minutes, he had all but completed a heroic comeback when a delightful exchange of passes with Drogba saw him unleash a tremendous shot from range, which Marcus Hahnemann did well to tip wide.
‘He played really well,’ said Ancelotti. ‘I think he was one of our best players. To be out that long is very difficult and he was very excited before the game. He’s an important player for us.’
With Frank Lampard scheduled to resume training on Monday and possibly in contention to play at Blackburn next Saturday, Chelsea are strengthening by the week.
And good though Wolves were yesterday, they could not live with Chelsea in their finest moments, the opening goal ample demonstration of the champions’ attacking prowess.
Nicolas Anelka darted down the right, played a lovely inside ball for Yury Zhirkov, who, in turn, pulled it back first time for Florent Malouda.
From eight yards out, the Frenchman struck firmly home.
The decider was just as slick and impressive. Substitute Kalou found Drogba, who then fed Essien.He slipped the ball back to Kalou, who had continued his run and finished the move with a firm strike to seal the points.

MATCH FACTS

CHELSEA (4-3-3): Cech; Bosingwa (Ferreira 78min), Ivanovic, Terry, Cole; Essien, Mikel, Zhirkov (McEachran 82); Anelka, Drogba, Malouda (Kalou 72). Subs (not used): Turnbull, Sturridge, Bruma, Kakuta. Booked: Mikel.

WOLVES (4-5-1): Hahnemann; Foley, Stearman, Berra, Ward; Jarvis (Fletcher 87), Milijas, Jones, Edwards, Van Damme (Hunt 46); Doyle (Ebanks-Blake 86). Subs (not used): Hennessey, Elokobi, Mouyokolo, Davis. Booked: Stearman, Berra.

Referee: L Probert (Wiltshire).

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Star:

CHELSEA 2 WOLVES 0:
A STROLLO FOR CARLO
By Paul Hetherington

Chelsea 2 Wolves 0:

MANCHESTER UNITED closed ranks to kill off any Chelsea hopes of landing Wayne Rooney last week.
But ­United’s hopes of beating the champions in the race to the Premier League title is another matter entirely.
Carlo Ancelotti’s men weren’t at their fluent best against struggling Wolves, who played better than their league position suggested they would.
And the Blues needed keeper Petr Cech to be sharp and alert to preserve their record of not c­onceding a league goal at home this season.
But Chelsea still stretched their points advantage to eight over United, who play at Stoke today. Goals from Florent Malouda and substitute Salomon Kalou sealed another Chelsea victory.
But their Italian boss was ­unusually agitated in the early stages as Wolves made much the better start. The champions weren’t their usual assured selves and Mick McCarthy’s enterprising side could have taken the lead through Dave Edwards, whose header from Kevin Foley’s cross was smartly saved by Cech.
Earlier, Jose Bosingwa had brought Chelsea to life in his first start for a year after a serious knee injury.
The right-back surged forward, worked a one-two with Didier Drogba and struck an effort which keeper Marcus Hahnemann did well to turn round the post.
But Chelsea eventually stepped up the pace and cruised ahead in the 23rd minute.
Nicolas Anelka found Yury Zhirkov, whose low cross set up Malouda for a comfortable right-foot finish.
Then Anelka could have put Chelsea further ahead before the break but hit the side-netting.
Wolves, though, never looked likle caving in and Kevin Doyle had a chance with his head but could only glance the ball wide.
And McCarthy’s battlers also made the better start to the second half with sub Stephen Hunt soon having a diving header superbly saved on the line by Cech.
Chelsea’s keeper then denied Doyle at the expense of a corner before Drogba missed a chance to increase his side’s lead in the 66th minute.
Drogba was sent clear by Branislav Ivanovic before Hahnemann raced out of his box to save at the striker’s feet.
But Chelsea sealed the points nine minutes from time with a neat finish by Kalou after his chance had been cleverly created by Drogba and Michael Essien.
Ancelotti said: “It was a tough game and we didn’t play so well.
“We had to play in Moscow ­during the week and we weren’t 100 per cent so it was an important result and we are in a good position.
“We have a good advantage at the top but if Manchester City beat ­Arsenal they will be only two points behind us.
“The difficult moments are still to arrive and we have to be ready when that happens.”
Wolves have now gone eight league games without a win but McCarthy said: “It was certainly a good performance and we should have scored.
“But we were playing the best team in the league in my opinion and they have one of the best ­keepers in the world.”

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Telegraph:

Chelsea 2 Wolverhampton Wanderers 0

Chelsea moved five points clear at the top of the Premier League thanks to goals from Florent Malouda and substitute Salomon Kalou. Wolverhampton Wanderers wasted a number of chances to equalise before Kalou completed a move he began by slipping Michael Essien's pass under Wolves goalkeeper Marcus Hahnemann 10 minutes from time.
The defeat left Wolves still looking for their first win since the opening day of the season and second from bottom.
Mick McCarthy's visiting side earned a corner as early as the second minute but Nenad Milijas' flag-kick was punched clear by Petr Cech.
Their bright start continued but another corner from Matthew Jarvis was headed straight at John Terry by Christophe Berra.
Chelsea struggled to find any kind of continuity in midfield and John Obi Mikel twice gave the ball away in dangerous positions. Fortunately for Chelsea, Ashley Cole managed to recover the situation before any damage could be done.
But Chelsea almost went in front in the 13th minute when Jose Bosingwa, playing his first game for over a year at home, burst into the penalty area but saw his angled drive tipped around the post by Hahnemann.
Wolves responded with a chance of their own in the 19th minute. Kevin Foley crossed from the right wing but a header from Dave Edwards was safely gathered by Cech.
Chelsea opened the scoring with a fine three-man counter-attack in the 23rd minute. Nicolas Anelka fed Zhirkov inside the penalty area and the Russian's pull-back was sidefooted home by Malouda.
Chelsea should have increased their lead in the 27th minute when Jarvis gave the ball away to Zhirkov.
He quickly fed Didier Drogba who in turn passed the ball on to Anelka inside the penalty area but the Chelsea striker fired his effort into the sidenetting.
Wolves tried to get back into the game but two long-range efforts from Milijas were easily dealt with by Cech.
Richard Stearman then became the first man in referee Lee Probert's notebook when he showed him the yellow card for a crude challenge on Drogba.
Bosingwa was determined to crown his return to action with a goal and he was only inches away from achieving that feat with a 25-yard shot in the 38th minute.
Kevin Doyle was unlucky not to equalise in the 42nd minute when he got on the end of a cross from Foley but could not direct the ball beyond Cech.
Bosingwa was then put clear by Malouda and the Chelsea right-back was thwarted by the feet of Hahnemann.
Stephen Hunt was introduced for Wolves at half-time for his debut for the club.
Hunt, who was involved in the collision that left Cech with a fractured skull when he was with Reading, was roundly booed by the home fans.
Hunt almost equalised in the 48th minute but his low header was cleared off the line by Michael Essien.
Doyle then forced Cech into a fine save at the near post as Wolves continued to press forward.
In the 56th minute Anelka got clear of the Wolves midfield and cleverly laid the ball through to Drogba but the Ivory Coast striker sent his shot wide of the target.
Milijas continued to try his luck from range but another 20-yard effort went straight into the midriff of Cech.
Drogba squandered another gilt-edged chance in the 65th minute when Branislav Ivanovic sent him racing clear.
But he failed to take the ball around the onrushing Hahnemann and the chance was gone.
Doyle forced Cech into a save at his near post in the 71st minute when he met a corner from David Jones.
Chelsea replaced goalscorer Malouda with Kalou moments later as they looked for a second.
They duly made it 2-0 in the 80th minute when Kalou slotted past Hahnemann, opening up their substantial points lead over Manchester City who face Arsenal tomorrow.


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