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Reply | Forward Message #1708 of 1948 |
morning papers

The Times
October 25, 2007

Chelsea's new open-minded philosophy wins favour with the fans

Chelsea 2 Schalke 04 0

Matt Hughes

Given that his boss is the man who has everything, it is perhaps just
as well that Avram Grant has promised Roman Abramovich the earth. In
his first programme notes, the Chelsea first-team coach pledged to
provide trophies, entertainment and winning football – everything,
indeed, but the proverbial moon on a stick. Five weeks to the day
since being handed the ultimate hospital pass, he is in danger of
delivering. José who? Grant is yet to hear his name chanted at
Stamford Bridge, but that prospect is no longer as fanciful as it once
appeared.

Chelsea fans have enjoyed too much success recently to be overly
impressed with victory over middling European opponents, but they are
not used to winning matches in this manner. Grant's side created
enough chances to have won by far more, but conceded enough to keep
Schalke 04 interested and against more clinical opponents could easily
have dropped points. Such openness will be welcomed by neutrals,
though not by Chelsea fans if they start to lose.

Grant's gift appears to be coaxing more out of those players pleased
by José Mourinho's departure while maintaining the performance levels
of those purportedly in mourning. Joe Cole seems to be relishing the
increased licence he has been given, but Florent Malouda and Didier
Drogba, who are definitely in the latter camp, show no signs of
sulking. The France winger opened the scoring with his third goal of
the season in the fourth minute, before Drogba effectively sealed the
game with his fourth two minutes into the second half.

The Ivory Coast striker's heart may have left the club with Mourinho,
but his body and mind are completely committed to the Chelsea cause.
Although frustratingly vague, Grant's philosophy appears to be based
around maintaining Mourinho's style and structure within a looser
framework. The 4-3-3 formation remains just the same, but the players
are afforded far greater individual freedom and not instructed simply
to preserve their energy for the next match once they have taken the
lead.

Chelsea began with the high tempo beloved of their former manager and
their opening goal could have come straight out of the Mourinho
manual. Paulo Ferreira's long ball from his own half was flicked on by
Drogba to Malouda, who showed impressive strength to hold off Rafinha
before beating him on the outside and depositing the ball between the
legs of Manuel Neuer. Malouda's shot took a cruel deflection but the
German goal-keeper should still have done better.

After an impressive start to his Chelsea career, Malouda has struggled
in recent weeks, but seemed back to his best last night. In his first
outing with Wayne Bridge, making his first start of the season,
Malouda gave Rafinha a torrid time, to such an extent that at one
stage he was forced to rugby tackle him, becoming possibly the first
Brazilian to master the art. With Frank Lampard and Michael Essien
driving them on, it was like watching the Chelsea of old and they
continued to create chances. Drogba and Lampard both headed wide but
the best opportunity fell to Essien from a Malouda cross, with the
Ghana midfield player's header well saved. Neuer also got down well to
block a long-range shot from Cole just before half-time.

While Chelsea's style and conversion rate remains similar to that of
the Mourinho era – direct and sporadic respectively – the main
difference appears to be at the other end of the pitch, where they are
far more vulnerable. Claude Makelele does not protect the back four
with the efficiency he used to, which is unfortunate as the hapless
Alex needs more protection than a helpless toddler.

Although missing several key players through injury, which increased
when Kevin Kuranyi pulled out in the warm-up, Schalke created enough
chances to have drawn level by half-time. Gerald Asamoah twice headed
wide at the far post, while Carlos Grossmüller got the ball in the net
in the 28th minute, but was ruled offside.

Drogba did his best to erase such concerns by scoring another direct
goal that was far easier on the eye, an object lesson in
counter-attacking football. In keeping with his desire to be involved
at all times, Drogba began and ended the move, dropping back to feed
Cole, whose brilliant pass found Ferreira in space on the right. The
Portuguese is not a natural attacker but his delayed cross was
weighted perfectly, with Drogba stooping low to provide a brave finish
with a diving header. Unlike under Mourinho, Chelsea continued to
play, which enabled Schalke to stay in the game. Soren Larsen hit a
post in the 61st minute and found himself free on goal late on, only
to be pulled back by a blatant professional foul from Alex, with the
referee inexplicably failing to award a free kick. The Brazilian
defender has replaced Khalid Boulahrouz as Chelsea's chief liability
and John Terry's return from injury is needed urgently.

For all his desire to be entertained, such clownish capers from his
centre back are probably not what Abramovich had in mind, even on his
41st birthday.

Defensive strategy

10 The defence of Paulo Ferreira, Ricardo Carvalho, Alex and Wayne
Bridge was Chelsea's tenth back-four combination in 15 matches this
season

44 Chelsea's run of unbeaten home games in all competitions since
losing 2-1 to Barcelona in February 2006

Source: Bill Edgar
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
------------------------------------------------------------------
Telegraph:

Didier Drogba and Chelsea take step forward
By John Ley at Stamford Bridge

Chelsea (1) 2 Schalke (0) 0

Roman Abramovich could have been forgiven last night for staging one
of his more flamboyant birthday celebrations. The Russian billionaire,
on his 41st birthday, saw his new manager achieve what his old manager
could not, thanks to a player seemingly unhappy with his lot at the
club.

Jose Mourinho's parting act was to see his side stumble to a 1-1 draw
with Rosenborg and leave Chelsea's European aspirations in a
precarious position. Now, under Avram Grant, the club have moved on,
adding this scalp to that of Valencia three weeks earlier.

Grant, as ever, spoke with understatement when he wished Abramovich
'happy birthday', adding: "He has done a lot for this club and I hope
this is a good present for him."

The 'present' was delivered by Didier Drogba and if the striker is
unhappy at Chelsea, it will be interesting to monitor his form if he
falls back in love with the club. Having claimed last week that
something at Chelsea was 'broken', he scored another goal, his second
in two games since his controversial comments. His goal, Chelsea's
second, went some way to securing their place in the knockout stages
of the Champions League.

Chelsea having been gifted the first goal, which Florent Malouda
scored through the gaping legs of goalkeeper Manuel Neuer, Drogba's
superb second enabled them to offer some of the entertainment Grant
had demanded.

With Rosenborg beating Valencia in the night's other Group B game,
Chelsea are now three points clear of the second-placed Norwegians.

Mourinho finished his Chelsea career with three games without a win;
Grant has won five of his last six even if at times last night the
hosts rode their luck. Schalke were deprived of key striker Kevin
Kuranyi in the warm-up before having a 'goal' disallowed for offside,
striking a post and, towards the end, being deprived of another
scoring opportunity through a blatant 'professional foul' by Alex.

That said, these are promising times for Chelsea after such a poor
start under Mourinho. John Terry and Ashley Cole are still absent, but
Wayne Bridge started for the first time this season.

The game was just four minutes old when Neuer gifted Chelsea. Malouda
rode a challenge from Rafinha, the Schalke defender, and when he shot,
the ball took the smallest of touches off the Brazilian right-back,
just enough to confuse Neuer, who let it slip through his arms and
legs in embarrassing fashion.

Chelsea had space and most of the possession, with Bridge enjoying
freedom along the left flank, but they became frustrated by their
inability to breach an ordinary defence.

More chances fell to Chelsea before the break as Michael Essien and
Joe Cole were denied by Neuer.

Chelsea began the second half in similar fashion to the first, with a
goal. And it went further to confirming that whatever his personal
feelings, Drogba will continue to fight for the Chelsea cause.

Inside the opening two minutes Paolo Ferreira and Joe Cole chased a
ball, with the defender taking up the option to carry it forward. His
cross, from the right, was struck with perfection, as was the timing
of the dive from Drogba, who stooped to head into the bottom corner.

The goal enabled Chelsea to assert their authority and soon afterwards
Cole went close from 20 yards.

On the hour, Schalke were unfortunate again, when Soren Larsen, the
late replacement for Kuryani, sent in a header that left Cech stranded
on the line, only for the ball to bounce off the inside of the left
post and into Cech's grateful arms.

Before the end, Alex clearly impeded Larsen and though the foul was
outside the area, the Brazilian should have been sent off. He survived
and now Chelsea march forward with confidence.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
------------------------------------------------------------------
Indy:

Chelsea 2 Schalke 0: Attacking revolution remains a fantasy
By Sam Wallace

What do Chelsea and Gelsenkirchen, the gritty industrial Ruhr hometown
of Schalke, have in common? Neither of them are really built with
entertainment in mind. Avram Grant's mission is to change all that and
usher in a new era of fantasy football at Stamford Bridge, although
for the time being it looks suspiciously like he is happy to win
matches by any means possible.

From the top of Group B, life looks a lot more comfortable for Chelsea
than seven games ago when a half-empty Stamford Bridge bore witness to
Jose Mourinho's last match in charge, that desperate draw with
Rosenborg. And as Roman Abramovich stepped into his limo last night he
could at least comfort himself with the knowledge that stability has
been restored but, at the back of his mind that nagging question:
could life be better than this?

On the occasion of Abramovich's 41st birthday yesterday, his friends,
cronies and hangers-on will have been asking the same question they
pose around this time every year: what do you get for the Russian
billionaire who has everything? The answer could be found 24 hours
earlier in the Emirates Stadium where Arsenal ran riot against Slavia
Prague, scored seven goals and sent their supporters home in raptures.

Grant will have felt a little more deflated than usual after a
post-match press conference in which he was deluged with questions
about entertainment value and comparisons with Arsenal. So far
unflappable, even Grant seemed to be tiring. "I respect Arsenal but we
are not taking an example from other clubs," he said. "We want to play
our game. We are going step-by-step, even Arsène Wenger said he needed
more than a year."

Grant has to take responsibility for making that particular rod for
his own back – he even mentioned entertainment in his programme notes
again yesterday. Florent Malouda was gifted a goal within five minutes
through an appalling error by goalkeeper Manuel Neuer – who seemed
personally determined to give Abramovich a birthday present. Within
two minutes of the second half beginning, Didier Drogba hit Schalke
with the classic sucker punch and put Chelsea two ahead.

The German side are renowned as the Bundesliga's nearly men and they
nearly put up a decent fight last night. Carlos Grossmuller had a goal
wrongly disallowed for offside, Soren Larsen headed against the post
and the striker should have had a penalty when Alex da Costa pulled
him down in the 85th minute. Even so Schalke, who lost striker Kevin
Kuranyi minutes before kick-off, were strangely insipid.

The linchpin for Chelsea once again was Drogba who was given no stick
whatsoever from the Stamford Bridge faithful for his declaration last
week that he wanted to leave the club – and his subsequent bizarre
retraction. Doubtless because anyone who knows Chelsea know they would
be half the team without their main man – they would sooner give away
every other striker on the books than him.

"Didier is a positive guy, he speaks on the pitch and that is where he
needs to do his talking," Grant said. Four wins on the spin for the
new manager before the visit of Manchester City on Saturday but Grant
would be naive to think that would be enough to earn him the plaudits.
The mantra of entertaining football will follow him all season.

Malouda scored when he took on a flick from Drogba on the left, went
outside Gerald Asamoah, cut back inside and drilled a low harmless
shot straight at Neuer and through the German's legs. The Schalke
goalkeeper made a similarly disastrous mistake against Hansa Rostock
in the Bundesliga at the weekend and ominously vowed after that match
to make up for it. Paul Robinson can rest easy that there are some
having a far worse time of it than him.

The killer blow from Chelsea took another 45 minutes to arrive. As
usual, the likes of Claude Makelele and Ricardo Carvalho were
exemplary but it was ever thus. The spark was still missing from
Malouda and Joe Cole. Two minutes after the break Schalke allowed
themselves to be easily opened up. For once, Chelsea got the ball
moving quickly on the counter-attack, Frank Lampard switched the ball
out right to Paulo Ferreira and the full-back whipped in a cross that
Drogba dived to meet at the near post.

It was a brilliant finish and Drogba's fourth goal of the season. The
Swedish referee should have given a penalty against Alex for his foul
on Larsen, but equally Drogba should have had one a few minutes later
when he was brought down by Jermaine Jones. On the Chelsea bench for
the first time was Henk ten Cate, the new assistant to Grant, who, it
was pointed out in the programme, coached an Ajax team that scored
more than 100 goals in 41 games last season.

Those are the kind of numbers that Abramovich hopes Chelsea are
posting by the time he turns 42. It is becoming an obsession at the
club and it will not be any easier to achieve if Drogba does decide
that his future lies elsewhere.

Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Ferreira, Carvalho, Alex, Bridge; Makelele; J
Cole (Shevchenko, 89), Essien (Mikel, 68) Lampard, Malouda (Kalou,
83); Drogba. Substitutes not used: Cudicini (gk), Pizarro, Ben Haim,
Belletti.

Schalke 04 (4-3-3): Neuer; Rafinha, Westermann, Bordon, Rodriguez
(Bajramovic, 82); Ernst, Grossmuller (Azaouagh, 77), Jones; Asamoah
(Rakitic, 61), Larsen, Lovenkrands. Substitutes not used: Schober
(gk), Howedes.

Referee: P Frojdfeldt (Sweden).

Group B

Results: Chelsea 1 Rosenborg 1; Schalke 04 0 Valencia 1; Rosenborg 0
Schalke 04 2; Valencia 1 Chelsea 2; Chelsea 2 Schalke 04 0; Rosenborg
2 Valencia 0.

Remaining fixtures: 6 November: Schalke 04 v Chelsea; Valencia v
Rosenborg. 28 November: Rosenborg v Chelsea; Valencia v Schalke 04. 11
December: Chelsea v Valencia; Schalke 04 v Rosenborg.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
------------------------------------------------------------------
Drogba's flying delivery brings home comforts to Grant and Chelsea

Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge
Thursday October 25, 2007
The Guardian

After the years of melodrama, this period of seclusion must be to
Chelsea's taste. They opened up a three-point lead in Group B without
inspiring bullish predictions that they are set to win the Champions
League. No one is fixated with them for the time being. Even the
referee Peter Frojdfeldt was not paying much attention when Alex,
after perpetrating a short backpass, brought down Schalke's Soren
Larsen in the 85th minute. No foul was awarded, no red card shown.

In reparation, Didier Drogba was denied a penalty almost immediately.
Despite legitimate squabbles about such events the justice of the
outcome is beyond challenge. Chelsea always had sufficient talent at
their disposal to win. Their rigour has been depleted to some extent,
however, and the club has to hope that this is explained wholly by the
absence of the injured John Terry.
Schalke, in the most ridiculous manner, failed to strain Avram Grant's
side. The visitors arrived with a gift of an early goal for
convalescent Chelsea. The single home game under the direction of the
new manager had been the 0-0 draw with Fulham, but Grant was not made
to wait long for a goal here last night.

With four minutes gone, Florent Malouda showed his characteristically
tenacious skill to get away from the right-back Rafinha, but his shot
was hit straight to Manuel Neuer. There was not any great speed on the
ball either, yet it still ran through the goalkeeper's legs. A blunder
on such a scale seemed to make Chelsea's fourth consecutive win
inevitable.

At the weekend Neuer had chucked a throw-out straight to an opponent,
so permitting Hansa Rostock their equaliser in a draw. Schalke must
believe that the fates are pursuing a vendetta. The striker Kevin
Kuranyi hurt himself before kick-off against Chelsea and, with the
line-ups already submitted, Soren Larsen had to be promoted from the
bench.

None the less, the visitors were never completely disheartened. They
had won 2-0 away to Rosenborg in Trondheim and occasionally attacked
with zest here. The intended evolution of Chelsea from the dry rigour
of the Jose Mourinho era has got no further yet than an increased
vulnerability.

Grant's side could not deal dependably with crosses and Carlos
Grossmüller was wrongly given offside when he tucked the ball home in
the 28th minute. There was errant flagging, too, after Joe Cole was
released by Drogba six minutes before the interval, but his effort had
been saved in any case.

While Neuer coped then there was still every reason to test him.
Another Cole effort in the 45th minute was shoved out into the middle
of the goalmouth, even if it did not run into the path of a Chelsea
player. The match was largely humdrum and Grant, who had not included
Shaun Wright-Phillips even among the substitutes, cannot have been in
the mood for frivolity. Chelsea put the emphasis on getting the ball
into the goalmouth in a direct fashion.

Michael Essien was as great a danger as anyone, twice threatening with
headers. It was a little odd to see him taking up such a role and
Frank Lampard was conservative by comparison.

Drogba, of course, is the best target of all for Chelsea and he
extended the lead in the 47th minute. Paulo Ferreira's run on the
right was full of good intentions but the forward, who might have been
off-side by a hair's breadth, had to supply true quality, connecting
with a diving header to beat Neuer.

Stereotypes about the Bundesliga were reinforced as the visitors
looked quite appealing without matching Chelsea's decisiveness. The
opinion, none the less, nearly had to be revised when Larsen's header
pinged off a post after Rafinha had picked him out in the 60th minute.

Chelsea, for all that, retained a sporadic sprightliness. Lampard
located Drogba with an especially perceptive ball but the Ivorian, for
once, could not overwhelm a defence single-handed. That was a rare
moment in which the lack of a striking partner for Drogba seemed a
disadvantage of the 4-3-3 system, featuring two wingers, so loved by
Grant's predecessor Mourinho

This was an unassuming win. The admirable visiting support teased
their opposite numbers for being subdued, but it was pardonable that
Chelsea minds should be drifting away from this fixture. The arrival
of the revived Manchester City on Saturday must, in particular, have
been starting to occupy Grant's thoughts.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Mail:

Cut-price Chelsea hit the right notes - Malouda and Drogba in harmony
Chelsea 2 Schalke 0

By MATT LAWTON

A chorus of 'Avram Grant' has not yet been heard at Stamford Bridge
but Chelsea's supporters still had plenty to sing about last night — a
first win at home in the Champions League this season, and for half
the price.

Results like this as well as a reduction in the cost of tickets will
ease the sense of loss that has been felt since the sudden departure
of Jose Mourinho after that fateful night here against Rosenborg.

That night was memorable not only for the empty seats but the end of
Mourinho's tenure, even if nobody quite realised it was the end until
the following night.

The healing process continued last night, Grant guiding Chelsea to a
fourth consecutive victory with goals at the start of each half.

If the football was not as entertaining and expansive as Grant
promises to deliver now that he has Henk Ten Cate at his side, it was
a far more accomplished display than Chelsea produced against a
Rosenborg side significantly inferior to this Schalke team.

Good fortune might have enabled Florent Malouda to seize the lead for
Chelsea in the fourth minute but good football brought a second for
Didier Drogba after the break.

While Drogba has expressed a desire to follow Mourinho out of Chelsea
at the end of the season, he appears determined to make the most of
what appears to remain of his Stamford Bridge career. His goal against
Middlesbrough last weekend was wonderfully clinical in its execution
and this one provided a demonstration of his movement as well as
menace.

He started the move when he passed to the feet of Frank Lampard and
finished it when he then met a super cross from Paulo Ferreira with a
quite brilliant header.

The Germans had every right to feel aggrieved when a television replay
suggested they had scored a perfectly good equaliser in the first
half, and they very nearly struck again when Soren Larsen sent a
header against a post.

But they were beaten by the better team, as a watching Franz
Beckenbauer no doubt agreed when he was not walking among Chelsea fans
signing autographs.

Grant might have said Ten Cate was the deputy in those inaugural
programme notes, and he undoubtedly is, but their appearance in the
dug-out suggested otherwise. Ten Cate was dressed in a smart,
managerial blue suit and Grant in a garish standard issue coat that
matched the track suits of the coaching staff.

Even if it confused Chelsea's players, they still made the perfect
start. A goal albeit thanks to the kind of keeping error that haunts
followers of England.

If Malouda did well to shake off the rather half-hearted challenge of
Rafinha before unleashing a reasonably well-struck shot, Manuel Neuer
still should have had little difficulty gathering the ball in his
arms.

As it was, Malouda's effort slipped through his hands, as well as his
legs, and the Schalke goalkeeper was left wishing a huge hole could
just swallow him up.

Not least because he was guilty of the error that enabled Hansa
Rostock to secure a draw last weekend.

It enabled a Chelsea side missing the injured John Terry and Ashley
Cole to settle into this encounter and quickly seize control. They
were in command of the midfield. Far more threatening in attack.

Schalke began to lose patience, Jermaine Jones receiving a yellow card
for the second of two reckless challenges that could easily have
earned him two yellows and a red. Clearly, they did not appreciate the
chorus of 'oles' from a Chelsea crowd just delighted to be getting
value for their money.

Keen to increase their advantage, Chelsea went in determined search of
a second goal and very nearly got it when Michael Essien met a Malouda
corner with a header that almost skimmed the crossbar.

As Carlos Grossmuller then demonstrated, however, it is foolish to
underestimate a side that currently sit second in the Bundesliga.

The assistant referee had already raised his flag when Grossmuller
guided a half-volley past Petr Cech and into the Chelsea goal, but
television evidence suggested he was not offside. A good decision for
Chelsea but, on that evidence, a gross injustice.

Chelsea responded immediately, and very nearly added the second goal
their superior industry and invention deserved.

On this occasion, however, Neuer did well, making a fine save to stop
a glancing Essien header that appeared destined for the back of the
net.

The Swedish assistant referees continued to baffle observers with
their decisions. Didier Drogba sent Joe Cole clear with a wonderful
flick of the heel but again the flag went up and again television
evidence suggested he was not off-side.

Maybe it is something about being a Swedish official in a Chelsea
match. It marked the end of Anders Frisk's career as a referee,
anyway.

Cole tested Neuer again with a stinging shot shortly before the
interval but there was little the German goalkeeper could do to deny
Drogba in the 47th minute.

The Chelsea striker is on fire again this season, comfortably among
the best in Europe at this moment.

Occasional drops in tempo invited Schalke to attack and when Rafinha
sent in a teasing cross, Larsen went close to scoring. His header hit
the post and, much to Grant's relief, bounced straight into the arms
of Cech.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Sun:

WHAT do you give the man who has everything?


In Roman Abramovich's case, a convincing win and another reason for
him to believe Chelsea are on the march to Moscow.


The Russian billionaire turned 41 yesterday and he got a little
something in return after spending millions trying to make the Blues
kings of Europe.


Abramovich has a Champions League dream that came a step closer with
the win over Schalke.


This season's final will be staged in the Russian capital — and it is
the Chelsea owner's goal to be in his homeland.


During Red Rom's four years in England, Liverpool have won the
competition and been runners-up while Arsenal have lost a final.


Meanwhile, Chelsea have lost twice in the semis to Liverpool during
Roman's reign and the man at the top is desperate to go one better
this year.


Abramovich was off his seat last night celebrating Didier Drogba's
goal which made it 2-0 and put Chelsea on course for the knockout
stages.


New boss Avram Grant has gained six points from two Champions League
games in charge, following the 2-1 win at Valencia.


It confirmed the Israeli is shrewd enough to get the right results
despite misgivings when he took over.


Arsenal may have been in seventh heaven on Tuesday but Chelsea are
still climbing their way back to the top of their game.


Drogba said he got his mojo back before the match — and this
performance showed he is playing 100 per cent for the team.


With Frank Lampard dominating the middle of the pitch and Florent
Malouda a threat on the left, Drogba looked in the mood from the
start.


Malouda twice had the Germans running for cover in the early
exchanges. Then the defensive wall came crashing down after only four
minutes.


Malouda jinked past Marcio Rafinha on the outside and his shot came
off Schalke's Jermaine Jones. It should have been easily dealt with by
Manuel Neuer.


But Malouda's effort went through Neuer's legs as the Schalke keeper
spread himself on the turf in disbelief. Chelsea fans were in full
voice as they tried to inspire the Blues to more goals.


Lampard linked play through the middle with Joe Cole but Drogba could
not connect with the final ball.


Malouda then crossed and Michael Essien made a great connection with
his head but Neuer dived full stretch.


It did not all go Chelsea's way in terms of possession.


Peter Lovenkrands dinked a pass to striker Carlos Grossmuller, who
controlled and beat Petr Cech at his near post.


The offside flag rescued Chelsea even though a replay showed
Grossmuller was in line with the home defence.


The Germans were expected to come out in the second half with all guns
blazing — but it never materialised.


In fact, it took Chelsea just two minutes after the restart to grab
their second of the night.


And it sealed a victory which leaves them within a win of reaching the
Champions League knockout stages.


The move may not have had the sparkle of London rivals Arsenal — but
it was a gem in its own right. Drogba dropped deep and played the ball
inside to Lampard, who drilled a quick pass to Paulo Ferreira on the
right flank.


The Portuguese full-back delivered an inch-perfect cross to Drogba,
who directed his header past Neuer to kill the contest.


Even Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich was off his seat to celebrate the
quickfire goal that makes another knockout appearance a formality.


Grant smiled on the touchline — but did not quite share his employer's
certainty.


The manager had slight cause for concern as Alex and Wayne Bridge got
in a tangle and just escaped punishment. Just before the hour mark,
the threat was even greater.


Rafinha burst free on the Chelsea left and delivered a teasing ball to
Soren Larsen, who was allowed a free header.


The Danish striker's attempt seemed to happen in slow motion as it
rebounded off a post and ended up in Cech's arms.


Alex could have been sent off for a pull on Larsen near the end but
this was destined to be a night for Chelsea and Abramovich to
celebrate.


Grant sent a personal message to Red Rom afterwards although the
present was already delivered.


A win and progress almost certain. Nothing else would suffice for the
man who has everything.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
-------------------------------------------------------------------



Thu Oct 25, 2007 7:03 am

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The Times October 8, 2007 Avram Grant prepared to put entertainment on hold Bolton 0 Chelsea 1 Tom Dart at Reebok Stadium "Clean sheet, three points, that's...
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Oct 14, 2007
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The Times October 25, 2007 Chelsea's new open-minded philosophy wins favour with the fans Chelsea 2 Schalke 04 0 Matt Hughes Given that his boss is the man who...
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The Times November 1, 2007 Dish fit for Roman Abramovich to savour but Chelsea's back line remains a worry Chelsea 4 Leicester 3 Matt Hughes Avram Grant's...
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The Times November 12, 2007 Blue is the colour...football is the same Chelsea 1 Everton 1 Martin Samuel, Chief Football Correspondent, at Stamford Bridge As...
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The Times November 7, 2007 Post, bar and Carlo Cudicini come to the aid of underfire Chelsea Schalke 0 Chelsea 0 Matt Hughes in Gelsenkirchen As a self-styled...
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The Times November 29, 2007 Brilliant Didier Drogba sends Chelsea through with something to spare Rosenborg 0 Chelsea 4 Matt Hughes in Trondheim In his quieter...
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Dec 4, 2007
1:38 pm

The Times December 12, 2007 Avram Grant favours his tried and tested in quest to preserve momentum Chelsea 0 Valencia 0 Alyson Rudd Chelsea achieved the...
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Dec 12, 2007
2:24 pm

The Times December 20, 2007 Andriy Shevchenko puts seal on typical display after moment of madness from Peter Crouch Chelsea 2 Liverpool 0 Matt Hughes For all...
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Dec 26, 2007
5:48 pm

The Times December 24, 2007 Joe Cole lands punch to settle bruising bout Blackburn 0 Chelsea 1 Matt Hughes at Ewood Park If he could bring himself to tune into...
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Dec 26, 2007
5:48 pm

The TimesDecember 17, 2007 Ghost of Jose Mourinho comes back to haunt Chelsea Matt Hughes Given his remarkable rise, it was with some justification that Avram ...
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Dec 26, 2007
5:48 pm

The Times December 27, 2007 Gareth Barry keeps his nerve as nine-man Chelsea lose their heads in thriller Chelsea 4 Aston Villa 4 Alyson Rudd And to think that...
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Jan 2, 2008
1:28 am

The Times January 2, 2008 Avram Grant's raised voice keeps Chelsea in with a shout Fulham 1 Chelsea 2 Matt Dickinson, Chief Sports Correspondent It is as...
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Jan 2, 2008
11:34 am

The Times January 9, 2008 Shaun Wright-Phillips talent show rescues Chelsea from another off night Matt Hughes Shaun Wright-Phillips is due a drink from all of...
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Jan 13, 2008
12:15 pm

The Times January 24, 2008 One touch of brilliance pierces the gloom and bursts Everton's bubble Everton 0 Chelsea 1 (Chelsea win 3-1 on agg) Martin Samuel,...
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Jan 26, 2008
5:58 am

The Times January 31, 2008 Chelsea keep pressure on rivals with German bite from Ballack Matt Hughes Avram Grant may dress like an undertaker, but the manner...
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Jan 31, 2008
12:53 pm

Draw that suits no one a cause for owners' disquiet Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge Monday February 11, 2008 The Guardian This forgettable match will still...
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Feb 18, 2008
1:09 pm

Grant gamble pays off as dour Chelsea gain upper hand David Hytner at the Karaiskaki Stadium Wednesday February 20, 2008 The Guardian Roman Abramovich has the...
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Feb 23, 2008
5:48 am

The Times March 6, 2008 Michael Ballack puts paid to any sign of nerves in Chelsea talent show Chelsea 3 Olympiacos 0 (Chelsea win 3-0 on agg) Martin Samuel,...
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Mar 9, 2008
1:35 pm

Lamps shining out: Frank fires four to keep Grant believing in title Chelsea 6 Derby 1 By NEIL ASHTON - More by this author » Last updated at 23:49pm on 12th...
Steve Lloyd
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Mar 16, 2008
1:03 pm

Telegraph: Robbie Keane has last word for Spurs in classic By Henry Winter at White Hart Lane Tottenham Hotspur (1) 4 Chelsea (2) 4 Avram Grant continues to...
Steve Lloyd
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Mar 21, 2008
3:06 am

The Times March 24, 2008 Grateful Avram Grant reverts to battering ram Chelsea 2 Arsenal 1 Martin Samuel, Chief Football Correspondent, at Stamford Bridge ...
Steve Lloyd
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Mar 24, 2008
10:44 pm

The Times March 31, 2008 Ricardo Carvalho claims reward for afternoon of hard labour Chelsea 1 Middlesbrough 0 Chelsea's grit and determination are keeping...
Steve Lloyd
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Mar 31, 2008
9:53 am

The Times April 4, 2008 Gael Kakuta leap has Avram Grant cheering Kaveh Solhekol Avram Grant has not had much to laugh about this week but the Chelsea ...
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Apr 4, 2008
1:18 pm

Mail: Chelsea blow it big time as Bury old boy sparks Fenerbahce fightback Fenerbahce 2 ( Kazim-Richards 65, Deivid 81) Chelsea 1(Deivid 13 og) By NEIL ASHTON ...
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Apr 4, 2008
1:19 pm

Indy: Chelsea 2 Fenerbahce 0 (Chel. win 3-2 on agg): Ballack lives up to billing but Chelsea fail to shine By Jason Burt Wednesday, 9 April 2008 Just like the...
Steve Lloyd
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Apr 9, 2008
10:23 am

can you send me pictures of Chelsea? vatsalbharat@......
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Apr 14, 2008
5:08 am

Express: EMILE DEALS A BIG TITLE BLOW By Tony Banks Chelsea 1 Wigan 1 Emile Heskey struck a dramatic injury-time equaliser to stun Chelsea as Wigan boss Steve...
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Apr 15, 2008
1:47 pm

Essien strike keeps Chelsea in title chase Andy Hunter at Goodison Park Friday April 18, 2008 The Guardian A fixture that prompted such protest from Chelsea...
Steve Lloyd
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Apr 19, 2008
2:37 am

Guardian: Riise's calamity gives Chelsea the upper hand Champions Lge Semi-Final L1 Liverpool 1 Kuyt 43 Chelsea 1 Riise (og) 90 Kevin McCarra at Anfield The...
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Apr 23, 2008
12:32 pm

The Times May 1, 2008 Act of bravery finally reveals true champion on a night of high emotion Chelsea 3 Liverpool 2 (aet; 1-1 after 90min; Chelsea win 4-3 on...
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May 1, 2008
12:13 pm
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