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Reply | Forward Message #1820 of 1952 |
sunday papers

Sunday Times

November 2, 2008

Nicholas Anelka leads Chelsea romp
Chelsea 5 Sunderland 0

David Walsh at Stamford Bridge

THERE are afternoons in football when you want to find a hole in the
ground and disappear. So, perhaps referee Martin Atkinson was being
kind to Roy Keane when banishing him to a quiet seat in the stand for
the second half of this hopelessly one-sided match. By then Sunderland
were losing 3-0 and it really was just a question of how many more
Chelsea would score. From his new seat Keane was close enough to a
defeat that bordered on humiliation.

The Sunderland manager got on Atkinson's wrong side by pointing out, a
little too vigorously, the failure to spot Joe Cole's foul on Pascal
Chimbonda in the preamble to Chelsea's third goal. "He told me not
come to the dugout for the second half, so whether that's been
officially sent off, you'll have to ask him," said Keane. Cole did get
away with a foul and Nicolas Anelka did look offside when touching
home Chelsea's second game but we're nit-picking here. Chelsea were
miles the better side.

"I don't want to sit here and take anything from Chelsea," added
Keane. "They were outstanding today, there was no shame in losing to a
top team like that. I am very relaxed after the game, I felt my
players kept going and when you're 5-0 down and there's 35 minutes to
go and Drogba's getting warmed up, you think, 'I wish someone would
fast forward that clock'."

Sunderland tried but weren't nearly good enough. Keane and his coaches
would have noted how well Javier Mascherano and Xabi Alonso shackled
Frank Lampard and Deco a week ago and Sunderland set out to suffocate
Chelsea. They had two lines of four defenders inside their own half,
every intention in the world of frustrating their rivals, but effort
is no substitute for technical mastery, and there aren't that many
Mascheranos around.

Chelsea were more urgent and sharper in their passing than a week ago,
almost as if they felt freer without the burden of having to defend
that four-year unbeaten league run at Stamford Bridge. How else to
explain the energy and concentration they brought to this match? Even
at 5-0, they defended as if the concession of one goal would cost them
the title.

The quality was epitomised by almost every Chelsea player, but
especially by John Terry, the much improved Alex, Jon Obi Mikel,
Lampard and Deco. With the rain cascading down and Sunderland
desperate to make their tackles count, you wondered how Deco would
cope. It wasn't like this when he was learning the game in the
Brazilian town of Sao Bernardo do Campo, but he was brilliant through
the first half hour; that is, when the match was a contest.

He constantly wanted the ball, he looked for the pass that would hurt
Sunderland and made the intelligent runs that catch out defenders.
With him and Lampard running the game so brilliantly, it did always
seem only a matter of time. The time came in the 27th minute after
Lampard played a neat pass through to Joe Cole, who drove his shot
across the goal. Sunderland's keeper Marton Fullop should have done
better than let the ball through his grasp and Alex had only to touch
it over the line.

As there was no set piece, you may wonder what the centre-back was
doing inside Sunderland's six-yard box and you won't be surprised to
know he was just hanging around, waiting for a chance. Such had been
his team's dominance, moonlighting as a striker wasn't exactly risky.

Before Sunderland could respond, they were two down. Deco opened
Sunderland's defence with the pass, Lampard's cross was accurate and
either Alex or Nicolas Anelka could have finished. Alex got the first
touch and as his slightly mis-hit effort bobbled into the unguarded
goal, Anelka followed in to make sure. He was in an offside position,
unnoticed by the match officials. Sunderland were too demoralised to
protest. Coming just before half-time, the third goal began with that
foul on Chimbonda but from there, was the best of the five; Joe Cole,
Lampard and Malouda combined brilliantly to pass their way through the
opposition and left Anelka with another tap-in.

The rain kept falling, Sunderland continued to run but endeavour
couldn't lessen the chasm in class. What was remarkable was Chelsea's
professionalism; Terry and Alex never gave their rivals an inch, Mikel
chased and harried and hardly ever gave the ball away. And as happens
when Chelsea play, Lampard got another goal, this one a fine back-post
header after Joe Cole skinned George McCartney.

Perhaps when the other four have slipped from the memory, the fifth
goal will remain because it started with a fine piece of defending by
Terry and when the clearance was played back to the centre-back by
Deco, Terry struck the finest pass to send Malouda surging down the
left. Anelka turned in the cross for his third, but it was the goal
belonged to the skipper. Unlike other times this season, he looked the
real John Terry yesterday.

CHELSEA:Cech 6, Bosingwa 6, Alex 7, Terry 7,A Cole 6 (Bridge 36min,
6), Mikel 7, Deco 8, Lampard 7, J Cole 6 (Drogba 63min), Anelka 7
(Mineiro 75min), Malouda 6

SUNDERLAND:Fulop 4, Chimbonda 5, Nosworthy 6, Ferdinand 5, McCartney
5, Malbranque 4 (Henderson ht, 5), Whitehead 5, Tainio 4, Richardson
6, Waghorn 5 (Diouf ht, 5), Jones 5 (Cisse 58min, 4)

100
The number of Premier League goals scored by Chelsea's Frank Lampard
and Wigan's Emile Heskey. Both netted yesterday but are the slowest to
reach the target in terms of games played - Lampard (406) and Heskey
(414)


----------------------------------------------


Telegraph:


Nicolas Anelka scores hat-trick as Chelsea destroy soggy Sunderland
Chelsea (3) 5 Sunderland (0) 0

By Patrick Barclay at Stamford Bridge

Midway though the second half, the cameras spotted Roy Keane on his
mobile phone. It was safe to assume the Sunderland manager was not
fielding inquiries about his players, who can seldom, in all their 49
matches since promotion, have been made to look so unfit for Premier
League progress.

And the worrying aspect is that even humiliation does not come cheap
on this unforgiving stage: of the 14 players Keane used here, six
arrived during the summer on substantial contracts.

It was one of those occasions that made you despair of a League once
considered the most competitive in Europe. Unless, of course, you were
a Chelsea supporter, gaily singing, free of the cares that beset
Arsenal's travellers at Stoke or even Old Trafford in the defiant face
of Hull.

Luiz Felipe Scolari's team hardly required the assistance of an
illegitimate goal that contributed to Nicolas Anelka's hat-trick and,
indirectly, Keane's banishment to the stands for a half-time protest
to the referee, Martin Atkinson.

Chelsea, to their credit, entertained us handsomely with passing crisp
enough to delight their Brazilian manager.

Keane reasserted complaints about both the second and third goals,
saying: ''I've been with a big team and all you want, when you come to
play them, is a bit of fairness. But I've never had a problem with
praising the opposition and today I'll do that.''

Beforehand, he had declared a willingness to alter his team within
five minutes if it became apparent they were not up to the task. After
10 minutes, we wondered what was keeping him and, although he made
changes later, Keane said: ''I don't think any system would have
worked today.''

For the first 26 minutes of their battering, Sunderland defended with
as much dignity as the slippery surface permitted, riding their luck
when Deco artfully scooped the ball against Martin Fulop's crossbar.

Then Joe Cole turned inside George McCartney and, essaying a
left-footer, miskicked, only for Fulop to let it squirm under his body
and out to Alex, who hit an unguarded net.

There was scarcely any more resistance to the next goal, though it
should have been disallowed. Deco found Frank Lampard, whose low cross
was again met by Alex --- what else was there for a Chelsea defender
to do on this day but try to score as often as possible? --- only for
Anelka, sliding, to help it over the line.

In truth this was a daft thing for Anelka to do, because he was in
front of not only Alex but any Sunderland player. Yet neither Atkinson
nor the relevant linesman saw anything untoward.

By comparison such controversy as preceded the next goal was a mere
tinge. Joe Cole's challenge was wild enough to prompt Pascal Chimbonda
to pull out and Cole, permitted to play on, found Lampard. A slick
move ensued, Florent Malouda unselfishly setting up Anelka.

As Sunderland trooped off, the thought occurred that they would
probably have preferred to stand in the rain. At any rate, whatever
Keane said made so little difference that within seven minutes of the
resumption they had conceded two more goals.

First came a nightmare for McCartney, whose wrestling failed to
prevent Joe Cole from crossing for Lampard to nod wide of Fulop. Then,
with Chimbonda AWOL, Malouda found Anelka, whose ill-placed shot
looped in off Fulop.

Later Didier Drogba made his comeback after injury, but Scolari said
Anelka would start Tuesday's Champions League match in Rome because he
was the fitter spearhead.

The luckier too, Scolari might have added. Anelka, joint leading
scorer in the Premier League with eight, would not have minded.


-----------------------------------------------


Independent:


Anelka the top dog as goals rain down on Keane's head

Chelsea 5 Sunderland 0: Blues cruise with Lampard on century duty but
Sunderland manager sees red

By Glenn Moore at Stamford Bridge

It must be hoped Triggs is in the mood for a good walk this morning.
Roy Keane is in the habit of taking his dog for a hike when he has
matters to brood on, and after this thrashing there is plenty for the
Sunderland manager to contemplate.

His team were outclassed at Stamford Bridge, where it rained cats,
dogs and Chelsea goals. Nicolas Anelka helped himself to three of
them, taking his season's tally to eight in the League. With Didier
Drogba making his return it was a timely treble, though the plaudits
belonged to its architects, Joe Cole and Frank Lampard. Keane's ire
was further exacerbated by his being sent to the stands at the
interval for disputing the validity of Chelsea's goals.

He had a point. Anelka was offside when he tapped in the second and
Pascal Chimbonda was fouled in the lead-up to the third, but while
goals change matches it is hard to believe the result would have been
substantially altered. Keane admitted as much when he said: "Chelsea
were outstanding and there is no shame in losing to them."

"We played football," said Chelsea's manager, Luiz Felipe Scolari. The
Brazilian, who reserved particular praise for Joe Cole, added in a
reference to his team's failings in last week's defeat by Liverpool:
"We tried to play on the ground, not high balls, feet to feet with the
players changing positions." The only negative for Scolari was a calf
injury to Ashley Cole which will rule him out of Tuesday's Champions'
League tie in Rome.

Keane denied he had been dismissed, but said the referee, Martin
Atkinson, had "told me not to come to the dug-out for the second
half," which sounds very much like it. He added: "All you want is a
bit of fairness. We felt we did not get that today."

Keane was unhappy enough going into the match, making five changes
from the side beaten at Stoke. Clearlyhe felt too many had still been
basking in the glory of last weekend's first home League victory over
Newcastlein nearly 30 years. The reshaped side never got going, and
Chelsea's early dominance was nearly rewarded when Deco chipped Marton
Fulop only to hit the bar. After 27 minutes the dam broke. Lampard
slid a ball down the inside-right channel to Joe Cole, who turned
George McCartney before driving in a low shot that Fulop allowed to
squirm under his body for Alex to tap in. Three minutes later Alex was
driving forward again as Deco picked out Lampard's excellent run into
the same inside-right channel with a beautifully weighted pass.
Lampard squared and Alex steered the ball goalwards, only for Anelka
to pinch the goal. The Frenchman, though, was offside, having been
ahead of Alex when he shot.

Chelsea had not got round the back of the defence at Liverpool once
last Sunday. Now they were doing it to order. A minute before the
break Joe Cole, Lampard and Florent Malouda exchanged passes and, with
the Sunderland defence appealing optimistically for offside, Anelka
tapped in.

Keane made two changes at the break, one positional as he switched to
4-5-1. As a damage-limitation exercise it failed miserably. Within six
minutes Joe Cole skipped around the hapless McCartney again and
chipped a cross which an unchallenged Lampard headed in. It was his
100th League goal.

"He can get 150 goals," said Scolari. "For a midfielder it is
fantastic. We need to think about who is the best in the world in this
position – maybe it is Frank Lampard."

With the next attack Anelka completed a 23-minute hat-trick, tapping
in after John Terry freed Malouda on the left. Malouda missed further
chances as Chelsea passed around the bedraggled visitors with ease. In
the stand the cameras caught Keane on the phone. An amateur lip-reader
swore he said: "Is that the Samaritans?"


--------------------------------------------------------


Observer:


Anelka spearheads rout to return Chelsea to summit

Chelsea 5 Alex 27, Anelka 30, Anelka 45, Lampard 51, Anelka 53
Sunderland 0

Jamie Jackson at Stamford Bridge

Delight and a return to the top of the table for Chelsea; a thrashing
for Sunderland and an enforced seat in the stands for Roy Keane. This
was far too easy for the home side. But while the five unanswered
goals might seem to make last week's surrender of Chelsea's proud
unbeaten run at home faintly unbelievable, there were hints that Luiz
Felipe Scolari does need to find differing ways to beat sides who do
not just roll over.

'We played well not because we won 5-0 but because we play football,'
said Chelsea's head coach, who had bemoaned a lack of such qualities
during the week. 'We try to play on the ground, feet by feet, and the
players change position.

'Joe Cole, for me, played the best game [yet]. He helped when we did
not have the ball and tried to build things for us - not only on the
wing but inside, in midfield. This is what we need - for players to
switch position.'

Cole was indeed outstanding. But as Keane pointed out, he is just one
of a side who include Deco and Frank Lampard. 'We were outclassed by a
top, top team. When you're losing 5-0 and Didier Drogba comes on, you
know you're in trouble. You want that clock to go forward. I was in my
bedroom last night thinking of tactics and tactic boards, but nothing
would have worked today - I'm not too despondent.'

Early on, Chelsea had oozed class, but there were signs of frustration
from Scolari at a lack of end product. Then came the opener. Lampard
found Cole on the right. The midfielder scampered inside and shot with
his left. Marton Fulop saved, but not well enough. It squeezed out
from under the goalkeeper's body and pinged sideways to Alex, who had
made the run into Sunderland's penalty area.

A second goal came very quickly. And was very similar. This time it
was Lampard who was on the right and in a shooting position. Instead,
he slid a reverse pass that wrong-footed Sunderland and again found
Alex - Nicolas Anelka grabbed the final touch for his seventh goal
this season, a tally to which he would add two more by the end in
collecting his first Chelsea hat-trick.

Scolari had been counting the number of bookable fouls and
conscientiously informing fourth official Andy D'Urso. By 31 minutes a
flash of three palms indicated the count was now at 15 including one
that did seem worth the yellow, by Steed Malbranque on Ashley Cole.

It was late and painful enough to finish the left-back's match - 'He
could miss the trip to Roma on Tuesday,' Scolari said - but as Wayne
Bridge replaced him in rain now hurtling down, Chelsea had not halted
scoring. Joe Cole picked out Lampard on the edge of the Sunderland
area, the ball went to Florent Malouda, then Anelka, and it was 3-0 in
added time.

'You would have to ask the referee,' said Keane, when asked why he was
forced to watch the second half away from the Sunderland bench after
arguing with the official in the tunnel at the break. 'We certainly
thought their third goal was unfair because of a foul on [Pascal]
Chimbonda.' That incident was unclear, though. And the Irishman added:
'I don't want to take anything away from Chelsea - they are quality
and still my favourites to edge the title.'

All Keane got from his new position in the stands after the break was
the difficult sight of his team being routed. Cole would be replaced
after 63 minutes by Didier Drogba. Before this, though, he had created
wonderfully for Lampard. Again the winger was allowed inside on
Sunderland's right and dinked the ball up for Lampard who, with his
head, scored his 100th Premier League goal.

Soon afterwards, Anelka claimed his third. Sunderland seemed incapable
of retaining possession and of providing resistance. Malouda set up
his countryman inside the visitors' penalty area, Anelka's finish hit
Fulop, but there was enough on it to make it 5-0.

THE FANS' PLAYER RATINGS AND VERDICT

Jonathan Dyer, ChelseaBlog.com I didn't actually feel that Sunderland
played too badly, but they came up against a good team on a good day.
They were solid and trying not to concede, but the first two goals
knocked them and they fell apart a bit. And after Keane got sent to
the stands it was all over for them. Anelka was exceptional – he's not
got a reputation as a hard worker, but he was doing box-to-box stuff
here and tackling back as well as scoring the hat-trick. Joe Cole was
excellent, very difficult to play against. It's hard for anyone to
contain him in a game like this. It remains to be seen whether we can
marry this attractive football with winning trophies – in the
Liverpool game, we couldn't open them up – but this was good stuff.

The fan's player ratings Cech 7; Bosingwa 7, Alex 8, Terry 7,
A Cole 7 (Bridge 7); Mikel 8; J Cole 8 (Drogba 7), Deco 7, Lampard 8,
Malouda 7; Anelka 9 (Mineiro 7)

Martyn McFadden, A-Love-Supreme.com
Where do I start? Their first three goals were really dubious – the
first looked offside, the second definitely was offside because
someone was standing on the line, and for the third there was a foul
in the build-up. After that, it was over. I'm not sure about our
formations overall – we've been playing 4-5-1 game after game yet
Keane had a slightly more attacking set-up here, and it isn't really
fair on Waghorn to be played as an attacker. It was a miserable day –
horrible, cold and wet – but the Sunderland fans were still outsinging
Chelsea's, who were probably too busy with their cappuccinos and
biscuits. But then Chelsea just seems part of the London tourist trade
– Madame Tussauds in the morning, game in the afternoon.

The fan's player ratings Fulop 5; Chimbonda 5, Nosworthy 5, Ferdinand
6, McCartney 6; Malbranque 5 (Henderson 6), Whitehead 6, Tainio 6,
Richardson 7, Waghorn 5 (Diouf 5); Jones 5 (Cissé 5)


----------------------------------------------


Mail:

Chelsea 5 Sunderland 0: Anelka puts Keane's men to shame

By IAN RIDLEY

Most competitive league in the world? Not when the team second in the
table going into the game can do this to the one then placed 10th.

It was a mismatch and an embarrassment.

Chelsea may have more charisma these days, but still a shambolic
Sunderland should not have subsided so readily, even if they felt at
least two of the goals should not have been allowed.

For complaining too forcibly, Roy Keane was banished to the stand for
the second half by referee Martin Atkinson.

A hat-trick by Nicolas Anelka - though his first goal was blatantly
offside - built on Alex's opener and made the Frenchman the joint top
scorer in the Premier League with eight.

The other came from the deserving Frank Lampard, who was at his
creative best, topping off his performance with his 100th goal in the
top flight.

On a grey, grizzly day at Stamford Bridge, the pitch made slick by the
steady drizzle, Sunderland mirrored the weather, Chelsea the pitch.

It could have been many more. The idea that Chelsea are casting off
the shackles of the Jose Mourinho era may be to insult a fine manager
who brought a winning mentality to the club, but it is clear that on
good days against limited opposition they can certainly purr.

'We play football. We try to play on the ground, not the high ball.
Feet by feet,' said the Chelsea manager Luiz Felipe Scolari in
charming English.

'The players change position and I think we play well.'

Sunderland manager Keane was surprisingly philosophical about the
defeat for a man who was such a competitor and winner as a player.

At one point he was spotted on his mobile, perhaps to his chairman
Niall Quinn for another wedge of transfer money in January or to the
Samaritans.Or even to the referees' chief Keith Hackett about two
decisions.

'Against the big boys you just want a bit of fairness and we didn't
get that,' Keane lamented. 'I thought my players kept going. Could we
have played better? Yes. Could we have avoided two or three of the
goals? Yes. But that's football.'

For all their impressive qualities yesterday, with Joe Cole and Deco
delightful on the ball, it has to be said that stricter tests await
Chelsea's lighter touch.

And they have already failed one, last Sunday at home to Liverpool.

Keane shook up his Sunderland side after the midweek surrender to
Stoke with strikers Djibril Cisse and El Hadji Diouf consigned to the
bench.

Goalkeeper Craig Gordon was still injured. But their replacements did
not seize their moment, however, and, after his return from long-term
injury, Kenwyne Jones barely touched the ball.

It did look for the first quarter of the game as if it could be a
frustrating afternoon for Chelsea, though, with Sunderland initially
solid of shape and firm of discipline.

But they probed persistently and Deco's chip against the bar from the
edge of the box hinted at the possibilities.

Then came the break Chelsea needed. Lampard stretched Sunderland again
with a ball wide to Joe Cole on the right and he cut inside George
McCartney to send in a shot which squirmed under Martin Fulop and
dropped conveniently for Alex to tap home from close range.

Within three minutes it was two. Deco played in Lampard for a low
cross that Alex turned goalwards and which Anelka - clearly offside -
seized upon to guide over the line from a couple of yards out.

It was never going to make material difference to the result, however,
as confirmed by Anelka's second goal, and Chelsea's third, in added
time at the end of the first half.
Lampard was again the instigator, receiving a pass from Joe Cole and
supplying Malouda for a low cross that saw Anelka all alone for
another tap-in, with Sunderland left claiming a foul on Pascal
Chimbonda in the build-up and Keane sent from the dugout for his
half-time protest.

Sunderland's hopes were shattered with the swift arrival of a fourth
goal early in the second half.

John Obi Mikel sent Joe Cole clear of McCartney on the right with a
piercing pass and his cross to the far post was met with a simple
header home for the persevering Lampard.

Within another few minutes it was five.

This time John Terry sent Malouda clear on the left and he picked out
Anelka in the box, his sliding shot hitting Fulop, but dribbling over
the line to give the Frenchman his hat-trick.

It was clearly to Sunderland's relief that Chelsea all but declared
after that, as Keane admitted when Didier Drogba came on for a late
run-out after injury.

'You just wish someone would fastforward at that point,' he said.
Kenwyne Jones barely touched the ball on his return from long-term
injury. He had that in common with Petr Cech in the home goal.

CHELSEA (4-3-3): Ce Alex, Terry, Ashley Col Mikel, Deco, Lampard
(Drogba 63), Malouda 75). Subs (not used): Kalou, Belletti.
SUNDERLAND (4-4- Chimbonda, Noswort McCartney; Malbranq 46),
Whitehead, Taini Waghorn (Diouf 46), J Subs (not used): Colg Meyler.
Booked: Tainio.
Referee: M Atkinson (Yorkshire)


----------------------------------------------------


NOTW:

CHELSEA 5, SUNDERLAND 0

Nic Anelka's trick 'n treat

By ROB SHEPHERD at Stamford Bridge, 01/11/2008

The Stamford Bridge fans were singing in the rain: "Boring, boring Chelsea."

The chant was ironic of course. The Blues were brilliant — it really
was like watching Brazil.

True, Sunderland played their part. They were minging in the rain.

Chelsea boss Phil Scolari has constantly played down comparisons of
the Blues' style to his native Brazil, emphasising the need to win
nasty at times.

But there is no question he has promoted a more expansive,
entertaining brand of football.

It always seemed a little harsh that Jose Mourinho's Chelsea were
branded boring. And Avram Grant's hangdog expression made them appear
dull when they weren't.

But there is certainly a feel-good factor around the club right now.
Even Nicolas Anelka is smiling.

He had good cause after bagging his first Premier League hat-trick and
then hearing he will continue to lead the line for Tuesday night's
trip to Roma even though Didier Drogba is fit again.

It is not often a striker grabs a hat-trick and does not get the
man-of-the-match vote but Scolari agreed that Joe Cole had been the
outstanding performer.

There were plenty of candidates though.

Frank Lampard, who became the first midfielder to hit 100 Premier
goals, was everywhere. Deco was a delight and Alex, who opened the
scoring, spent nearly as much time in the Sunderland box as his own.

Scolari, though, insisted: "We were probably better when we beat Aston
Villa 2-0. The difference was we had more shots here and took more
chances.

"The way we play? The emphasis is to play, play, to pass the ball on
the ground not in the air."

Sunderland boss Roy Keane was surprisingly calm about the defeat — and
even about referee Martin Atkinson, who ordered him into the stands
after a heated exchange in the tunnel at half-time.

Keane said: "The referee told me to sit in the stands for the second
half. If that's being sent off then you will have to ask him.

"But, to be honest, I am not as angry as I was after the Stoke game in
the week. It's no shame to be beaten by a team like Chelsea. They are
a really top side.

"I was most disappointed with the third goal but I am not looking for excuses."

Chelsea started slowly but with an assuredness that suggested they
knew it was just when, not if, they would break through.

It wasn't a long wait.

Deco laid down a marker in the 16th minute when he collected a pass
from Joe Cole and, from 20 yards, caressed a chip which glided over
keeper Marton Fulop.

It almost matched Lampard's effort in the midweek crushing of Hull but
dipped a fraction late and bounced back off the bar. After that
Chelsea simply swaggered around, constantly cutting swathes through a
Sunderland back four that just could not cope with the movement and
subtle passing patterns of Scolari's side.

After 27 minutes Lampard rolled a super ball into the path of Joe
Cole, who then turned George McCartney inside out before shooting low
and hard. The ball slithered under the body of Fulop and Alex tapped
in like a centre-forward not a centre-half.

Two minutes later Alex miscued a Lampard cross and Anelka, looking
suspiciously offside, rolled it in.

And in first-half stoppage time a great one-touch move ended with
Florent Malouda crossing for Anelka to slide in another sitter.

Joe Cole was in dazzling mood and in the 51st minute produced a
brilliant run and chip for Lampard to head his landmark goal.

Scolari added: "In a few years' time when people ask who was the best
midfielder of that time in the world then you would have to say Frank
Lampard.

"If he carries on like this he will score 150 before he retires."

Cole sent Malouda clear again after 53 minutes and Anelka scrambled
home his third and Chelsea's 27th in 11 games this season.

The only downside for the Londoners was losing Ashley Cole with a
first-half injury. He may be out for a couple of weeks.

But Keane is still tipping them to regain the championship.

He admitted: "I have fancied them for the title since the start and
I'm still sure. I think because they have lost out twice they will
just have the edge over United."


---------------------------------------------------



Sun Nov 2, 2008 7:11 am

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Nov 2, 2008
1:51 pm

The Sunday Times November 16, 2008 Chelsea outclass Albion West Bromwich Albion 0 Chelsea 3 John Aizlewood at The Hawthorns FOR CHELSEA it could hardly have...
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Nov 21, 2008
1:24 pm

The Sunday Times November 23, 2008 Newcastle frustrate Chelsea forwards Chelsea 0 Newcastle 0 Joe Lovejoy at Stamford Bridge MUCH has been made of the positive...
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Nov 23, 2008
3:28 pm

The Sunday Times January 4, 2009 Wasteful Chelsea stunned by Southend Chelsea 1 Southend 1 Barry Flatman at Stamford Bridge FOR a football traveller as worldly...
Steve Lloyd
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Jan 8, 2009
11:33 am

The Sunday Times Frank Lampard's late strike saves Chelsea Chelsea 2 Stoke 1 Joe Lovejoy at Stamford Bridge BEFORE the kick-off, they presented Frank Lampard...
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Jan 18, 2009
12:12 pm

Times Ballack double helps calm Chelsea nerves Chelsea 3 Ipswich Town 1 Brian Glanville at Stamford Bridge AMID all the swirling rumours about Chelsea's...
Steve Lloyd
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Jan 25, 2009
12:19 pm

Sunday Times Phil Scolari booed as Blues flop Chelsea 0 Hull City 0 Joe Lovejoy at Stamford Bridge THEY were not about to admit it, but Chelsea tumbled out of...
Steve Lloyd
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Feb 13, 2009
3:08 pm

Sunday Times Nicolas Anelka lifts Chelsea spirits Watford 1 Chelsea 3 Joe Lovejoy at Vicarage Road HE HAD only one match in charge but Ray Wilkins showed the...
Steve Lloyd
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Feb 25, 2009
1:13 pm

Observer: Early Anelka strike sinks Villa as Hiddink opens with a win Aston Villa 0 Chelsea 1 Anelka 19 Paul Wilson at Villa Park Guus Hiddink could hardly...
Steve Lloyd
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Feb 25, 2009
1:13 pm

The Times Frank Lampard lights up Chelsea Joe Lovejoy at Stamford Bridge CHELSEA celebrated their victory in stoppage time as if they had won the Premier...
Steve Lloyd
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Mar 3, 2009
12:29 pm

Sunday Times Chelsea on a Sky Blues cruise Coventry 0 Chelsea 2 Joe Lovejoy at Ricoh Arena CHELSEA moved routinely into the semi-finals of the FA Cup with...
Steve Lloyd
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Mar 11, 2009
12:51 pm

The Sunday Times Luka Modric gives Hiddink first Chelsea defeat Tottenham 1 Chelsea 0: Chelsea fail to capitalise on Man Utd defeat as they slump to a Luka...
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Mar 27, 2009
12:36 pm

Sunday Times Midas touch eludes messiah Newcastle United 0 Chelsea 2 Jonathan Northcroft at St James’ Park THE Messiah moment came and went at around half...
Steve Lloyd
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Apr 8, 2009
10:35 am

Sunday Times Didier Drogba makes the difference Arsenal 1 Chelsea 2 Jonathan Northcroft at Wembley FAREWELLS do not have to be sombre and Guus Hiddink has a...
Steve Lloyd
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Apr 20, 2009
10:37 am

Sunday Times Chelsea stay in the hunt West Ham 0 Chelsea 1 Nick Townsend at Upton Park SOME personnel you confine to camp at times like this. Others you call ...
Steve Lloyd
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Apr 28, 2009
6:16 pm

Sunday Times Chelsea keep the heat on Liverpool Chelsea 3 Fulham 1 John Aizlewood at Stamford Bridge How to enable Chelsea’s Nicolas Anelka and Didier Drogba...
Steve Lloyd
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May 6, 2009
1:13 pm

Observer: Frank Lampard delivers FA Cup delight for Chelsea despite Everton's dream start Chelsea 2 Drogba 21, Lampard 72 Everton 1 Saha 1 Paul Wilson at...
Steve Lloyd
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Jun 1, 2009
11:37 am

Telegraph: Seattle Sounders 0 Chelsea 2: Match report from the American tour match at the Qwest Field in Seattle USA. John Terry led Chelsea to victory as the...
Steve Lloyd
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Jul 20, 2009
3:18 pm

Sunday Times August 2, 2009 Salomon Kalou’s late goal saves Chelsea from defeat Reading 2 Chelsea 2Nick Townsend at the Madejski stadium Chelsea manager...
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Aug 3, 2009
1:25 pm

Sunday Times Didier Drogba double gives Carlo Ancelotti dream start Chelsea 2 Hull City 1 David Walsh at Stamford Bridge CHELSEA were earnest rather than...
Steve Lloyd
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Aug 19, 2009
11:44 am

Sunday Times Burnley undone by Chelsea’s fluency Brian Glanville at Stamford Bridge PERHAPS the cruel alliteration could be, Burnley’s Bubble Bursts. After...
Steve Lloyd
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Aug 31, 2009
8:20 pm

Sunday Times Last-gasp Florent Malouda goal keeps Chelsea top Stoke 1 Chelsea 2 Duncan Castles at Britannia stadium WELL might Carlo Ancelotti have indulged in...
Steve Lloyd
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Sep 14, 2009
12:40 pm

Sunday Times Wigan break winning run of mighty Chelsea Wigan 3 Chelsea 1 Duncan Castles “SIN MIEDO” is the Spanish phrase with which Roberto Martinez likes...
Steve Lloyd
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Sep 30, 2009
1:38 pm

Sunday Times James Collins condemns Chelsea to second loss Aston Villa 2 Chelsea 1 David Walsh, chief sports writer, at Villa Park IF IT is the old-fashioned...
Steve Lloyd
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Oct 19, 2009
11:39 am

Sunday Times Frank Lampard brace puts Chelsea back on top Chelsea 5 Blackburn Rovers 0 FOOTBALL has never been more important than family for Carlo Ancelotti ...
Steve Lloyd
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Oct 26, 2009
12:29 am

Sunday Times Frank Lampard sets Chelsea on way to victory Bolton 0 Chelsea 4 Duncan Castles at Reebok stadium GATHER as many elite players in one dressing room...
Steve Lloyd
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Nov 2, 2009
3:24 am

Sunday Times Chelsea pass Wolves into submission Chelsea 4 Wolves 0 Nick Townsend at Stamford Bridge THE worrying thing for Chelsea’s rivals is not only did...
Steve Lloyd
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Nov 23, 2009
2:16 pm

Sunday Times Carlos Tevez and Shay Given justify City's lofty ambitions Man City 2 Chelsea 1 Duncan Castles at City of Manchester stadium THERE are some things...
Steve Lloyd
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Dec 8, 2009
10:13 pm

Independent : Drogba double makes point for leaky leaders Chelsea 3 Everton 3: Everton cash in as Chelsea offer little defence from set-pieces and Cech's...
Steve Lloyd
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Dec 16, 2009
1:24 pm
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