Sunday, February 14, 2016

Newcastle 5-1


Independent:

Blues on fire as Diego Costa sparks rout

Chelsea 5 Newcastle 1

Miguel Delaney Stamford Bridge

Chelsea look like the champions they are again, Pedro looks like the player he was at Barcelona again but yesterday that might have had something to do with the fact that woeful Newcastle United look like prime candidates for relegation again. Steve McClaren’s side made this win so easy for Chelsea, although there was one complication after John Terry went off injured in the first half.

The Chelsea captain was involved in an early collision with Aleksandar Mitrovic and is a doubt for Tuesday’s Champions League round of 16 match at Paris Saint-Germain. Otherwise, this was the perfect preparation for that game as the Blues finally began to purr again.

Diego Costa and Willian were both brilliant again, scoring one each, but it was Pedro who soared above everyone by hitting twice.

This win made it two months unbeaten for Chelsea – their last defeat was in Jose Mourinho’s last match, 2-1 away at Leicester City – but this was still Guus Hiddink’s first home win in the league.

If Chelsea’s form is still somewhat patchy, that has not been the case with Costa. In just the fifth minute, the Spain striker hit his eighth goal in 11 games, and his classic striker’s finish bore all the characteristics of a player performing with confidence.

Costa may be wearing a mask, but he was not hiding, relentlessly chasing down everything throughout the game. The wonder here was how Newcastle’s defence did not do more to chase Willian. The playmaker turned Cheick Tioté and just strode through the opposition half so easily. That kind of haplessness was a sign of things to come from Newcastle, as Costa then turned Willian’s pass past goalkeeper Rob Elliot to make it 1-0.

From that point, it seemed certain to get a lot worse for McClaren’s side in terms of the scoreline, but staggeringly their overall play also got worse. The second goal – coming just four minutes later – was a case study in atrocious play, even if Pedro’s sprint and finish were brilliant.

From Newcastle’s corner, the ball was cleared to the halfway line and Steven Taylor gave the Spanish winger a clear run on goal by playing a terrible pass straight into his path. Pedro had himself thundered forward from his own box, but he finished the move with a precise low finish into the corner from distance.

Newcastle were all over the place and, by the 17th minute, Chelsea again capitalised to make it 3-0. Costa returned the earlier favour for Willian, being afforded the space to play a precise ball across the box for the Brazilian to slide the ball past Elliot from close range.

Chelsea were by now enjoying themselves, and Branislav Ivanovic began displaying his technique in the Newcastle box, while Terry tried to score from a flick. The captain had not recovered from his earlier collision with Mitrovic, however, and went off after 37 minutes, to be replaced by Baba Rahman. It did not look good when Terry went straight down the tunnel.

Chelsea had one eye on Tuesday’s match as Newcastle even launched some attacks at the start of the second half. Typically, however, they ended up conceding the next goal. Again, despite the quality of Chelsea’s attacking moves, so much of it was down to Newcastle’s lack of defensive structure. Cesc Fabregas was afforded the freedom of the midfield, just as Willian had been in the first half, and that allowed the Catalan to pick his pass precisely. He played an arching ball over for Pedro, who took it down expertly and slid it past Elliot.

A near-perfect performance then had the near-perfect ending, as  20-year-old youth graduate Bertrand Traoré came off the bench to score his first goal for the club.

Andros Townsend did slightly spoil it for the home fans with a fine consolation goal – his first since his £12m move from Tottenham – and Chelsea must hope their week isn’t spoiled by injury to their captain.

Teams

Chelsea: (4-2-3-1) Courtois; Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry (Baba, 37), Azpilicueta; Matic, Fabregas; Hazard, Willian (Loftus-Cheek, 80), Pedro; Costa (Traoré, 60).

Newcastle: (4-2-3-1) Elliot; Janmaat, Taylor, Coloccini, Aarons; Shelvey, Tioté; Sissoko, Wijnaldum (Colback, 45), Townsend; Mitrovic (Doumbia, 70).

Referee: Roger East

Man of the match: Willian (Chelsea)

Match rating: 7/10


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Observer:

Pedro’s pair fuel Chelsea’s 5-1 rout of wretched Newcastle

Chelsea 5 - 1 Newcastle

Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge

It takes performances as pathetic as this to drain any optimism generated by a lavish mid-season outlay on attacking talent. Newcastle United looked a depressingly dysfunctional side here, a team devoid of defensive steel as they crumpled obligingly to present Guus Hiddink with a first league win at home in his second spell as Chelsea’s interim manager. Subsiding in these parts might not normally be cause for huge alarm, but the champions have not been permitted to purr like this all season.

Newcastle were feeble, their first half performance in particular the kind that invites demotion. If Chelsea lost interest at times, a 12th match without defeat assured and thoughts drifting to Paris and the Champions League, they could still rouse themselves at will. The combination between Bertrand Traoré and César Azpilicueta seven minutes from the end proved as much, the pair scything through for the youngster to register a first Premier League goal. Chelsea have not been as high as 12th for four months though, in truth, this was as easy a thrashing as they could hope to inflict. A gentle warm-up for a testing tie ahead.

Steve McClaren has his own challenges to confront. His team depart for a training camp in La Manga scarred by a sixth successive away defeat in all competitions, restored to the bottom three and with Sunderland, local rivals on an upward curve, breathing down their necks.

This was shambolic, a disgusting display lacking poise, leadership, discipline or fight. The same criticisms were levelled at the majority of these players after they succumbed to the same scoreline at Crystal Palace back in November. They were sunk from the opening exchanges, their performance summed up by Cheick Tioté’s dawdling in midfield, or the sight of their centre-halves seemingly ploughing through a quagmire as home players gleefully skipped across the surface at pace.

It actually felt dangerous to pass judgement on Chelsea given how obliging these opponents had proved to be. Certainly Paris Saint-Germain – aside from being encouraged by the twinge to the right thigh suffered by John Terry which forced him prematurely from the fray and will require a scan on Sunday – will have learned little other than that the Premier League champions can still be expansive when permitted to revel. They could run riot here without breaking into a sweat as Newcastle’s resistance extended no further than taking the kick-off.

They had been punctured by Chelsea’s first attack of any significance, Willian gliding away from his marker just inside the Newcastle half and then sliding a pass inside the hapless Fabricio Coloccini to infiltrate a ragged back-line. Diego Costa, the latest home player to sport a Zorro-style protective facial mask, held off Steven Taylor and clipped a first-time shot back across the on-rushing Rob Elliot that dribbled agonisingly into the corner of the net. The goal was Costa’s seventh in eight Premier League games.

Newcastle were split with every forward pass, as Willian, Eden Hazard and Pedro left them dizzied. The locals sensed panic in visiting ranks. Rolando Aarons, a winger filling in unconvincingly at left-back, was culpable for the second after an attacking free-kick had been hooked back to the halfway line. The 20-year-old misplaced his pass towards Daryl Janmaat, Pedro collecting and scurrying away while the Dutch international slumped to the turf in disbelief. By the time he had picked himself up Pedro had converted crisply from just outside the penalty area.

The ease with which Costa outpaced Coloccini, then cut back inside to slide a pass across the area for Willian to score the third, was disturbing. Tioté had allowed the Brazilian the freedom of Stamford Bridge to glide up-field and convert and, for all that the visiting players held impromptu arm-flapping inquests at each break of play, their deficiencies remained. Pedro and Branislav Ivanovic should have added to the lead, though no team this slack at the back can hope to resist for long.

All it took was Cesc Fàbregas’s lofted pass, arcing over Taylor, to open them up again. Pedro darted in behind the centre-half, collected on his chest and dispatched a fourth beyond Elliot. Traoré had added a fifth before Andros Townsend dispatched a consolation from distance, though that meant little. Newcastle departed the turf battered and bruised, and even the prospect of a friendly against Lillestrom in Spain will not be appealing. By the time their campaign resumes at Stoke next month, they must have rediscovered a backbone.


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Telegraph:

Chelsea 5 Newcastle 1, match report: Five-star Chelsea humiliate Steve McClaren as relegation fears grow

Newcastle United produced a defensive performance that screamed relegation against a swaggering Chelsea

By Matt Law,

Steve McClaren has suffered his fair share of footballing humiliations, but this will rank among the worst as his Newcastle United team produced a defensive performance that screamed relegation.
Goals from Chelsea’s masked hitman Diego Costa, Pedro Rodriguez, Willian and substitute Bertrand Traore plunged Newcastle into the relegation zone and heaped more pressure on manager McClaren.

Newcastle have now lost six successive games on the road, but it was the manner of this pathetic defeat, rather than the bad away run, that should have McClaren worried.

The standard of defending was not just bad, it was completely unacceptable and Newcastle look a hopeless case if they have to rely on their calamitous captain Fabricio Coloccini and Steven Taylor, only just back from injury, for the rest of the season.
McClaren takes his squad to La Manga for a training camp this week, where they will play a friendly against Lillestrom, but it will require more than warm weather to cure the cold reality of Newcastle’s problems.

“I’ve told the players don’t let that derail us,” said McClaren. “We have 18 days before our next game now – three or four players should return from injury and we can work on others in terms of fitness, and getting some defenders back in. We are getting a consistency at home, but we need to pick up some points away from home. There are 12 cup finals to come. We’ve got to stay calm and stable."

McClaren had said that he would not be pleased with a point at Stamford Bridge, but even the slightest hope of Newcastle taking anything off Chelsea was extinguished in 16 disastrous minutes for the visitors that raised more question marks over why the team’s defence was not significantly strengthened in January.

For a club that supposedly had a good transfer window with the signings of midfielder Jonjo Shelvey and winger Andros Townsend, Newcastle still have a defence that lacks shape, cohesion and quality, and could ultimately send them down.
How Coloccini remains a Premier League defender is anybody’s guess, but this was a horror show that featured the entire back-line and supposed defensive midfielder Cheick Tiote, rather than just the Argentine.

Guus Hiddink was delighted to have secured his first home victory in his second spell in charge of Chelsea, but the Blues suffered a fitness scare over captain John Terry ahead of Tuesday night’s Champions League last-16 first-leg tie against Paris Saint-Germain.

Terry was forced off with a hamstring problem after tangling with Aleksandar Mitrovic and will be scanned on Sunday to determine whether or not he has a chance of playing in Paris. Already without Kurt Zouma for the rest of the season, Hiddink needs good news.
“Tomorrow we'll know,” said Hiddink. “We hope it's a small muscular problem. Midweek is already Tuesday, so we just have two days to recover. Teams need at least three days, but we don't have that. We'll see what the outcome (of the scan) is.”

Chelsea already had the game wrapped up by the time Terry limped off in the 37th minute thanks in main to Newcastle’s inadequacies.
In just the fourth minute, Willian played in Costa, who was not impeded by the mask protecting his broken nose and beat Taylor to the ball to slide it past goalkeeper Rob Elliot.
McClaren headed straight into the tunnel to watch a replay of the first goal and he was only back in his seat for five minutes before there was even worse to see from his side.

Rolando Aarons attempted a ridiculous pass intended for Daryl Janmaat, but succeeded only in sending the returning Pedro through on goal and the former Barcelona forward gave Elliot no chance with a low shot into the corner of the net.

This time Newcastle held out for all of seven minutes more before they conceded again. Costa, hardly known for a blistering turn of pace, beat Coloccini to a ball he should not have got to and passed for Willian, who Tiote had given up tracking. The Brazilian made no mistake to net Chelsea’s third.
Tiote is apparently wanted by clubs in China before the closure of their transfer window on February 26. Newcastle should offer to pay the airfare.

McClaren reacted to the fact his team somehow needed to score three goals to have any chance of securing the point he claimed would not be good enough by taking off top scorer Georginio Wijnaldum at the half-time break.
Wijnaldum, who has scored nine goals this season, was replaced by midfielder Jack Colback, who is yet to hit the back of the net.

Newcastle started the second half slightly better, although they could not have been any worse. Cesar Azpilicueta, wearing his own protective mask, blocked a Shelvey shot before Mitrovic fired an angled drive wide.

But the prospect of Newcastle rescuing any sort of pride was extinguished in the 59th minute as the visitors’ defence parted for the fourth time. Cesc Fabregas hit a high pass over the top and Taylor succeeded only in jumping under the ball, allowing Pedro to run on to the ball and score his second of the game.
Jamaal Lascelles took over from the appalling Tiote, as Newcastle switched to a back five in an attempt to limit the damage, while another of the club’s attacking January signings, striker Seydou Doumbia, was sent on to make his first appearance for the club with 20 minutes remaining.

But it was a Chelsea substitute, Traore, who managed to make an impact on the game as the forward netted his first Premier League goal from Azpilicueta’s cross.
Townsend pulled a goal back for Newcastle at the death, but the shake of the head, rather than a celebration, from the former Tottenham Hotspur man told its own story.


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Mail:

Chelsea 5-1 Newcastle: Pedro nets brace as Blues cruise to emphatic victory over Magpies at Stamford Bridge

Chelsea cruised to a 5-1 victory over Premier League strugglers Newcastle at Stamford Bridge

By OLIVER HOLT

The masks that a number of Chelsea players have worn during the past few uncertain months started to feel some time ago like symbols of the fact that they have performed like champions in disguise for much of this strangely unpredictable Premier League season.

Diego Costa was the latest to sport one of them on Saturday after sustaining a broken nose in what was called, euphemistically, a 'duel' with a teammate in training. Gradually, though, the need for disguise is diminishing and against Newcastle, Chelsea unveiled themselves in much of last season's glory.
They have not lost now since Jose Mourinho left the club before Christmas and Guus Hiddink took over. Their progress, pockmarked with draws, has hardly been spectacular but the recovery has been steady and against Newcastle, it accelerated fast.

Newcastle, it must be pointed out, are a desperately poor side. If this was the best they could muster after watching their relegation rivals, Sunderland, close the gap on them at the bottom with a morale-boosting win over Manchester United, then one fears for their ability to beat the drop.
In fact, maybe Newcastle's players should don the masks instead. They could do with something to hide their blushes. They were, frankly, an embarrassment to themselves. Their inability to deal with Chelsea's attacks was one thing. Their unwillingness to match Chelsea's effort or desire was quite another.

The scale of this defeat pushed Newcastle down into the relegation zone on goal difference below Norwich City. They will have to improve dramatically if they are going to escape. Jonjo Shelvey and Andros Townsend, their new signings, already look like men adrift. Adrift and bereft, wondering what the hell they have got themselves into.

When Townsend scored a late goal for his new team to make the score 5-1, he did not even think about celebrating. He simply turned around and walked back towards the centre circle, shaking his head in dismay at the farrago that had just unfolded. Don't call his goal a consolation because it didn't provide any consolation to anyone.

After the match, Newcastle's embattled boss Steve McClaren manfully tried to eke the positives out of a putrid display. It was a struggle. 'We can't let this derail us,' he said. 'We have to stick together.' When he was asked whether some might view the club leaving for a warm-weather trip to Spain as a reward for such a crushing, limp reverse, McClaren bristled. 'People say it's a warm-weather trip,' McAllen said, 'but it could be pouring down where we're going.'

It certainly started raining goals early at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea had taken the lead within the opening five minutes after Willian had wriggled away from his marker in midfield and slipped a pass through to Costa, who had made a strong run into the area. Costa slid to meet the ball and hooked it expertly past Rob Elliot. It was his seventh goal in his last eight league appearances.
They went further ahead three minutes later as Newcastle pressed down hard on the self-destruct button. First of all, Shelvey underhit a free kick woefully and it was cleared upfield. Rolando Aarons brought it under control but passed it square towards Daryl Janmaat. That was underhit, too, and Pedro intercepted it and ran 30 yards before curling it past Elliot.

It was the kind of half where every Chelsea attack seemed to lead to a goal or a gilt-edged chance. They were 3-0 up after 17 minutes and this one was the best so far. Costa broke from midfield and beat Fabricio Coloccini to a through ball. Costa saw Willian bursting into the box and threaded a perfectly weighted pass into his path and the Brazilian slammed it past Elliot.

Even aside from their laughable defending, Newcastle were appalling. They were disjointed and disinterested. Aleksandar Mitrovic seemed to think going nose to nose with John Terry counted for something.
Mitrovic's foul on Terry midway through the half forced the Chelsea skipper off before half time but the Newcastle supporters might have preferred it if Mitrovic had looked at any point before then as if he was going to climb out of Terry's pocket.

Chelsea should have been six up by half time. Branislav Ivanovic scuffed a fine opportunity after a pull-back from Eden Hazard and Pedro shot tamely at Elliot when Costa played him clean through. It didn't matter. Newcastle were so poor Chelsea simply toyed with them.
They improved a little after half time, which may have been partly due to Terry's absence. With Kurt Zouma out for six months, Chelsea now face central defensive worries as they approach this week's Champions League tie with PSG in Paris. Ivanovic deputised alongside Gary Cahill in the second half.
Newcastle actually managed a couple of shots in the minutes after the interval but then they allowed the outstanding Cesc Fabregas the freedom of midfield and his lofted ball over the top of the visiting defence embarrassed Steven Taylor as he tried and failed to head it clear. Pedro took the ball on his chest and drilled it past Elliot.

The game lost momentum after that. Thinking of the match in France on Tuesday night, Hiddink took Costa off and replaced him with Bertrand Traore and Chelsea began to stroke passes around as if they were playing a lazy game of keep-ball on the training ground at Cobham.
Newcastle made a half-hearted effort to respond but Shelvey spent most of the second half gesturing at his teammates in apparent dismay. He knows now there aren't any other leaders in this Newcastle team. If anyone is going to rally them, he is going to have to do it himself.

As for Chelsea, their flirtation with relegation is over. They ended this game nine points clear of the bottom three and just two points behind Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool. They are surely too far back to mount a challenge for the top four but they may at least be coming into the kind of form that will give PSG coach Laurent Blanc cause for concern.
Eight minutes from the end, the second of Chelsea's masked men, Cesar Azpilicueta, dashed to the byline and cut a low cross back for Traore, who steered it past Elliot at his near post. It was 5-0 and Newcastle's embarrassment was complete.
Newcastle left for Spain after the game. In the radio commentary box, one of their former defenders, John Anderson, made a weary joke of it. 'I think a few of them are already there,' he said.

MATCH FACTS, TEAM NEWS, PLAYER RATINGS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois 6; Ivanovic 7, Cahill 7, Terry (c) 7 (Baba 37, 7), Azpilicueta 7; Fabregas 8, Matic 7; Pedro 9, Willian 7.5 (Loftus-Cheek 80, 6.5), Hazard 7; Costa 8 (Traore 60, 7)
Subs not used: Begovic, Mikel, Kenedy, Remy
Scorers: Costa 5, Pedro 9, 59, Willian 17, Traore 83
Manager: Guus Hiddink, 7

Newcastle (4-2-3-1): Elliot 4; Janmaat 4, Taylor 3, Coloccini (c) 3, Aarons 3; Shelvey 5, Tiote 5 (Lascelles 66, 5); Sissoko 5, Wijnaldum 5 (Colback 46, 5), Townsend 5; Mitrovic 4 (Doumbia 70, 5)
Subs not used: Perez, Saivet, Darlow, Riviere
Booked: Taylor, Shelvey
Scorers: Townsend 90
Manager: Steve McClaren 3

Referee: Roger East, 7
Attendance: 41,622
Man of the Match: Pedro

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Mirror:

Chelsea 5-1 Newcastle: Pedro and Costa run riot against hapless Magpies - 5 things we learned

BY DARREN LEWIS

Steve McClaren's men were three down inside 15 minutes as their dismal away form continued at Stamford Bridge

Steve McClaren's Newcastle were plunged back into the bottom three after being ripped apart by rampant Chelsea.

The Magpies conceded three goals in the first seventeen minutes to end the game as a contest.

Diego Costa , sporting a mask to protect his broken nose, netted just five minutes in from close range after being teed up by Willian.

Pedro doubled the advantage four minutes later in remarkable fashion. The former Barcelona winger intercepted an horrendous pass from Rolando Aarons inside the centre-circle.

He then raced clear and sent the ball low beyond helpless keeper Rob Elliot.

Costa set up Willian for Chelsea’s third by chasing a long ball forward and sending a low ball across the box for the winger to tuck away at the back post.

Pedro added a fourth on 58 minutes when Steven Taylor failed to cut out a long ball forward. The Spaniard had time to control the ball and convert an effort into the bottom corner.

Substitute Bertrand Traore completed the rout with seven minutes left when he converted at the near post from Cesar Azpilicueta’s centre.

The win lifts Chelsea to 12th, seven points off the top six. The defeat for Newcastle was their seventh time this season they have conceded three or more goals in a game.

Andros Townsend hit a consolation in the 90th minute from outside the box.

Sky pundit Jamie Redknapp described their shambolic start to the match as “probably the worst 20 minutes i have ever seen from a Premier League side.”


Here are five things we learned.

1. Newcastle still can’t defend

They may have outspent the German Bundesliga last season with a £29million spree but Steve McClaren failed to strengthen in the area that he needed to most.

Chelsea dissected the Magpies’ backline without breaking sweat.

The way that Willian strode through to score Chelsea’s third highlights just how shocking Newcastle’s concept of defending is.


2. Chelsea are stretched ahead of PSG clash

John Terry limped off eight minutes before the end of the first half, after clashing with Aleksandr Mitrovic.

It leaves Gary Cahill and Branislav Ivanovic at centre-half. Not the worst pairing in the world but it gives Guus Hiddink little room to manoeuvre if either is injured or booked.

Or if anything happens to any of his full-backs.


3. McClaren’s tactics will come under scrutiny

He threw Jack Colback on to replace the utterly pointless Georginio Wijnaldum at half time.

But why take off holding midfielder Cheick Tiote for Jamal Lascelles?

Surely an offensive player should have come off to prevent this shambles getting worse.


4. What must Jose be thinking of Costa's revival?

Let’s not kid ourselves, he clearly switched off under Jose Mourinho during the first half of the season. Over the course of the first five months he scored just four goals.

Since Mourinho departed in December, Costa has scored eight goals in ten games.

This run-out will have done very nicely ahead of Chelsea’s trip to the French capital.


5. Remy must be annoyed his move to China was denied

Another game, another 90 minutes that the France striker has had to watch from the bench.

Even with Chelsea 3-0 up at half-time he couldn’t get on and didn’t play at all in the end.


Player ratings

Courtois 7 - Will be annoyed at not keeping the clean sheet.

Ivanovic 8 - A nice run-out before PSG provide real competition in the week.

Cahill 8 - Must wish he could play every week - against Newcastle.

Terry 7 - Will be hoping the injury he came off with is not serious.

Azpilicueta 7 - With no service for Townsend an easy evening.

Matic 8 - Dominated the midfield. Even easier when Tiote went off!

Fabregas 8 - Had the freedom of the park with Newcastle clueless.

Hazard 7 - Quiet yet again. But at least today it didn’t matter.

Pedro 9 - Two well taken finishes. Must be gutted he can’t play Newcastle every week.

Willian 8 - Made one, scored another and will be yet again happy with his day’s work.

Costa 8 - Returned the favour after Willian set him up. Eight in ten now.

Subs

Baba (Terry 38) 7, Traore (Costa 60) 7, Loftus-Cheek (Willian 80) 7

Newcastle

Elliot 4 - And that’s being kind because he was left exposed

Aarons 2 - Horrendous back pass for Pedro’s goal.

Coloccini 1 - Supposed to be the leader. AWOL as his side fell apart.

Taylor 1 - Poor for all four goals. An horrific evening.

Janmaat 2 - Seemed not to know what to do when the ball came near him.

Tiote 3 - Unable to stem the tide as Chelsea’s midfield swept past him.

Sissoko 3 - Did he make any kind of meaningful contribution?

Wijnaldum 2 - Seemed unable to accept he needed to help defend. Hooked.

Shelvey 4 - Must (still) be wondering: ‘What have I done?’

Townsend 6 - Fine late consolation. See Jonjo Shelvey.

Mitrovic 3 - When his 2nd half chance came he couldn’t take it.

Subs

Colback (Wijnaldum 45), 3, Doumbia (Mitrovic 70) 4, Lascelles (Tiote 67) 3


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Express:

Chelsea treat their fans to fireworks as they hammer hapless Newcastle

CHELSEA gave out free beer and fired rockets into the night before the game to encourage fans and show not all is lost.

By TONY STENSON

Then the party and fireworks really started.

Chelsea made it a nightmare for Newcastle manager Steve McClaren who is surely hanging on to his job by a thread. His side were nothing short of woeful as the match turned into a turkey shoot.

The Blues secured their biggest league win of the season, with Pedro grabbing two, but Diego Costa, running riot, was the star man until he went off to a rousing reception.

They scored three goals in 16 minutes to condemn Newcastle to another round of head-banging and relegation worries.

The Magpies conceded six to Manchester City. It could have been double that. They apologised to the fans after that drubbing. What excuses now?

Even a 90th-minute goal from Andros Townsend couldn’t mask the pain in this pathetic show.

Costa wore a mask to cover a broken nose and he galloped in like the Lone Ranger to put them ahead after five minutes.

He never stopped and was a menace to Newcastle’s wobbly defence throughout. He even tried a theatrical over-head kick.

Then four minutes later Newcastle continued to commit hari-kari when Rolando Aarons tried an appalling crossfield pass only for Pedro to intercept and race for goal to fill his boots and score the first of his brace.

At that stage Newcastle were back in the bottom three and McLaren’s £80million spending spree – £28.5m during the last transfer window – looked a lost cause already.

Can he survive another pounding?

To rub salt into open wounds they folded again when Cesc Fabregas put Costa clear, he rounded Fabricio Coloccini and fed Willian to score a third.


It begged the question, do Chelsea really need a new manager when Guus Hiddink is doing very nicely, thank you, as interim boss?

He’s now unbeaten in his last 17 games.

Costa, who couldn’t buy a goal under previous boss Jose Mourinho, finished a move made out of nothing by Willian, a player who just gets better and better.

He’s already a shoo-in for their player-of-the-year crown and again showed why.


He waltzed passed Cheick Tiote as if he wasn’t there and then threaded a wonderful pass that was too much for Newcastle defender Steven Taylor and Costa scored from a difficult angle for his seventh goal in eight league games.

The onslaught continued as Pedro and Willian increased the goalfest – rounded off by Bertrand Traore.

If – and it’s a big ‘if’ – Chelsea had won each of the four matches they have drawn recently, their Champions League hopes would be alive and kicking.

But there’s the problem – despite having improved under Hiddink, four draws in five and six draws in eight was a poor return until Saturday.


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Star:

Chelsea 5 Newcastle 1: Pedro double, Costa, Willian and Traore shoot down sorry Magpies

CHELSEA gave out free beer and fired rockets into the night before the game to encourage fans and show not all is lost.

By Tony Stenson

Then the party and fireworks really started. Chelsea made it a nightmare for Newcastle manager Steve McLaren who is surely hanging onto his job by a thread.

They were nothing short of woeful as Chelsea turned into a turkey shoot.

Chelsea secured their biggest league win of the season, with Pedro grabbing two but Diego Costa running riot and was star man until he went off to a rousing reception.

They scored three goals in 16 minutes to condemn Newcastle to another round of head-banging and relegation worries.

They conceded six to Manchester City. It could have been double that yesterday.

They appologised to the fans after that drubbing. What excuses now?

Even 90th minute goal from Andros Townsend couldn’t mask the pain is this pathetic show.

Costa wore a mask to cover a broken nose and he galloped in like the Lone Ranger to put them ahead after four minutes.

He never stopped and was a menace to Newcastle’s wobbly defence throughout. He even tried a theatrical over-head kick.

Then four minutes later Newcastle continued to commit hari-kari when Rolando Aarons tried an appalling cross field pass only for Pedro to intercept and race for goal to fill his boots and score the first of his brace.

At that stage Newcastle were back in the bottom three and McLaren’s £80million spending spree - £28.5million during the last transfer window - looked a a lost cause already.

Can he survive another pounding? To rub salt into open wounds they folded again when Cesc Fabregas put Costa clear, he rounded Fabricio Coloccini and fed Willian to score a third.

It begged the question: Do Chelsea really need a new manager when Guus Hiddink is doing very nicely, thank you, as interim boss.

He’s now unbeaten in his last 17 games. Costa, who couldn’t buy a goal under previous boss Jose Mourinho, finished a move made out of nothing by Willian, a player who just gets better and better.

He’s already a shoo-in for their Player of the Year and again showed why. He waltzed passed Cheick Toitte as if he wasn’t there and then threaded a wonderful pass that was too much for Newcastle defender Steven Taylor and Costa scored from a difficult angle for his seventh goal in eight league games.

The onslaught continued as Pedro and Willian increased the goalfest and basically killed the game.
                   
If - and it’s a big ‘if’ - Chelsea had won each of the four matches they’ve drawn recently, their Champions League hopes would be alive and kicking despite a rotten first half of the season.

But there’s the problem - despite having improved under Hiddink, four draws in five and six draws in eight was a poor return until yesterday.

More of this and pride can be restored. But they will meet better sides ahead than Newcastle.

Newcastle were easy fodder and little was seen of new arrivals like Jonjo Shelvey and Andros Townsend.

At home they are dangerous, as they showed when drawing with Chelsea, giving Manchester United a real game and beating West Brom last week, but on the road they continue to look totally lost.

It’s five defeats in a row since they somehow won at Spurs and while all of their striking options have scored away from home, none have found consistency Newcastle United arrived having taken more points off Chelsea (13) than any other team in the last five seasons.

Then the fairy tale ended. Chelsea were unstoppable, attacking from every position leaving Newcastle floundering, breathless and looking no-hopers.

You felt for their fans who made the long round journey but never stopped cheering their side. They deserved more.

A weak effort from Georgino Wijnaldum that went softly into Thibaut Courtois’s hands was the sum total of Newcastle’s first half.

Pedro should have scored Chelsea’s fourth in the 36th minute when put clear by Costa but he shot straight at Rob Elliot. Chelsea were forced to re-structure defender and skipper John Terry limped off minutes later.

Baba came on as left back while Cesar Azpilicueta moved to his natural right and Branislav Ivanovic took over Terry’s central role. Not that the onslaught stopped, with Willian having a free kick touched round a post by a diving Elliot on half time.

Chelsea

Thibaut Courtois: 6 (Didn't really have to deal with any threats besides Andros Townsend's goal) Branislav Ivanovic: 7 (His return to top form continues and he proved he can also offer solutions in the centre of defence) Gary Cahill: 7 (Restored confidence in defence after Kurt Zouma's injury) John Terry: 7 (Limped out with a knock on 38 minutes but was solid for as long as he played and had the fans pleading with him to stay) Cesar Azpilicueta: 8 (Made some important clearances and created Bertrand Traore's goal) Cesc Fabregas: 8 (The Spaniard brought back memories from last season as he dominated in midfield and produced an assist) Nemanja Matic: 7 (Was also very dominant in midfield as he erased Georginio Wijnaldum) Eden Hazard: 7 (He linked up well with his attacking teammates, especially Pedro, and showed great resiliency) Willian: 8 (He created Diego Costa's goal and scored one himself. Another great performance that proves he is Chelsea's best player of the season)  Pedro: 9 (We haven't seen Pedro playing this well since his debut match against West Brom. He scored two goals and was a constant danger in Newcastle's defence)  Diego Costa: 8 (Scored Chelsea's opener and returned the favour to Willian as he created the Brazilian's goal)  SUB - Bertrand Traore: 7 (An impressive performance that rightfully earned him a goal) SUB - Baba Rahman: 7 (Could have done more to stop Townsend from scoring but was still very impressive)  SUB - Ruben Loftus-Cheek: N/A (Only played for 10 minutes)

 Newcastle

 Rob Elliot: 5 (The Newcastle keeper endured a nightmare against Chelsea) Daryl Janmaat: 5 (Didn't really have a chance against Pedro) Steven Taylor: 4 (An evening he would like to forget) Fabricio Coloccini: 4 (Chelsea players didn't find it hard to beat Coloccini at every exchange) Rolando Aarons: 4 (His back pass led to a Pedro goal and didn't really make up for it during the rest of the match) Jonjo Shelvey: 6 (Couldn't create chances and push his team forward) Cheick Tiote: 5 (Chelsea's midfield was just too much for him) Moussa Sissoko: 5 (There were moments where he found some space but he couldn't produce anything out of it) Georginio Wijnaldum: 5 (Couldn't offer any solutions in attack) Andros Townsend: 7 (Managed to get the consolation goal and was perhaps Newcastle's best player) Aleksandar Mitrovic: 5 (Chelsea's defence was too much for him) SUB - Jack Colback: 7 (Tried to contribute but nothing could stop Chelsea at that point ) SUB - Seydou Doumbia: 6 (Came in on 70 minutes but the damage had already been done) SUB - Jamaal Lascelles: 6 (Just like the other substitutes, he tried to turn things around but the damage had already been done)

Monday, February 08, 2016

Man Utd 1-1



Guardian:

Chelsea’s Diego Costa strikes at the last to deny Manchester United

Chelsea 1 - 1 Man Utd

Dominic Fifield at Stamford Bridge

This should have been the afternoon Manchester United breathed new life into their pursuit of the top four. Stamford Bridge may not be as impregnable as it once was, but victory would have edged the visitors within four points of the bottleneck beneath Leicester City, offering Louis van Gaal some respite amid all that familiar discord and doubt. He would not admit it, but to inflict defeat on a team who had started the campaign under José Mourinho, a friend who apparently now covets his job, might have provided added satisfaction.

Instead, as the Dutchman berated the fourth official in the mouth of the tunnel at the end, then echoed his complaints through his post-match quotes at the referee’s eagerness to blow his whistle and choke a United counterattack at the end of each half, it was hard to escape an underlying sense of deflation.

As bright as United had been at times, at the start of the second period in particular, when a goal of real pedigree had eventually forced them ahead, they were also damagingly wasteful. Aside from profligacy, the concession to Diego Costa in added time was born of the substitute Memphis Depay’s weak surrender of possession at the other end of the pitch. Just as at Newcastle United last month, points had been frittered away. “To have conceded so late makes it feel like a defeat,” said Jesse Lingard.

This game should have been theirs, for all that Chelsea summoned a response in the final quarter in pursuit of an equaliser. David de Gea had done well to deny Branislav Ivanovic on the volley, then turn aside Cesc Fàbregas’s crunched shot towards the near post. When Costa rose to nod over as the fourth official’s board was raised, it felt as if the hosts’ opportunities had been and gone.

Instead, Depay carelessly handed the home side another opportunity to spring upfield, the forward perhaps undecided whether to make for the corner and waste time or set up his fellow substitute Morgan Schneiderlin with a potential sight of goal. Chelsea regained the ball and, within seconds, Fàbregas was clipping a pass through the clutter of bodies on the edge of the United penalty area with panic having set in.

The visitors had been unnerved by John Terry’s presence as a makeshift forward, Daley Blind unsure just who he should be picking up only to slip as he belatedly broke forward, thereby clearing a pathway through which Fàbregas’s delivery duly squeezed. Cameron Borthwick-Jackson had played Costa onside and slid in desperately to try and intercept, only for his tackle to take the ball away from an on-rushing De Gea and neatly into the striker’s path.

Costa collected and converted a seventh goal in nine appearances and the champions had extended their unbeaten run to 11 matches. They are also now on 30 points, 10 away from the traditional marker to avoid relegation. Their own frustration was born of De Gea’s fine save to thwart Costa in what time still remained and, more worryingly, a potentially serious knee injury sustained by Kurt Zouma that will be scanned on Monday.

Yet it was United who felt damaged. This had been one of their better displays, a performance to maintain the promise of those wins over Derby County and Stoke City even as all the uncertainty swirls over the manager’s long-term future at the club.

Thibaut Courtois had denied Anthony Martial, thrillingly, and Wayne Rooney, then Lingard at full stretch just as the visitors’ ascendancy was growing before the hour-mark.

Unperturbed, Michael Carrick, Martial and the excellent Juan Mata pinged their passes once again to liberate Borthwick-Jackson from left-back. His centre was touched on by Rooney with the ball falling to Lingard, 12 yards out and with the 23-year-old’s back to goal. There was a touch, a spin and a fine rising shot on the turn which careered into the top corner before César Azpilicueta could summon a block.

Chelsea have found themselves in arrears too often on home territory, and a fifth defeat here loomed large. Their own attacking play had been generated in fits and starts, a flurry midway through the opening period when Costa and Oscar had found their range, and a wild penalty appeal in first-half stoppage time as John Terry’s shot struck Blind on the left elbow as he sprung out to intercept.

Zouma’s absence had disrupted their approach, the Frenchman having leapt to hack a loose ball upfield only for his right leg to buckle grotesquely on landing. He was taken off on a stretcher, distraught and clearly in agony. “It’s very bad when you land with a hyper-extension of your leg, very bad,” said Guus Hiddink before drumming his finger on the wooden desk. “Touch wood [it will not be the end of Zouma’s season] but, tomorrow, we’ll know more.”

They had still been reorganising when Lingard forced the visitors ahead, with Terry then pushed forward to bolster the attack with the game creeping away from Chelsea’s reach. Costa’s finish earned them a point, though those already faint hopes of making Europe through their league position are fading with each drawn match.

“We are unbeaten [since Mourinho’s departure in December] but, if you want to get into fourth place, you have to make victories,” added Hiddink. “We have had too many draws to get to fourth place. So it’s difficult.”

That sounded like an understatement given United are six points off fourth place and still feel like outsiders in the pursuit of Champions League qualification.

Man of the match David de Gea (Manchester United)


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

Telegraph:

Chelsea 1 Manchester United 1: Diego Costa keeps his cool to turn heat on Louis van Gaal with late equaliser

 Diego Costa scored a stoppage-time equaliser before Louis van Gaal loses temper with an official

Jason Burt

The striker with a bit of devilment did for the Red Devils. A draw at Stamford Bridge and a vibrant attacking performance was a huge positive for Manchester United under normal circumstances.
But these are not normal circumstances for them or for manager Louis van Gaal who betrayed his frustration at the end by berating fourth official Craig Pawson for the timing of the final whistle just as, six minutes into added time, time added for an apparently serious leg injury suffered by Kurt Zouma, his team countered in search of a desperately-needed victory that felt so close before it was taken away.

They thought they had it. They thought they had done enough. They thought David De Gea’s outstanding goalkeeping – with one emphatically world-class save to beat away a fierce Branislav Ivanovic volley – had repelled Chelsea and that they would be closing the gap on fourth-placed Manches­ter City to just four points.

Instead it stands at six. Not insurmountable but the margin for error is now so tight that even a result like this is damaging for Van Gaal who knows – despite his angry rebukes – that the spectre of Jose Mourinho is looming large. Mourinho’s agent Jorge Mendes is making sure of that. Making sure that the United hierarchy know his man is ready and available to be considered should a switch be made. The pressure is on.

It would appear impossible for Van Gaal to survive into the final year of his contract as United manager if he does not secure Champions League football. With the top four playing each other next Sunday, a day after United are away to Sun derland, and with Van Gaal still having to face that quartet, then the crunch is approaching fast.

There is no margin to slip for United just as Daley Blind slipped here allowing Costa to run onto Cesc Fabregas’s clever stabbed pass and score the equalizing goal. If Blind was unfortunate there then he was perhaps lucky not to concede a first-half penalty when John Terry’s shot hit his arms.
Van Gaal admitted taht the “title gap is growing and growing” but this is not about winning the title. He needs that top four. That has to be the prize.

It has gone for Chelsea, the champions, with interim manager Guus Hiddink effectively admitting that afterwards. That may also come as a relief, of sorts, as Chelsea will surely now start to turn more towards the cup competitions with the FA Cup and, yes, the Champions League still winnable for them. They are only seven points clear of relegation but will not go down.
There will be claims that Hiddink’s second spell at Chelsea is, after six draws in eight league matches, lacking traction but they would have certainly lost this match not so long ago. Instead this Chelsea are now, again, fighting to the end.

None more so than Costa. The striker carried that fight but the menace he showed was channeled properly. There were no distracting rows just a constant stream of aggressive intent that earned a hug and an exchange of words from De Gea once this encounter was over. And, at the end, Costa’s name rang out around the stadium; his status re-confirmed.

The focus was on Terry also, of course, with this being the Chelsea captain’s first home game since he announced he did not expect a new contract to be offered to him by the club and that – as things stand – he will be leaving at the end of this campaign. The fans reacted. Terry knew they would and chose his words carefully when interviewed post-match, also. Maybe Zouma’s injury – if it is a bad as feared – might also have an impact on Chelsea’s decision on Terry? Roman Abramovich was here, he heard the songs, he saw how Terry played and he knows this could develop into awkward situation.
Almost as awkward as this fixture being relegated to 13th place hosting fifth when, for so long, it was associated with title-defining games, games that showed how the shift in power switched between these two clubs over the past decade or so before Manchester City entered that conversation.

There are a few more voices involved this season – with, gloriously, Leicester City plus Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal hoping to last the pace – and the bottom line for both these clubs is that they need to shape up fast; they need to work out exactly what they want to do and where they want to be next season. And that starts with a decision over who manages them.

United had dominated with Anthony Martial, again impressive, cutting inside and forcing a superb one-handed save from Thibaut Courtois with a drive destined for the top corner before De Gea then acrobatically held onto Nemanja Matic’s header before Costa dragged a shot across goal and Oscar fired over. But it was tight. It felt like one goal would be enough and United drew two more fine saves from Courtois – who denied Rooney and Lingard before, with England manager Roy Hodgson watching, the latter scored.

Zouma’s injury, hyper-extending his leg as he landed, appeared to affect Chelsea’s players and when play resumed they were caught out. United worked their way forward with the ball sent wide by Martial to Cameron Borthwick-Jackson whose cross – and he delivers a very dangerous cross - from the left was cushioned by Rooney to Lingard who swiveled sharply to send an athletic right-foot shot beyond Courtois and high into the net. It was a “beautiful” goal, Hiddink conceded

Then came the Chelsea onslaught. De Gea denied Ivanovic, Fabregas and Costa, with a strong one-handed save before Borthwick-Jackson erred – playing Costa onside – and as Blind slipped the chance opened up. Borthwick-Jackson slid in but it only helped Costa round De Gea and stroke the ball home.
To compound United’s frustration the goal had resulted from substitute Memphis Depay losing the ball – rather than any mistake by the officials - as they attacked with four players against two defenders. Chelsea deserved their draw. But Van Gaal had victory in his grasp and needed to win.


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


Independent:

Diego Costa pounces in added time to peg back Red Devils

Chelsea 1 Manchester United 1: Lingard’s class rams home the extent of giants’ descent

Jack Pitt-Brooke

There was a time, not too long ago, when this was the best fixture in England, between the two best teams. Not now. Chelsea and Manchester United drew 1-1 in a game which had only one real moment of quality, in Jesse Lingard’s improvised opener, but said a lot about why these two teams are underperforming so badly.

Chelsea were far happier with the result, having offered little before Diego Costa’s stoppage time equaliser. This point moves them one ahead of West Bromwich Albion in the table. United, who were the better team, are now six points behind fourth-placed Manchester City, rather than four.

But this is the most open title race for a generation and neither of these sides, with nine out of the last 11 titles between them, is anywhere near the running. Neither of these managers is likely to be in charge of their sides next season. These are two clubs in need of new direction, of a new start, if they are going to push themselves back towards the top of the game in England, never mind Europe.

Both of these clubs would love to appoint Pep Guardiola as manager but he is going to Manchester City instead. The closest thing to him is Jose Mourinho, who won the title with Chelsea last year before leaving them in tatters less than two months ago. United are now making plans to appoint him in the summer, thinking that the trophies he wins justify the inevitable collateral damage.

That is not what United thought in 2013, but this game was more evidence of why they are changing their minds. The Louis van Gaal era is drifting towards its meek ending, even though Van Gaal himself bristled in the post-match press conference when asked about the club’s move to replace him. But unless United can find another level to their play, more intensity in possession, and fewer mistakes at the back, they are looking at the prospect of another season of Europa League football. Chelsea are unlikely even to qualify for that.

At the start of this decade, and the end of the last one, Chelsea and United were regulars in the semi-finals of the Champions League and often in the final itself. Next year’s competition, with the lure of a final in Cardiff, will probably take place without either of them.

United, it must be said, were the better side for most of the match. They started the game with complete control of possession, even if, as is often the case, they struggled to turn that into chances.

Michael Carrick ran the game from the base of midfield, while Anthony Martial cut in from the left with real menace. He forced Thibaut Courtois into the first of the game’s many good saves, with a right-footed shot towards the far top corner of the net.

But United needed to speed up after half-time and they did, starting to make chances. Wayne Rooney induced another save from Courtois with a shot from the edge of the box, as did Lingard four minutes after.

Lingard has been one of the most positive things to happen to United this season and he put them ahead with a goal that was the only moment of real quality in the match. Cameron Borthwick-Jackson, who also impressed, charged down the left-wing, receiving a pass from Juan Mata and hitting a good cross into the box. Rooney touched the ball to Lingard, who had his back to goal. With his first touch he controlled the ball, before spinning leftwards and striking it with his right foot, into the ceiling of the net. A brilliant idea, perfectly executed. Even the Chelsea manager, Guus Hiddink, said it was “a beautiful goal”.

Lingard and Borthwick-Jackson were, along with David De Gea, United’s best players and it is to Van Gaal’s credit that he continues to pick the youngsters, despite the poor results. It is unlikely that Mourinho would give them as many chances, as United must know.

Chelsea, in contrast, looked like a team in need of some youthful exuberance. It took them nearly 20 minutes to mount a serious attack, having started the game slowly and ponderously.

Playing both Nemanja Matic and Jon Obi Mikel naturally slows things down, and it was Matic himself who sparked Chelsea’s best moments of the first half, charging forward, and heading a Willian corner just wide.

There was an improvement just before the break, and Oscar might have scored from close range, before a plausible appeal for a penalty when John Terry’s shot hit Daley Blind’s arm. But Chelsea started the second half just as slowly, again on the back foot. Kurt Zouma was taken off on a stretcher with what appeared to be a serious knee injury, which meant a lengthy stoppage and the introduction of Gary Cahill.

Only in the final 20 minutes did Chelsea find the right intensity, having introduced Eden Hazard and Pedro from the bench. De Gea made a quick reaction save from Branislav Ivanovic’s left-footed volley, and then another one at his near post from Cesc Fabregas.

United ought to have seen the game out and they did make it into added time before they dropped their guard. When Fabregas played a pass through to Costa there was far too much space between Daley Blind and Chris Smalling, and when Blind slipped Costa was through.

He took the ball past Matteo Darmian and finished into the bottom corner. In the sixth and final minute of added time Costa broke through again, only to be denied by De Gea.

Three points would have been very flattering to Chelsea after a performance so lacking in tempo and control. They can take credit from the way they fought back in the final spell of the game, but this was not a performance to match Chelsea’s resources and ambitions. But neither was it from United, either.

Both teams are drifting in 2016, and it shows.


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


Mail:

Chelsea 1-1 Manchester United: Diego Costa nets late equaliser after stunning Jesse Lingard strike looked to have sealed victory

By MARTIN SAMUEL FOR THE DAILY MAIL

These are worrying times for Manchester United. They did very well here, for long spells, showed considerable ambition for the away team, took a single goal lead into second-half injury time. And drew.

The gap between Louis Van Gaal’s team and the Champions League places is now six points – seven if one factors in inferior goal difference – a significant margin to make up, particularly when the team in fourth place is Manchester City. Chelsea know how hard it is to make progress at this stage in the season. The club hasn’t lost under Guus Hiddick but still lie 13th. Draws are no help as the weeks slip away – and United do not look capable of the lengthy unbeaten run that is required.

Van Gaal was talking sparkling football before this match, but it is all relative. United enjoyed back to back wins, but one was against Derby County of the Championship, another at home to a Stoke team that has slumped dramatically since losing the Capital One Cup semi-final on penalties. Visits to Stamford Bridge are the occasions on which the elite are judged. Chelsea may have played nothing like a Champions League team this season, but they have stellar personnel and an upcoming date with Paris St Germain. A win here would have been a statement.

And Manchester United looked like getting it, as the game ticked into injury time. They had taken a brilliant goal through Jesse Lingard and kept Chelsea at bay, despite one of those hard-running performances from Diego Costa that rolled back the years. Well, one year anyway. And then they dozed off and gave it all up. That’s what it is like at the top. Tough.

There were six minutes of injury time remaining, but Manchester United should have been thinking only of closing out the match. It was substitute Memphis Depay who committed cardinal sin number one, losing possession at a crucial moment, handing the counter-attacking advantage to Chelsea. Cardinal sin number two, sadly, came from Cameron Borthwick-Jackson who dozily stayed a yard too deep, playing Costa onside in a dangerous position.

Typically, Cesc Fabregas found him there – a lovely eye of the needle pass that left Costa on goal, Borthwick-Jackson trying and failing to correct his mistake, and David De Gea for once stranded in Manchester Unitred’s goal. Costa scored, Chelsea saw out the game. It makes little difference to them – their Premier League season is already a bust – but it was a colossal blow for United. Van Gaal felt he was hard done by at Stamford Bridge last season and no doubt doubly so after this.

Yet the draw seemed a fair result to most. Manchester United had the best of the first 20 minutes of both halves, Chelsea finished them stronger. Manchester United had several good chances, so did Chelsea. Thibaut Courtois made some excellent saves, so did De Gea. Chelsea had a fair penalty shout rejected. Chelsea lost a key player to what appears a very serious injury. Manchester United made more of the running than away teams often do at Stamford Bridge. So, fair exchange, no robbery.

It was a pity for Borthwick-Jackson and, in a way, for Van Gaal, too. If this is to be his last season as Manchester United manager, the defender is one of the precious gifts he will leave behind. Jesse Lingard is another. The two youngsters combined for the goal that looked to have won the game. It was always Van Gaal’s promise that he would bring through youth players and he has been as good as his word. Yes, to some extent, by luck as much as judgement. Had Luke Shaw not suffered serious injury, it is hard to imagine Borthwick-Jackson getting sustained opportunity. Even so, it happened, and Van Gaal persevered. He has integrated Lingard into his forward line ahead of Depay, given Borthwick-Jackson the nod when other, more expensive, alternatives were available.

And on Sunday he was rewarded. The goal came in the 61st minute. Juan Mata fed Borthwick-Jackson on the left overlap, his cross was perfectly struck for Wayne Rooney to lay back and there was Lingard to plant it into the top corner of the net. He made it look easy, but it wasn’t. He had his back to goal but twisted and struck it on the turn, eluding Cesar Azpilicueta in the process. Yet, as has happened so often this season, United failed to take advantage.

Chelsea were doubly damaged in that moment, having already been hurt by a horrid injury that left central defender Kurt Zouma stricken just minutes before the goal. He jumped to make an unusual, volleyed clearance and landed on his right leg, his full body weight passing through his knee, which buckled backwards in a sickening fashion. Zouma was screaming, his team-mates nearby looked ashen. Gary Cahill is no bad replacement but almost his first act was to assume shape for the restart. Chelsea were behind. Yet from this crisis, they were the ones who finished stronger.

MATCH FACTS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE

CHELSEA XI (4-2-3-1): Courtois 8; Ivanovic 6, Zouma 7 (Cahill 59), Terry 7, Azpilicueta 6.5; Obi Mikel 6.5, Matic 6 (Pedro 67); Willian 7.5, Fabregas 7.5, Oscar 6 (Hazard 54); Costa 7.5
Subs not used: Begovic, Baba, Traore, Loftus-Cheek
Scorer: Costa 91

MANCHESTER UNITED XI (4-2-3-1): De Gea 7.5; Darmian 6.5, Smalling 7.5, Blind 7, Borthwick-Jackson 6.5; Fellaini 7 (Schneiderlin 79), Carrick 7; Lingard 7.5 (Memphis 86), Mata 6.5 (Herrera 95), Martial 7; Rooney 6.5
Subs not used: Romero, McNair, Varela, Pereira
Scorer: Lingard 61
Booked: Lingard, Smalling

Referee: Michael Oliver
Attendance: 41,434
Man of the match: Thibaut Courtois

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


Mirror:

Chelsea 1-1 Manchester United: Diego Costa snatches a point for under-par Blues - 5 things we learned

BY JOHN CROSS

Costa rescued a point and continued Chelsea's unbeaten record under Guus Hiddink after Jesse Lingard's stunning opener

Diego Costa struck in injury-time to dent Manchester United’ s top four hopes and grab Chelsea a point at Stamford Bridge.

United looked set to keep themselves in touch with the Premier League top four after Jesse Lingard’s goal just after the hour mark.

That would have made it back-to-back wins for Louis van Gaal’s men and would have left United four points behind rivals Manchester City.

However, as the game ticked towards the 91st minute, Cameron Borthwick-Jackson was caught ball watching, leaving Diego Costa onside, and the Spanish international turned home.


Here’s five things we learned.


1. Martial's influence grows by the week

He really looks a proper talent.

Even while United have been toiling and labouring in recent weeks, Martial has been excellent.

The way he drifts in from the left catches the eye, he’s a constant threat and he looks a fantastic prospect.

Manchester United paid £36m - potentially rising to £57m - and that sort of fee is generally reserved for proven talent.

They paid through the nose for potential and Martial has clearly got bags of it.


2. Cahill has chance to regain his place

It is always horrible and sickening to see a player suffer a nasty injury. Kurt Zouma’s injury looked horrific as he fell awkwardly and was stretched off.

The concern among the other Chelsea players was there for all to see and the home fans clapped him off. They could see the gravity of the injury.

Gary Cahill came on and may now get the run of games he so desperately needs and craves to clinch his place in the England line-up.

Heartbreaking for Zouma who was doing so well since coming in, but a way back for Cahill.


3. Lingard has an outside chance for the Euros

Roy Hodgson was at Stamford Bridge to watch what has traditionally been a top of the table clash.

It’s got a different context these days with Chelsea labouring in the bottom half of the table and Manchester United’s main target is simply top four.

But one player to surely have caught Hodgson’s eye must have been Jesse Lingard.

Lingard has scored three important goals recently, against Newcastle, Stoke and now at Stamford Bridge.

His goal at Chelsea was a peach. He controlled the ball, span and fired it into the top corner.

Hodgson got some stick for calling up Lingard a few months ago. If Lingard keeps playing and progressing then no-one will question his next call-up. He might even be in with a chance of the Euros.


4. What is and isn't handball?

It’s become such a grey area that no-one is quite sure what constitutes handball anymore, not least the referees.

The easiest definition is an unnatural movement of the hand and, to my mind, that’s what Daley Blind did to block John Terry’s shot in first half injury time.

I thought it was a penalty. Others disagreed. But then again, no-one is quite sure anymore.


5. Chelsea's top six hopes have gone

It was always going to be a tall order, but Chelsea’s hopes of getting a top six place - let alone top four - have surely gone now.

They are not playing well and there’s too much traffic to get through and too many points to make up to get a European place.

Chelsea looked flat, lacking in star quality and they have yet to regain any sort of momentum needed to climb up the table.

They must now rely on the FA Cup or Champions League as a passport into Europe. But playing this, both those routes look unlikely.


Player ratings - By Dave Kidd

Chelsea

Courtois 8 - Three terrific saves and little blame for the goal.

Ivanovic 6 - Given a rough ride by Martial but held up well and almost scored.

Zouma 7 - Basic but effective defending before his horrible injury.

Terry 7 - Rolled his socks up, puffed his chest out and led well.

Azpilicueta 5 - Not at his best defensively or going forward.

Mikel 5 - Won a few meaty tackles but bang average on the ball.

Matic 6 - Quietly effective in screening role but sacrificed when United went ahead.

Wlllian 7 - At the centre of most of Chelsea's best attacking work.

Fabregas 6 - Very poor first half, very decent second half.

Oscar 6 - Worked hard and has added a crunching tackle to his game.

Costa 7 - Had his usual nuisance value and sniffed out late leveller.

Subs: Hazard (for Oscar, 54 min, 5), Cahill (for Zouma, 58 mijn, 5), Pedro (for Matic, 67 min, 5)


Manchester United

De Gea MOTM 8 - Three world-class second-half saves.

Darmian 7 - Galloped forward well and defensively sound

Smalling 6 - Booked. Grew into game after some dodgy early distribution.

Blind 6 - Booked. Cultured on the ball but slip led to equaliser.

Borthwick-Jackson 7 - Coped pretty with Willian, bombs forward and crosses well.

Carrick 7 - Did his Carrick thing –all interceptions and angled passes.

Fellaini 7 - Shackled Fabregas and enjoyed the physical battle.

Lingard 7 - Booked. A terrific finish – the winger's second in as many games.

Mata 7 - Elusive in the No 10 role, he's still loved at the Bridge.

Martial 6 - Forced a great early save, though not at his most effective.

Rooney 6 - Some decent link-up play but more perspiration than inspiration.

Subs: Schneiderlin (for Fellaini, 79 min, 6), Memphis (for Lingard, 86 min, 4), Herrera (for Mata, 90 mins, 5)


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


Express:

Chelsea 1 - Manchester United 1: Costa comes to Blues aid as Van Gaal's men suffer late on

HE CAME close, Louis Van Gaal. Very close to going into the old den of the man who is tormenting him and making a real statement.

By TONY BANKS

But close is not good enough right now for the Manchester United manager, and Diego Costa's injury time goal at Stamford Bridge last night was a dagger through the Dutchman's heart.

It may possibly even have been a mortal blow to Van Gaal's hopes of staying in the job at the end of this season and not relinquishing it to Jose Mourinho. The man supposedly lined up to succeed him, and whose realm, whose kingdom, the Bridge used to be.

This morning, United stand six points off fourth place, and a full dozen behind Premier League leaders Leicester, with 13 games to go.

Van Gaal's team played well at times yesterday afternoon in SW6, taking a late lead through Jesse Lingard's goal. But they did not play well enough, and at the end few could deny that Chelsea deserved their late, late equaliser. That Diego dagger.

Chelsea's hopes of league success have long gone.

Had they lost this, though, their chances of making even the top six would have been significantly reduced. As it was, Guus Hiddink remains unbeaten as interim manager, and the faint hope still lingers.

But that goal, coming in the 91st minute, which came when Cesc Fabregas threaded a pass through to Costa, played onside by Cameron Borthwick Jackson, was a killer for his Dutch compatriot. Costa then evaded the youngster's tackle and went round the excellent David De Gea to score.

It was harsh on De Gea, who had pulled off half a dozen brilliant saves, and harsh on Borthwick- Jackson, the youngster Van Gaal has championed, and who had set up their goal. But those small margins are not going United's way at the moment.

During the week Van Gaal had dismissed as "rubbish" rumours that Mourinho, sacked by Chelsea before Christmas, was closing in on his job. It would been sweet for him to answer that threat with three points yesterday. But the truth was, that against this moderate Chelsea side, United were once again not good enough.

For the first home game since John Terry's announcement that he was going at the end of the season with no new contract offered, there was little fanfare. One or two banners, a few chants. Not quite the fanatical backing he might have wanted.

In any case, the Chelsea captain had other things on his mind early on, as United started well. It took a fine save from Thibaut Courtois to foil Anthony Martial but then De Gea saved well from Nemanja Matic as Chelsea came back into it.

Terry claimed a penalty when his shot struck Danny Blind, but it would have been harsh. But Chelsea then lost Kurt Zouma, who landed horribly after volleying the ball and looked to have damaged knee ligaments, which will be a blow to Hiddink if he is ruled out for a lengthy period.

Ironically, though, for Van Gaal, it was another youngster he has promoted who provided the breakthrough.

Lingard first saw a drive well saved by Courtois but then he fastened onto Borthwick-Jackson's low cross, span, and hooked his shot past the Chelsea goalkeeper.

Chelsea roared back but found De Gea in immovable form.

First he quite brilliantly turned Branislav Ivanovic's volley over the bar, and then reacted well to keep out Cesc Fabregas's rising shot.

As Costa nodded over from close in it looked like Chelsea's chance had gone. But then up popped Fabregas, United fell asleep again - and Costa struck.

He could even have won it right near the end but once again De Gea stopped him at the foot of a post. Had it not been for his excellent goalkeeper, this could have been even worse for Van Gaal.

At the end Terry saluted the Matthew Harding end and even threw his shin pads into the crowd. That farewell is going to be long and involved, and may even not happen.

Van Gaal may well be on the road to his own farewell at the end of the season right now. And the ghost of Mourinho - whose teams, remember, were specialists at the late strike - still haunts him.


Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois 7; Ivanovic 7, Zouma 7 (Cahill 58 6), Terry 7, Azpilicueta 6; Mikel 7, Matic 7 (Pedro 67 6); Willian 6, Fabregas 7, Oscar 7 (Hazard 54 6); Costa 7. Goal: Costa 91. NEXT UP: Newcastle (h), Sat PL.

Manchester United (4-2-3-1): De Gea 8; Darmian 7, Smalling 7, Blind 6, Borthwick-Jackson 6; Carrick 7, Fellaini 7 (Schneiderlin 78 6); Lingard 7 (Depay 85 6), Mata 7 (Perreira 94 6), Martial 7; Rooney 7. Booked: Blind, Smalling, Lingard. Goal: Lingard 61. NEXT UP: Sunderland (a), Sat PL.

Referee: M Oliver (Northumberland)


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


Star:

Chelsea 1 Manchester United 1: Diego Costa rescues late point for Blues

JOSE MOURINHO would have enjoyed this.


By Paul Brown / Published 8th February 2016


Chelsea had been outplayed, had a series of penalty claims waved away, and lost Kurt Zouma to what looked like a season-ending injury.

Yet somehow they still managed to escape with a stoppage time goal from Diego Costa, who cancelled out Jesse Lingard’s fine opener to maintain Guus Hiddink’s unbeaten record.

All that was missing was Mourinho snarling and raging in the dug-out at every perceived injustice. If you believe the hype, United fans may not have long to wait for that.

The Special One broke his silence yesterday, admitting he wants back into management as soon as possible. It seems only a matter of time until he is.

For almost 90 minutes it all looked so good for Louis Van Gaal. His side played with the kind of pace and positivity the fans have been demanding for weeks.

But they were undone by Costa, who had penalty claims against Danny Blind waved way three times by referee Michael Oliver, but still found a way to be decisive.

It was a much more cavalier United that started the match, with Michael Carrick and Marouane Fellaini pulling the strings and the visitors committing men forward in numbers.

Van Gaal made no changes from the team which beat Stoke 3-0, and that win seemed to have restored their confidence.

It wasn’t until Willian picked up the ball in the 16th minute that Chelsea came alive, the winger powering his way straight through the heart of the visiting midfield.

Oscar’s resulting shot was blocked though, and Thibaut Courtois was then forced into a fine one-handed save from Anthony Martial.

Willian was just about the only bright spot for Chelsea in a pretty poor opening for the home side, who looked well out of sorts.

Diego Costa, who had barely touched the ball, was then lucky to escape a booking at a corner won by another surging Willian run.

Costa’s header looped just over the target, but he was being held by Blind and responded furiously when referee Oliver gave nothing.

Suddenly Chelsea burst into life, with a slick move involving Oscar, Willian and John Obi Mkel freeing Costa down the right for a shot which whistled just past the post with De Gea rooted.

Oscar too missed a decent chance, blazing wide when he found himself with time to take aim at the near post from a tight angle.

He’d scored a hat-trick in Chelsea’s FA Cup win at MK Dons, and he was inched away from getting on the end of a low Willian centre moments later.

Fellaini nodded a corner from Blind wide at the other end when he should really have done better, but it was hardly gripping stuff.

And Wayne Rooney, quiet up until that point, was a whisker away from connecting from a fine low cross from Matteo Darmian which only needed a touch.

But the half ended in controversy when a John Terry volley struck Blind on the arm. Chelsea wanted a penalty. Referee Oliver said no.

Jesse Lingard forced Courtois into another full-length stop at the start of the second half.

And then came the horrible moment when Zouma’s knee buckled under him, his screams leaving players from both sides demanding the swift intervention of Chelsea’s medical staff.

Almost immediately after the gruesome incident United scored, with Cameron Borthwick-Jackson crossing and Rooney laying it off for Lingard, who turned his man to fire home.

Costa wanted another pen when Blind then bundled him over, but all he got was a free kick. This time he just laughed about it.

De Gea pulled off spectacular saves to deny Branislav Ivanovic and Cesc Fabregas, and Costa headed over before his late goal changed everything.

Borthwick-Jackson actually made a fine save tackle, but in doing so took the ball beyond De Gea and allowed Costa a tap-in. He could even have won it but De Gea denied him moments later.


Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Courtois 6; Ivanovic 6, Zouma 6 (Cahill 59, 6), Terry 7, Azpilicueta 5; Matic 6 (Pedro 67, 6), Mikel 6; Willian 7, Fabregas 6, Oscar 6 (Hazard 55, 6); COSTA 8.
Subs: Begovic, Baba, Traore, Pedro, Loftus-Cheek.

UP NEXT: Newcastle (h), Premier League, Saturday

Manchester United (4-2-3-1): De Gea 6; Darmian 6, Blind 6, Smalling 6, Borthwick-Jackson 7; Carrick 7, Fellaini 6 (Schneiderlin 79); Lingard 7 (Memphis 87), Mata 6 (Herrera 90), Martial 6; Rooney 6.
Subs: Romero, Varela, McNair, Perreira.
UP NEXT: Sunderland (a), Premier League, Saturday

Star man: Diego Costa (Chelsea) – Never gave up
Star shocker: Cesar Azpilicueta (Chelsea) – Beaten for goal
Referee: Michael Oliver 6

Thursday, February 04, 2016

Watford 0-0




Independent:
Blues extend unbeaten run to 10 games in goalless draw
Watford 0 Chelsea 0

Kevin Garside Vicarage Road

A point at Watford is no longer to be sniffed at. This was a match Chelsea might have lost earlier in the campaign. There were few flares let off in a gritty, hard-fought encounter, and you know who excels on occasions such as these.

Yes, the name of John Terry was the one on the lips of the Chelsea faithful as the clock ran down, a typically aggressive burst out of defence in an attempt to rouse his team one more time. Terry had his hands full all night keeping Odion Ighalo and Troy Deeney quiet, but never took a backward step, the fallout from his contract poker game having nil impact on him.

Elsewhere, interim coach Guus Hiddink would have learned far more from this yeoman arm wrestle than the parade through Milton Keynes in the FA Cup on Sunday. If he does persuade his masters to retain the services of Terry, Hiddink will have done the club a service.

If the likes of Willian and Oscar get itchy feet, however, that would be a different matter. If Chelsea are to feature at the top of the table next season, both would benefit from whatever Terry had last night.

Though out of the equation at the top, Chelsea might yet have a significant hand in the coronation with their final three home fixtures of the season against Manchester City, Tottenham and Leicester, in that order, the latter closing the campaign. Of the present top five, only Arsenal do not have to face Chelsea again. Manchester United are first up on Sunday.

The Premier League has provided rich and unpredictable entertainment this season but few would argue it is the better for Chelsea’s improbable decline, though we acknowledge the dramatic value of Jose Mourinho’s fall.

Watford’s station as top-10 campaigners is further proof of the growing levelling-out in the Premier League, as is the hitherto modest club spending millions on five players in the January transfer window, including two quickly farmed out on loan to Granada.

The charismatic Spaniard at the helm, Quique Sanchez Flores, hardly knew whether disappointment or elation was the appropriate response to occupying 10th place ahead of Chelsea’s visit. At one point his team threatened to emulate Leicester’s trajectory.

Then again, at the outset none would have been surprised if Watford experienced the lot of Aston Villa, Sunderland and Newcastle. Irrespective of last night’s result Watford were guaranteed to remain above their august opponents, which neatly sums up this mad cabaret.
Hiddink made four changes from the Chelsea side that whupped MK Dons in the FA Cup on Sunday, the most significant of which was Eden Hazard being withdrawn to the bench.

The game was six minutes old when Terry, at the centre of yet more political manoeuvring at Stamford Bridge, was drawn into the match for the first time, yielding a corner with a block on the dangerous Ighalo. You wondered if Terry might not have been better served keeping his powder dry until after this assignment given the potential for embarrassment at the feet of Ighalo. Then again, heroic resistance was always his credo.

Watford display all the features of an ambitious, upwardly mobile team, organised in the current fashion into a compact shape with explosive elements up front. Ighalo, Deeney, Jose Manuel Jurado and Étienne Capoue were all a persistent nuisance in the opening period.

One mazy dribble by Jurado in the 27th minute was a case in point and led to a stinging shot from Capoue that drew a smart save from Thibaut Courtois. It was the Belgian’s second intervention within minutes after being tested by a Sebastian Prödl header from a corner.

Chelsea’s first real crack at goal came in the 32nd minute on the break, Diego Costa racing on to a speculative long ball. The Spaniard had plenty to do to get a shot away, and though he won a corner, Chelsea made nothing of it. The longer the half went on the more Chelsea pursued the aerial route, seeking out the willing Costa.

The tactic reflected Watford’s dominance of the middle of the park at the expense of the largely decorative Willian and Oscar. Ben Watson deserves special mention in this regard, a critical cog at the base of the Watford midfield who did much to anchor the defensive effort.

The half ended in unnecessary acrimony with Costa at the heart of it, taking an illegal blow from Juan Carlos Paredes after first bringing his opponent to the ground. The usual posturing ensued, sundry quasi-hardmen from each side throwing their weight about before both Costa and Paredes were booked.

Hiddink would have told his team they would need to improve to maintain their upswing in momentum, and though they opened the second half with a speculative effort from Jon Obi Mikel that required the attention of a back-pedalling Heurelho Gomes, Watford moved with greater fluency and purpose.

Costa was the all-too-obvious out ball for Chelsea while in the service of Watford Ighalo and Deeney offered twice the threat. With Cesc Fabregas continuing to labour in the Chelsea midfield and Nemanja Matic and Mikel  flatlining, Costa had insufficient support behind him.
Hiddink recognised the problem and with 20 minutes left sent out Hazard for Matic. It had increasingly become a night for keeping the mistakes to a minimum and hoping talent would win out at some point. It was not to be for either side.

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

Telegraph:

Watford 0 Chelsea 0
Guus Hiddink's side frustrated despite unbeaten run stretching to nine games
Visitors are held to a goalless draw despite Diego Costa's best efforts

By  Jason Burt
Chelsea just about won this one on points – with some pushing and shoving involving Diego Costa thrown in – but they did not take the points in what developed into a full-blooded, bone-jarring encounter which Watford certainly did not deserve to lose either.

The storylines revolved around John Terry – this being the first game for the Chelsea captain since he announced he expected to quit the club in the summer after not being offered a new contract – and, inevitably, the brooding, bullying Costa who was sinned against more than sinning given the laughable theatrics of defender Juan Carlos Paredes. Watford captain Troy Deeney summed up the clash, which rumbled around half-time, with the word “pathetic”. He was right.

In the cold light of day Chelsea are now 16 points off fourth place with just 14 Premier League matches left. It means they have to gain a point a game more for the rest of the season than either Arsenal or Tottenham Hotspur to finish in the top four. And that is surely not going to happen. The champions are relinquishing their title and a place in the Champions League also - unless they go and win it.

On the one hand Guus Hiddink has now, over two caretaker spells, after his first period in charge in 2009, taken charge of 32 matches and lost just one. That is phenomenal. He is unbeaten in nine games since returning to Chelsea at Christmas. On the other hand he has presided over seven league matches and won just two of them, drawing five.

That is not to blame Hiddink. He has done well, very well – again - and this was a very different Chelsea than the one which drew 2-2 at home to Watford in his first game back, on Boxing Day, when their fragility was all too evident. Here they were far more robust, a lot more driven, a lot more dangerous.

This was feisty but it was also friends reunited. Hiddink was denied by Heurelho Gomes, his goalkeeper when the Dutchman was coach of PSV Eindhoven, with two outstanding late saves from the Brazilian. Watford manager Quique Sanchez Flores was moved to help try and calm Costa, who he had managed at Atletico Madrid, as the striker tangled with Paredes.

Hiddink claimed the Ecuadorean had hit Costa on the back of the head. The Chelsea striker then appeared to push Paredes on the back of his head – with the Watford player then embarrassingly clutching his face as he hit the turf. Costa held his own face. Onlookers, in truth, felt like holding their own faces as well.

It was pretty unseemly stuff and was, in fairness, dealt with well by referee Mike Dean while Costa – who had also pushed another defender, Sebastian Prodl, to the ground in an earlier incident – eventually gathered himself sufficiently to perform far better in a second-half that Chelsea came into stronger and stronger.

At the final whistle there were cheers from the Watford fans who recognize the value of a courageous performance and a point that took their team up to ninth in the table – and four points ahead of Chelsea still – in what has been an outstandingly convincing return to the top-flight.

For long periods in the first-half it felt like they would have even more to celebrate as Idion Ighalo ran Terry ragged – his quick feet, trickery and directness was a problem – and Deeney provided the muscle as well as the guile. It is, and has been all season, a potent combination with Etienne Capoue adding strong running support from midfield while Jose Manuel Jurado ran at the Chelsea defence.

Chances were at a premium, however. But Ighalo should have given Watford the lead when Jose Holebas broke down the left and delivered a cross that dropped over Terry, who missed the flight, and in front of Kurt Zouma. Ighalo was in-between the pair, and, surely he would score. But his header was mis-timed, maybe Terry’s jump had put him off, and the opportunity went. There was a powerful header from Prodl held by Thibaut Courtois who then did even better to push away a fierce rising shot from Capoue after he was set up by Jurado’s dancing feet across the edge of the area.
Chelsea were reeling but then Oscar’s long ball forward caught out the Watford defence with Costa running clear to twist and turn and send a low cross-shot that deflected off the recovering Craig Cathcart to fly only narrowly wide.

That fight-back almost spilled over – Costa and Paredes clashed – and the second-half became even more attritional. No quarter was given. Gomes had to react alertly to tip over a looping, deflected shot from John Obi Mikel, Oscar side-footed just wide from close-range after being set up by Costa and, at the other end, Deeney volleyed low and just past the post.

Hiddink decided to go for it. He pushed on Eden Hazard, a substitute as he continues his recovery from injury, and there was suddenly more purpose to Chelsea and more threat. “Attack, attack, attack,” chanted the visiting fans and their team did. Oscar forced a fine parry from Gomes as he drifted inside and fired a powerful right-foot shot before Hazard’s run was picked out by Willian. He fed Branislav Ivanovic whose effort was superbly turned around the post by Gomes who, finally, excelled that by thwarting Costa who headed powerfully from even closer to goal. It remained eventful and goalless.

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

Guardian:

Watford’s Heurelho Gomes flexes to keep Chelsea at bay
Watford 0 - 0 Chelsea
Dominic Fifield at Vicarage Road

John Terry performed his customary routine at the final whistle here, striding into the Watford half and towards those upstanding in one corner of the Vicarage Road stand to applaud the chanting of his name and thump the badge on his chest. The centre-half believes he will be denied the “fairytale ending” of retiring as a Chelsea player and, unless both parties can find reconciliation, every game between now and the summer will feel like a farewell. On this evidence, the sense of anti-climax will end up shared by club and captain.
 
This was a 10th match in all competitions without defeat for the champions since José Mourinho was sacked in December but, confronted by a Watford side who simply would not wilt, it still ended up feeling wasteful.

The visitors were disjointed, playing in fits and starts and offering only flashes of the fluency which had dismantled MK Dons in the FA Cup on Sunday. Those Championship opponents were naively obliging. Watford, newly risen from the second tier, are anything but these days and Quique Sánchez Flores’ more streetwise team discomforted their visitors throughout the first period. They are the side who now loiter in the top half of the table while Chelsea peer up at them from below
.
Only in the latter stages did Guus Hiddink’s team really threaten a third away win in succession, when Heurelho Gomes shrugged himself awake to block from Branislav Ivanovic and, brilliantly, claw away Diego Costa’s header in the last few minutes. Hiddink had worked with the Brazilian at PSV Eindhoven and bemoaned the goalkeeper’s heroics in opposition. He was less complimentary about Juan Carlos Paredes’ theatrics in first-half stoppage time, Watford’s Ecuadorian right-back rolling around clutching his face after brushing with the occasion’s predictable pantomime villain, Costa, in front of the dugouts.

“We were very close, it was 10 yards from our bench, and Paredes punched Diego in his back and then they stumbled,” said Hiddink. “Then Paredes brought his hand to his head, and Diego had been nowhere near his head. They stumbled. It was provocation to get someone off the pitch. Happily the referee and the assistant saw it and didn’t fall for it because there was no way Diego was close to his face. This is a man’s game.”

Both players were booked, though Paredes can also expect a dressing down from his club captain back at the training ground in London Colney on Thursday. “He didn’t help himself,” said Troy Deeney. “It was ‘soft’, that’s the best word to describe it. Where I grew up, and the way I grew up playing football, people would get kicked for rolling around like that. It was all a bit pathetic. But it’s new-age football. There’s a little touch and everyone’s rolling around. It’s just handbags. In Sunday League that wouldn’t happen because you’d be laughed at. I don’t like to see it, to be honest, and we’ll have a word with Paredes on our side.”

It was that kind of game, a spluttering stalemate crying out for a flash of inspiration from Eden Hazard or Odion Ighalo, Oscar or José Manuel Jurado. They all offered tasters of their quality but too much of it was lost amid the stodge of midfield.
 
The hosts could consider two draws with the reigning champions this term as reason for satisfaction, Flores describing most aspects of their performance as “amazing” in the aftermath while admitting taking Costa to one side at the end “to tell him I love him”. He had coached the young Brazilian, since turned Spain international, when they were at Atlético Madrid. The majority in the crowd preferred to heckle Costa, riled by the aggression which he has made his trademark but thankful he had seen his first-half effort deflected wide by Craig Cathcart.

Watford were not afraid to muscle their way into opponents as well, with Deeney driving Chelsea’s full-backs into their shells and Ighalo denied from close range by César Azpilicueta’s block from José Holebas’ fine centre. Thibaut Courtois thwarted Sebastian Prödl and Étienne Capoue, yet they were stretched in the latter stages and relieved by the final whistle.

“You have to compare us to how the team were when we came in,” added Hiddink. “It had been a difficult half-year but, step by step, we’re getting back to how we like to play.”
That is proving a slow process, despite the unbeaten sequence, and the top six remain a distant 10 points away. For now, Watford continue to hold the higher ground.

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

Mail:
Watford 0-0 Chelsea
Diego Costa fails to inspire Blues in goalless draw as Guus Hiddink's side continue unbeaten run

By Matt Barlow for the Daily Mail 

For a few minutes at the very end, Eden Hazard came off the bench and offered a flourish, a flash of colour as the Belgian looked something like the superstar he was last season.    

But that was that. There proved to be no way past Heurelho Gomes, the brilliant Watford goalkeeper, who played for Guus Hiddink at PSV Eindhoven, and for the rest of it, this was a rather tedious affair.      
Caution gripped two teams in search lost form and the Chelsea fans borrowed a chant from those at Manchester United.

'Attack, attack, attack,' they roared as the game drifted along. Until that point, it had been most notable for another tantrum from storm-tossed striker Diego Costa.

Chelsea are unbeaten in 10 games since the exit of Jose Mourinho, but still disjointed, lacking balance and without back-to-back victories since last season, and not the team they were.
This point does little to help Guus Hiddink's unlikely quest for a late charge towards the top four. They languish in 13th, nearer the relegation zone than the Champions League places.

'We are disappointed,' said Hiddink. 'We would have loved to have three points we thought we deserved. I didn't like what Gomes did. It would have been a big reward to win this after the wins against Arsenal and in the FA Cup.

'We knew it would be difficult to get to fourth place. Now it's very difficult. We probably need 3.1 points from each game.'
Watford were more satisfied with another point to the survival fund. 'We are very happy,' said Quique Sanchez Flores, who saw his team start well, but they were under pressure at the end.

Diego Costa has improved his play but his behaviour hasn't changed a bit. Referee Mike Dean needed to watch Costa throughout the first half, especially off the ball.
After a clash with defender Sebastian Prodl, Costa pushed the Watford player to the floor. A clear foul and Dean spoke to the striker.
Just before half time there was a bizarre clash between Juan Carlos Paredes and Costa. First Costa seemed to invent contact by the defender and threw himself to the ground.

Dean played on but did stop play when Paredes threw himself to the ground, holding his face after Costa went past him. Replays showed no contact from Costa and Dean showed common sense by cautioning both players for unsporting behaviour.
Common sense from the referee which was clearly lacking from the players.

Odion Ighalo gave John Terry problems in the first half with his quick feet and turn of pace, but the Chelsea skipper got to grips with him and celebrated another clean sheet.
He went to the fans at the final whistle to tap his chest and exchange mutual respect.

Terry's name was sung loudly by Chelsea supporters on his first appearance since revealing that he would not be offered an extension to his contract and expects to leave at the end of the season.
There is no question where the fans stand on this one. He is one of them. So too Costa, who led the line in his usual combative style.

First there was a tussle with Sebastian Prodl, who crashed to the floor without much encouragement. Referee Mike Dean settled for a quiet word with Costa and Prodl was booked, moments later, for a lazy trip on Oscar.
Costa engaged again with Juan Carlos Paredes just before the interval right under the noses of the managers.

In the course of a few seconds, both players had rolled around on the turf, complaining to anyone who would listen, gesticulating wildly and both were booked amid exaggerated pleas of innocence.
'Nothing new, nothing special, nothing different,' said Flores. 'I understand Costa because I managed Costa. In every single play he wants contact. But nothing happened.'

Hiddink thought differently, and he accused Paredes. 'Paredes punched Diego in his back and they stumbled,' said the Chelsea boss. 'Then Paredes brought his hands to his head. This is provocation from their side to get someone off the pitch.'

Troy Deeney, Watford's captain, probably summed it up best. 'It's New Age football,' said Deeney. 'One little touch and everyone's rolling around. It's handbags. In the Sunday League you'd be laughed at. I don't like to see it and we'll have a word with Paredes on our side.'

Pathetic as it was, it actually injected some passion into a sluggish 45 minutes devoid of clear chances.
With John Obi Mikel and Nemanja Matic deep in midfield, Hiddink's team lacked creativity, and Willian was subdued until Hazard came on, late in the game.
Watford were more ambitious. Ighalo missed a good chance with a header, and Thibaut Courtois made strong saves to deny Prodl, Ighalo and Etienne Capoue.

Chelsea's first glimpse of goal, and it came from a long ball, launched out of defence by Oscar towards Costa, who twisted and shot on the turn only to see it deflected wide.
Oscar became more influential after the interval, and went closer when he nudged wide a cross from Costa having deceived Watford's back line with a dart to the near post.

Still there was little pattern to the game. No sooner did Chelsea muster some positive possession than they seemed vulnerable at the back. The perfect balance has eluded them this season.
Deeney slammed a volley wide from the 20 yards, and Jose Holebas cut into the penalty area on a bustling foray from left-back only to lose all composure and crash the ball into the side-netting.

As the Chelsea supporters started to chant for Hazard to be introduced, Oscar danced inside from the left and forced a full-length save from Gomes.
Hiddink must have heard them. Hazard was sent on in the 72nd minute in place of Matic, and made an impact. There was a jinking run and low pass, cut back to set up Branislav Ivanovic.
Gomes responded a fabulous reflex save, pushing the effort wide. The Brazilian 'keeper made another brave stop at the feet of Hazard and then, his most eye-catching contribution, an acrobatic spring to his right to keep out a header from Costa which looked to be destined for the top corner.
'Amazing,' said Flores. 'This is our Heurelho. I love him.'

MATCH FACTS, PLAYER RATINGS AND PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE BY ADAM SHERGOLD AT VICARAGE ROAD 

WATFORD (4-3-2-1): Gomes 7.5; Paredes 6.5 (Nyom 67, 6), Prodl 7, Cathcart 7, Holebas 6.5; Capoue 6.5 (Suarez 86, 6), Watson 6.5, Behrami 6; Jurado 7 (Abdi 63, 6); Deeney (c) 7, Ighalo 7
Substitutes not used: Pantilimon (GK); Amrabat, Guedioura, Anya
Booked: Prodl, Paredes

Manager: Quique Sanchez Flores 7
CHELSEA (4-2-3-1): Courtois 7; Ivanovic 6, Zouma 6.5, Terry (c) 6, Azpilicueta 6; Mikel 6, Matic 7 (Hazard 72, 6); Willian 7, Fabregas 6, Oscar 7; Diego Costa 6.5
Substitutes not used: Begovic (GK); Baba, Traore, Kenedy, Cahill, Loftus-Cheek
Booked: Costa

Manager: Guus Hiddink 6
Referee: Mike Dean 7
Attendance: 20,910
Man of the Match: Gomes

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

Mirror:
Watford 0-0 Chelsea: Diego Costa huffs and puffs but Hornets earn point - 5 things we learned
  
By Darren Lewis
 
The Spaniard was at his fiery best but couldn't make the crucial difference as Quique Flores' men earned a deserved share of the spoils

Diego Costa huffed and puffed but couldn't blow the Watford house down in a see-saw clash at Vicarage Road.
Both sides struggled to fashion a real gilt-edged opening in a blood and thunder contest under the lights where the fiery Spaniard again took centre stage.

Costa was a constant thorn in the Hornets' side as he hassled and harried throughout earning a yellow card after a bad tempered clash with Juan Carlos Paredes just before the half.
Eden Hazard, a second half substitute, was also bright when he came on but both teams shared the spoils.

Here are five things we learned at Vicarage Road.

1. Chelsea still look a mid-table team

They went into this matches on an unbeaten streak of seven Premier League games. But Watford ran rings around them for much of the first half. How the mighty have fallen.

2. Odion Ighalo looks the kind of striker that Chelsea should after this summer

Quick feet, strength and an unerring eye for goal. Ighalo is already on the Chelsea radar and the Blues could not have had a better scouting report than his performance against them.
He caused them all sorts of problems.

3. Diego Costa continues to be a liability

His brilliance in front of goal is obvious. But he pushed Prodl over early on and he picked up a yellow card for a clash with Paredes.
Just before half time Guus Hiddink had to have a word. That fuse is still too short.

4. The John Terry situation hang over Chelsea for the rest of the season

The travelling fans made their feelings clear about the potential loss of their captain before and during the match.
The next home game at Stamford Bridge will be interesting.

5. Jurado did for Watford what Hazard could have been doing for Chelsea

The Spain midfielder was skilful, direct and at times left Chelsea players on their backsides as he ghosted past them.

He was Watford’s best player.

Player ratings

Watford

Gomes 8
Vulnerable at times but made three outstanding saves late on.
Paredes 6
Booked. Had a real ding dong with Costa.
Cathcart 7
Good display, denied Costa space, good positioning.
Prodl 6
Good header but could have scored. Solid but slow.
Holebas 7
Dangerous crossing from the left full back.
Capoue 7
Saw a fierce shot beaten away by Courtois.
Watson 7
MotM. Has completely reinvented himself. Influential.
Jurado 7
His strong running and pace troubled the Chelsea defence.
Behrami 6
Good work rate, you can see why Flores trusts him.
Deeney 7
Puts in a good shift for the team. Terrific captain.
Ighalo 7
Good pace, movement, quick feet, The real deal.
Substitutes
Abdi, for Jurado, 63 mins, 6
Nyom, for Paredes, 67 mins, 6
Substitutes: Nyom, Suarez, Amrabat, Guedioura, Pantilimon, Anya, Abdi.

Chelsea

Courtois 7
Good saves when Watford were on top. Played well.
Ivanovic 6
Solid defensively, rarely got a chance to get forward.
Zouma 6
His pace getting him the nod over Cahill. He did well again.
Terry 7
The support and backing from Chelsea fans was overwhelming.
Azpilicueta 6
Chelsea’s man in the mask solid at left back.
Mikel 7
Saw a shot deflected just over the crossbar. Solid.
Matic 6
Solid display in midfield, offered little going forward.
Willian 5
Had a quiet game, didn’t look fully fit after a knock.
Fabregas 6
Played further forward but didn’t influence the game enough.
Oscar 6
Played towards the left, missed being in the middle.
Costa 7
His usual self: a real handful who wound up Watford.
Substitutes
Begovic, Baba, Hazard, Traore, Kenedy, Cahill, Loftus-Cheek.


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

Express:

Watford 0 - Chelsea 0: Stunning Gomes save denies Costa late winner
HEURELHO GOMES’ superb late save denied Diego Costa a winning goal as Chelsea were held by Watford here at Vicarage Road.
By Joe Short

Gomes sprang to his right to tip wide a Costa header with just three minutes remaining of an entertaining clash.
The goalkeeper also kept out Branislav Ivanovic with a point-black save, while midfielder Oscar put wide a side-footed shot from four yards.
Watford, who dominated the first half, rarely forced Thibaut Courtois into action but they deserved a point for their endeavour.

Guus Hiddink went into the clash seeking a 10th game unbeaten since taking over as interim head coach from Jose Mourinho back in December.
The boss oversaw a 2-2 draw against the Hornets on Boxing Day at Stamford Bridge - a tie that would have yielded three points had midfielder Oscar not fluffed a late penalty.
And Watford showed similar fighting spirit to that displayed in west London in the early stages of this encounter - strike duo Odion Ighalo and Troy Deeney at times outmuscling Chelsea veteran John Terry and Kurt Zouma, an apprentice in comparison to the 35-year-old, at the back.
Terry, who last weekend confirmed Chelsea will not renew his contract this summer, certainly didn’t look out of place in his 476th Premier League appearance.
Unfortunately for Terry, it was his team-mates who struggled in the opening throes to keep apace with the home side.
     
It was almost midway through the opening half that Watford created their first real chance, when a flowing move eventually saw Jose Holebas whip in from the left for Ighalo, who mistimed a free header.
It was a sign of intent, however, and shortly after both Prodl and Etienne Capoue had chances well saved by Courtois in the away goal.
In reply, Diego Costa finally latched on to one of the procession of Chelsea long balls to turn and shoot within the Watford box, only for a stray leg to deflect his effort wide.

Costa, always one to spice up the party, was involved in a spat with Hornets defender Juan Carlos Paredes moments before halftime.
The Spain international went down fairly lightly when backing into the right-back and, in the following phase, Paredes himself hit the turf for nothing more than a brush of the arm.
Watford fans sensed blood but referee Mike Dean rightly kept his cool and booked the pair for their petty behaviour.

If halftime was meant to calm everything down then neither side got the message as both John Obi Mikel and Deeney went close early after the restart, before Oscar passed wide a chance from four yards out.
Chelsea, now on top, pushed for an breakthrough and only a magnificent save from Gomes prevented Ivanovic finishing off Eden Hazard’s cut-back, while Oscar saw a ranged effort parried by the goalkeeper.
And it was Gomes who again came to the rescue at the death when he clawed away Costa’s header from a deep corner.

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

Star:

Watford 0 Chelsea 0: Costa frustrated in stalemate at Vicarage Road
THE first date on John Terry’s farewell tour did not exactly rock.

By David Woods

Chelsea’s travelling fans spent most of the last few minutes before kick-off singing the name of the outgoing skipper.
He did not acknowledge it, perhaps deciding it best not to stir things in the first game since his announcement, on Sunday, that he was not getting a new contract from the club.
After that, those fans did not have a great deal to get excited about.
The Blues may be unbeaten in their seven games under Guus Hiddink, but five of them have been draws - meaning ten more points dropped.
Two of the stalemates have now been against Watford, who earned a 2-2 at Stamford Bridge in the Dutchman’s first game in charge.
And the buzzing Hornets went above Stoke into ninth with this point - while Chelsea’s took them up a place to the dizzy heights of 13th!

Watford boss Quique Sanchez Flores was indebted to keeper Heurelho Gomes, who was up to anything the still stuttering champions could muster.
His best saves came in the final 15 minutes. Eden Hazard, who bizarrely was not brought on by Hiddink until the 73rd minute, did not take long to set up Branislav Ivanovic after a neat exchange with Willian.
But the Serb was left with his head in his hands as the Brazilian keeper reacted smartly to keep out his close-range shot at his near post.
Gomes did even better in the 88th minute to dive and claw away Diego Costa’s header, from a Willian cross.
They were a couple of potentially embarrassing moments for 35-year-old Terry early on, but he escaped.
Odion Ighalo was very close to getting a head on a Jose Holebas cross, after Terry failed to cut if out.
The centreback was also outjumped when the resulting corner came over, but Sebastian Prodl sent his header straight at Thibaut Courtois.


After shoving over Prodl in the 12th minute, following some the typical tussling in the box, pantomime baddie Costa was involved in more nonsense just before the break, this time with Juan Carlos Parades.
First Costa went down too easily as they jostled while a throw was being taken. Then the Ecuadorian tumbled when given a little shove by the striker. Rolling around on the ground, he grabbed his face as if hit, it was laughable stuff.
Cue some more playground behviour with others getting involved before ref Mike Dean calmed things and booked the two naughty boys.
Costa was all smiles as he had a chat with Dean before the restart. And he might have scored soon after when Cesc Fabregas sent his bursting clear. But he shot straight at Craig Cathcart.
The ball ricocheted to John Obi Mikel, whose shot hit Ben Watson and had to be tipped over by an alert Gomes.

Troy Deeney volleyed a couple of feet wide at the other end, pouncing on a poor defensive header by Kurt Zouma.
In the 55th minute the champions had their best chance. Costa got to the byline close to goal and found Oscar but, stumbling as he shot, his effort went the wrong side of the near post.
It was typical of the west Londoners’ night. Too often their touch was poor and heavy, particularly Costa’s.
And despite fans shouting “attack, attack, attack” there did not seem a huge amount of urgency.
Perhaps they feel they can send off Terry with a second win in the Champions League - they face PSG in 12 days.
If they want to do that, they’ll need to put on a much livelier show than the one last night at Vicarage Road.