Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
chelseamatchdaychat · Mostly Newspaper reports now.
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want your group to be featured on the Yahoo! Groups website? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
morning papers   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #1886 of 1944 |
morning papers

The Times

Michael Essien continues impressive comeback to send Chelsea into second place
Chelsea 1 Manchester City 0

Matt Hughes at Stamford Bridge


Manchester City’s owners are discovering the hard way that the most
important ingredients in a team are those that money cannot buy.
Commitment, teamwork and organisation were all displayed by Chelsea
yesterday as they reestablished their foothold in the title race, but
for the visiting team such qualities were nowhere to be seen.

Such characteristics should be instilled by a manager, which is why
City may give serious thought to replacing Mark Hughes in the summer.
Hughes deserves some sympathy for being saddled with players who
appear to have little sense of professional pride, but the buck for
failing to motivate them stops with him.

One of the most talented groups of players in the club’s history, who
were good enough to beat Arsenal 3-0 in November, have become
something of an embarrassment. City could go on to win the Uefa Cup
and even qualify for next season’s competition via their league
position, but such success should not be allowed to disguise a series
of dismal away performances that have brought only one league win this
season. Hughes featured on the shortlist when Chelsea were looking for
a new manager last summer, but he may have to seek employment at a
smaller club in the event that he loses his job Oddly, given the
frequency with which they wield the axe, Chelsea stand as exemplars of
the model managerial switch, as the side have been transformed since
Guus Hiddink took over last month.

The Dutchman has given his players a renewed appetite and self-belief
to engineer a run of six wins from seven matches and, given their
sense of purpose, it is conceivable that they could go unbeaten for
the remainder of the season. Manchester United cannot rest easy on
their four-point lead yet, with Chelsea determined to pursue them
vigorously.

If Michael Ballack can be successfully converted into a holding
midfield player, as Hiddink achieved yesterday, with the Germany
captain sitting deep to allow Michael Essien and Frank Lampard to
rampage forward at will, anything is possible.

Without leaving second gear Chelsea had far too much for City, who
deserved to return to the North West having suffered a repeat of the
6-0 hiding they experienced on their previous visit to Stamford
Bridge. If anything, Chelsea’s dominance was even more pronounced than
on that occasion and with better finishing they could have moved a
long way ahead of United’s goal difference, rather than drawing level
on plus 33.

Lampard had the ball in the net in the third minute only to be
adjudged offside and the sole surprise when Chelsea took the lead 15
minutes later was the identity of the scorer. One of Essien’s many
nicknames is “The Train” - he is also known to his teammates as “The
Bison” and, less charitably, “Mummy’s Boy” - and as well as powerful
locomotive qualities he also shares the railway network’s occasionally
erratic sense of timing, arriving to score for a second time in as
many matches after being missing because of injury for most of the
season.

To mark his first home appearance since August, City gave Essien the
freedom of their penalty area, allowing him to swing wildly at
Lampard’s free kick, the ball flying off his shin beyond Shay Given.

If Essien’s goal was fortuitous, then the luck deserted Chelsea for
the remainder of the afternoon, particularly in the second half as
they pushed to add to their tally. Didier Drogba, Nicolas Anelka and
Juliano Belletti went close, while their dominance was such that even
Florent Malouda got in on the act, with the substitute having a shot
cleared off the line by Richard Dunne.

City offered nothing in return, to leave Hughes searching for excuses,
with the Welshman claiming that the bright spring sunshine had
adversely affected his players. That may explain why Robinho and Elano
sought sanctuary in the dressing-room when they were removed in the
second half. Sheikh Mansour, the City owner, may wish to consider
installing a retractable roof at the City of Manchester Stadium just
in case, as well as signing some players with character.

Chelsea (4-1-4-1): P Cech 5 - J Bosingwa 6, R Carvalho 6, J Terry 6, A
Cole 6 - M Ballack 6 - N Anelka 6, F Lampard 7, M Essien 7, Deco 5 - D
Drogba 7. Substitutes: J Belletti 6 (for Deco, 41min), F Malouda (for
Drogba, 71). Not used: Hilário, J O Mikel, R Quaresma, S Kalou, Alex.
Next: Tottenham (a).

Manchester City (4-1-3-2): S Given 6 - M Richards 5, R Dunne 5, N
Onuoha 5, W Bridge 5 - P Zabaleta 4 - S Wright-Phillips 5, S Ireland
5, Robinho 4 - F Caicedo 3, Elano 4. Substitutes: C Evans 4 (for
Caicedo, 55min), K Etuhu 4 (for Elano, 66), V Bojinov (for Robinho,
81). Not used: J Hart, J Garrido, G Fernandes, G Berti. Next:
Sunderland (h).

Referee: M Riley Attendance: 41,810


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


Telegraph:


Chelsea leapfrog Liverpool to second spot

Liverpool might have ensured there will be no automatic coronation of
Manchester United this season, yet it is Chelsea who are emerging as
the most convincing heirs to Sir Alex Ferguson’s Premier League
throne.

By Jeremy Wilson at Stamford Bidge

Having finished in the top two in each of the past four seasons, they
look rejuvenated under Guus Hiddink and their performance in Sunday’s
'Battle of the Billionaires’ against Manchester City suggested a
further rediscovery of the resilience and consistency that carried
them to five trophies under Jose Mourinho.

A gap of four points and one game to Manchester United may still prove
decisive but, unlike Liverpool, Chelsea have an abundance of players
with the experience of winning a Premier League title. In Hiddink,
they also have a manager with the stature to rival Ferguson and the
Dutchman was canny enough yesterday to cast himself as the underdog
while deflecting any pressure in the direction of Old Trafford. “It’s
clear that after Saturday’s unexpected result that the tension has
come back in the league,” said Hiddink. “It gives a blow. It depends
on their calmness if it goes on. When you are in the driver’s seat and
someone else is coming, you can get a little bit nervous. The door is
a little bit open.

Of course [they are vulnerable]. In the Premier League, many teams
have the capacity to win there. It’s not a battle between the
managers. It’s a battle between the players. Rafael is experienced,
Sir Alex is very experienced. Let me, as a schoolboy, chase them.”

The schoolboy, though, may have to do without Deco for the rest of the
season after the Portugal midfielder limped off yesterday with a
hamstring injury. Hiddink is more confident about Didier Drogba’s
ability to quickly recover from a knock to his knee and can draw
particular confidence from the return of Michael Essien.

The contrasting performances of Essien, who scored Chelsea’s winning
goal after 18 minutes, and Robinho, who was virtually anonymous,
certainly supported Hiddink’s pre-match theory that it is not the size
of a club’s bank account that counts, but the way they utilise their
resources.

Luiz-Felipe Scolari previously declared that a fit Essien would be
like having “five new players” and, in the space of just six days, the
Ghanaian has gone some way to proving his theory.

Against Juventus, he scored the pivotal goal in Chelsea’s progression
to the Champions League quarter-finals and his presence yesterday
again inspired fresh midfield urgency.

Sensibly, he was not wasted at right-back or utilised as a holding
midfield but instructed to burst forward alongside Frank Lampard.

His goal, though, owed most to quick-thinking and a dash of good
fortune. With Lampard lining up a free-kick just inside the Manchester
City half, Essien drifted into space on the edge of the penalty area
and hooked a first-time volley off his shin beyond Shay Given.

Stephen Ireland was perhaps guilty of some slack marking, though it
was not the only time that City were unable to nullify Chelsea’s
variety of passing.

Lampard was particularly outstanding and a precise through-ball split
the City defence after 36 minutes, with Drogba back-heeling into the
path of Michael Ballack, who shot narrowly over.

Chelsea were also denied a convincing penalty claim shortly before
half-time when Nedum Onouha appeared to tug at Nicolas Anelka’s shirt
and then trip his former team-mate. City could give further thanks for
conceding just one goal after Juliano Belletti’s 25-yard shot flew
beyond Given but cannoned to safety off the inside of the post.

On the back of just one away league victory this season, there were no
real positives from a flat City performance. Robinho’s most memorable
contribution involved arguing with Mike Riley over perceived
injustices, while Elano headed straight for the tunnel after being
substituted. After initially sitting in the dugout, Robinho also
reacted to his substitution by heading in the direction of the away
dressing-room before the match had finished. “It was difficult to get
Robinho into the game,” said Hughes. “But all our attackers struggled.
You can’t just expect one player to carry the team. We have other
players who have to stand up to the plate.

“All is fine [with Elano]. No problem. With 10 minutes to go, he
[Robinho] is getting recovery strategies, fluids down him, so it’s not
an issue. The sunshine affected both teams in a negative way. We had
to try and put some extra legs and energy on the pitch in the end.”

The boos and chants of “what a waste of money” that accompanied
Robinho’s departure, however, suggested that the Chelsea supporters
did not share Scolari’s regret over the way Manchester City hijacked
his signing. Indeed, after six wins and a draw from seven matches, it
is the judgment of Hiddink in which Chelsea can increasingly trust.



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


Mail:


Chelsea 1 Manchester City 0:

Blues jump into second as Robinho flops again By NEIL ASHTON Football
News Correspondent

What a result for Chelsea. Not just the victory that leaves them four
points behind Manchester United, but their failure to sign Robinho
last August is the save of the season.
It certainly looked that way when Roman Abramovich walked across the
pitch at the final whistle, heading into the home dressing room to
slap Guus Hiddink on the back after Chelsea's fourth successive
victory in the Barclays Premier League.
There were no thumb-sucking celebrations at Stamford Bridge from the
Brazilians, just a good old-fashioned strop from two of Manchester
City's potential match-winners.

Elano was at it first, feigning surprise when he was substituted in
the 65th minute and then heading straight down the tunnel towards the
dressing room. A dressing down, more like.
He was followed shortly afterwards by Robinho, swapping shirts with
Salomon Kalou on his way down the steps and no doubt wishing he had
held his nerve last August to wait for Chelsea to improve their offer.

'Don't make anything of it,' pleaded City's manager Mark Hughes after
they slipped pathetically to their ninth defeat of the season on the
road.
Hard not to when two of the Premier League's most talented players
wandered aimlessly across the pitch until Hughes plucked up the
courage to haul them off.
'You can't expect one player to carry a team. We have other players
who have to stand up and be counted. It wasn't Robbie's day.'

Even when the sun is shining, as it was at Stamford Bridge, their
team-mates could not convince them to come out to play - they were
shirking their responsibilities and hiding in the shade.
'The sun affected both teams,' claimed Hughes.
'It certainly didn't shine too kindly on us.'
No kidding. Robinho's sole contribution to the game was to repeatedly
tell Michael Ballack to '**** off' as Shaun Wright-Phillips scampered
away with the ball after he failed to retreat the full 10 yards when
the Chelsea midfielder took a first-half free-kick.
This team had 10th written all over them when Robinho scored on his
debut in a 3-1 defeat at Eastlands last September and yet apparently
they are making great strides.
Where are they this morning? Tenth. They are eight places and 26
points behind Chelsea, a team with a sniff - and it is no more than
that at the moment - of a third Premier League title.

Chelsea were always comfortable. Not convincing by any means, but
there is a resilient look about them. They seem ready for a battle in
the remaining nine games and will believe they are back in the hunt,
ready to overhaul Manchester United in the run-in if Sir Alex
Ferguson's team somehow slip up.
This morning they will scan the fixture list again - Tottenham,
Newcastle, Bolton, Everton, West Ham, Fulham, Arsenal, Blackburn and
Sunderland, believing they are capable of winning every one of those
games.
Hiddink even changed his formation to accommodate Deco, who limped off
with a hamstring injury after just 41 minutes of his first start since
they lost 3-0 at Manchester United in January, and that bulldozer
Michael Essien.
They lined up 4-4-2, highly unusual for Chelsea, with Essien on the
right until he unexpectedly popped up inside the area to divert Frank
Lampard's 17th-minute freekick beyond Shay Given.
Essien's game was explosive, giving a barnstorming performance and
reminding John Mikel Obi, easily Chelsea's weakest link, how to
dictate matches.
His goal, his second in less than a week after his equaliser against
Juventus last Tuesday, was supposed to be the catalyst to go on and
score two, three or four past their second-rate opponents.

Instead they played within themselves, always ready to tap their foot
on the gas if City threatened to turn this into a contest.

They never looked likely to. Valeri Bojinov's effort, shortly after he
came on as Robinho's replacement, was their only shot, an embarrassing
footnote in this embarrassingly one-sided game.
'Sometimes it is difficult when we play away because Robbie is
obviously a threat and opponents know that,' added Hughes.
'We couldn't get him in the game, we're an attack-minded team but we
didn't have the sharpness we need when we come up against the
top-class teams.'
Chelsea threatened to be top class, picking holes in City's defence
whenever the mood took them. Ballack read Didier Drogba's mind by
running on to his delicious back-heel in the first half but clipping
his effort wide of the target.
Drogba and Frank Lampard then took it in turns to shoot wide and
Juliano Belletti, on as a substitute for Deco, rattled Given's post
after the break.
Hiddink has overseen this impressive transformation, turning Chelsea
into a football force again and laying the foundations for the future.
His (allegedly) short stay in England will not cost anything like that
£34m City paid for Robinho, but at least Chelsea are on to a winner.

MATCH FACTS
CHELSEA (4-4-2): Cech 6; Bosingwa 6, Carvalho 7, Terry 7, A Cole 6;
Essien 8, Lampard 6, Ballack 6, Deco 5 (Belletti 42min, 6); Anelka 6,
Drogba 5 (Malouda 70, 6).
MANCHESTER CITY (4-4-1-1): Given 6; Richards 5, Dunne 7, Onuoha 6,
Bridge 6; Wright-Phillips 6, Zabaleta 6, Elano 4 (Etuhu 65, 6),
Ireland 6; Robinho 4 (Bojinov 81); Caicedo 5 (Evans 53, 5). Booked:
Elano, Evans.
Man of the match: Michael Essien.
Referee: Mike Riley.


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


Independent:


Essien gives flicker of hope to Blues' title bid

Chelsea 1 Manchester City 0

By Sam Wallace

Guus Hiddink's way of describing Chelsea's pursuit of Manchester
United in the title race was to declare yesterday that Sir Alex
Ferguson was in the driver's seat but that he must be "nervous"
someone was behind him. To extend the metaphor a little further, let
us imagine that in Ferguson's rear-view mirror he can see a portly yet
composed Dutchman, astride his beloved Harley-Davidson and
accelerating gently.

Hiddink really does have a Harley motorcycle back in Amsterdam but for
now it gathers dust while he goes about rejuvenating Chelsea's season.
Let no-one get too carried away, Hiddink's team are still four points
behind United, whose game in hand means that they are still very much
in control of this title race but at least Chelsea have regained some
credibility. Michael Essien's goal yesterday gave them hope, albeit
slim, that the race is not over.

Undefeated since he took over last month, this was Hiddink's sixth win
out of seven in all competitions and suddenly Chelsea have something
of that old indomitable attitude about them. He played down the
suggestions that his team might overhaul United, comparing himself to
a "schoolboy" in relation to Ferguson and Rafael Benitez, but do not
be fooled. No-one quite knows how United will respond to Saturday's
result but if they stumble again, Chelsea look very well placed to
take advantage.

Hiddink's side are in second place now, ahead of Liverpool on goal
difference and revving up nicely. "It is clear that after Saturday's
unexpected result that the tension has come back in the league," he
said. "It's a boost. But if we want to track them, we have to keep on
winning. That will create tension to the end of the season, which is
good for everyone."

Hiddink was not yet ready to call it on with Ferguson although you can
be assured that the Chelsea manager has an ego to compare with the
best of them, however humble he is currently playing it. "It's a
battle between the players," he said. "They [Benitez and Ferguson] are
both very experienced – Rafael is experienced. Sir Alex is very
experienced. Let me, as a schoolboy, chase them. At the end, it's
about the players.

"I don't know if you can compare the two clubs or how they will react
to this. But it gives United a blow. It depends on their calmness if
it goes on. But they have experience. I don't know what their reaction
will be. Let's hope for everyone [that United struggle]. When you are
in the driver's seat and someone else is coming, you can get a little
bit nervous."

The impact of Essien, whose goal came in just his second start since
his return from injury, is exactly the little bit of good fortune that
every new manager needs.

Hiddink may already have proved himself with his initial impact upon
this Chelsea team but Essien's return has been his reward. The player
they call "The Train" played as if he had never been away, a full 90
minutes of match-winning commitment that embodied the Chelsea of Jose
Mourinho.

Essien was everything Mourinho wanted in a footballer, a supreme
athlete who scored crucial goals. He was a major factor in Mourinho's
second title-winning season and then he scored the goal against
Valencia in 2007 that gave Avram Grant his first big win as Chelsea
manager.

Yesterday, Essien was the force in Hiddink's side. It says everything
about the player who has recovered from the cruciate knee ligament
injury sustained in August, playing for Ghana in Tripoli, to make a
difference to Chelsea's season.

To take the true value of Essien you only had to see how ambivalent
Hiddink was about the strong possibility that Deco will not play again
this season.

The Portuguese midfielder came off after 41 minutes complaining of the
hamstring problem that has troubled him this season. Would he be
playing again? "I have my doubts to be honest," Hiddink said, "but
let's see what happens." He did not sound like a manager for whom the
world has just caved in. Deco out, Essien in. It seems like a good
deal for Chelsea. Whether Deco ever plays again for the club is also
debatable, he is strongly connected to the Scolari regime and has not
been able to sustain the early promise he showed this season.

In contrast, Essien is just about the most saleable asset Chelsea
have. He took his goal brilliantly, volleying in Frank Lampard's
clever free-kick to him on the edge of the box after 18 minutes.

After that, Chelsea had a good shout for a penalty when Nedum Onuoha
dragged down Nicolas Anelka on 32 minutes but they were hardly
stretched. Manchester City were predictably dreadful away from home
where they have won just twice in their last 20 games.

The real embarrassment for Mark Hughes was a desperate performance
from his moody Brazilians, Elano and Robinho, both of whom were
substituted long after they had effectively given up.

It is a mystery why Hughes bothers to pat these players on the back as
they leave the field, the assumption being that he is just keeping
them happy until the end of the season when, at the very least, Elano
can be offloaded. The City manager deserves better than this. It is
rare for the Chelsea fans to be able to sing "what a waste of money"
at an opposing player without a hint of irony but it was justified in
Robinho's case.

Richard Dunne kicked substitute Florent Malouda's shot off the line in
the closing stages to keep the difference down to one goal but in
reality this was a hammering for City in everything but the scoreline.

Hiddink's greatest regret must be that – Chelsea having played their
two games against United before he arrived – he must leave it to
others to try to beat the champions. On current form he would fancy
his chances against United.

Goal: Essien (18) 1-0.

Chelsea (4-1-4-1): Cech; Bosingwa, Terry, Carvalho, A Cole; Ballack;
Anelka, Essien, Lampard, Deco (Belletti, 41); Drogba (Malouda, 72).
Substitutes not used: Hilario (gk), Mikel, Quaresma, Kalou, Alex.

Manchester City (4-2-3-1): Given; Richards, Dunne, Onuoha, Bridge;
Zabaleta, Ireland; Wright-Phillips, Elano (Etuhu, 68), Robinho
(Bojinov, 82); Caicedo (Evans, 55). Substitutes not used: Hart (gk),
Garrido, Fernandes, Berti.

Referee: M Riley (West Yorkshire).

Booked: Manchester City: Elano, Evans.

Man of the match: Essien.

Attendance: 41,810.


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


Guardian:


Essien provides spark as Chelsea stay in the chase

Chelsea 1 Essien 18
Manchester City 0

Kevin McCarra at Stamford Bridge

It was a luxury to amble into closer contention for the Premier League
title. Chelsea will not yet be utterly convinced that they can track
down the leaders Manchester United, who are four points clear with a
game in hand, but at least they will feel rested after this simple
victory. Mark Hughes, the visitors' manager, referred to missing
players and a weariness in the wake of a Uefa Cup win over Aalborg on
Thursday.

The Danes, however, had hardly tested City and if the club is to
achieve a status that corresponds with its wealth they will have to
develop a different mentality. Chelsea's lead was narrow in theory,
but of oceanic breadth to City. While Michael Essien's goal delivered
the win, it was his sheer vigour that counted for more. The Ghanaian
had appetite and influence in his first league start since sustaining
cruciate ligament damage while with his country in September.

City were despondent long before he tired. With a single away victory
in the league, the subdued tone of Hughes' team is not without cause.
They are six points clear of the relegation zone. That margin makes it
highly unlikely that they will be demoted, but it is galling even to
have to contemplate such a possibility. It is appropriate to
sympathise for a manager under pressure following the arrival of new
owners, but Hughes would have been feeling ill-at-ease no matter who
held the shares.

Though even-tempered afterwards, it must have infuriated the Welshman
that City had a single attempt on target, from the substitute Valeri
Bojinov, that hardly troubled Petr Cech. Essien's effort was never
likely to be overhauled. It was taken with his shin, but the true
untidiness lay in the visitors' defending after 18 minutes. Frank
Lampard had no trouble finding Essien with a free-kick struck from the
middle of the pitch. The midfielder connected first-time and the ball
flew past the left hand of Shay Given.

That contact contained its element of luck, but there was nothing
haphazard about Essien's influence overall. If he has been absent for
much of the campaign, that at least makes him a footballer whose
dynamism will also make a deep impression on wearying rivals. City had
certainly lost sight of him when he headed off-target from a Lampard
delivery in the 39th minute.

Earlier Lampard had been at the heart of an exquisite move that
Ballack started and then sought to finish. Stepping onto the backheel
by Drogba the German fired wide. There was an abundance of
opportunities and Chelsea will be reproached for spurning them. City
did at least persist and Richard Dunne, for instance, kicked clear an
effort by the substitute Florent Malouda with three minutes remaining.

Damage limitation cannot satisfy a club of such means. The crowd
jeered the eventual substitution of the ineffectual Robinho. Had
Chelsea succeeded in signing him before City stepped in he would have
been idolised here. On this occasion, the Brazilian was far advanced
on the left but that was largely a ploy to check the trademark surges
of the Chelsea full-back Jose Bosingwa. Of Robinho's dozen goals for
City, just two have come in away games and he has not scored at all
since December 28.

The statistics, of course, must reflect the help he is given and there
was little impact at Stamford Bridge from, for example, Stephen
Ireland, who had been enjoying an excellent campaign. Chelsea could
afford to be unflustered even when they might, for instance, have
railed against the referee Mike Riley when Nicolas Anelka was denied a
penalty after appearing to be fouled by Nedum Onuoha in the 32nd
minute.

If Guus Hiddink broods at all it will be over the pernicious hamstring
injury that curtailed Deco's afternoon. The manager suggested
afterwards that the Portuguese international might even have come to
the end of his involvement for this season. Chelsea's means are not
extensive in certain areas and it suits them that the main priority
must lie in the Champions League, a tournament in which just five
further games have to be negotiated by the eventual winners.

The caretaker Hiddink continues to be unbeaten with the club. This
latest success could have been resounding even though Chelsea did not
have to push themselves to the limits. It did not, for instance, feel
like a turning point had been reached when the substitute Juliano
Belletti hit the post with a long-range effort after 62 minutes. Any
uncertainty lay in the eventual margin of City's loss.

Hughes impresses with the calmness shown in a trying campaign, yet he
does need to galvanise his squad. Chelsea, for their part, might enjoy
living in what is relative seclusion following the hullabaloo of the
Mourinho era. The league may well be out of reach but the side is now
going about its work with quiet effectiveness.



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


Sun:

Chelsea 1 Man City 0

MICHAEL ESSIEN'S stunner helped Chelsea keep up the pressure on Man Utd

By IAN McGARRY


GUUS HIDDINK has got everything right since he joined Chelsea.

Attitude, decisions, results.

Yesterday was no exception as his team won their fourth consecutive
league match to close the gap at the top to four points.

Michael Essien is nicknamed The Train by team-mates for the
unstoppable way he plays the game.

If events of the past six days are anything to go by, however, maybe
they should rename him the Goal Machine.

His strike made the difference against Manchester City yesterday just
as it did when he struck against Juventus last Tuesday.

This was only his third league start of the season and his first in six months.

On this form, though, it is not hard to see why the Blues struggled so
much when he was out with damaged cruciate ligaments.

The Ghana international takes the game to opponents, moving the ball
from one part of the pitch to another in the blink of an eye.

That frees up Frank Lampard to take up positions further forward and
receive a pass rather than make it.

Consequently, a team which has too often gone off the rails recently
is suddenly running like a dream.

The same cannot be said of their opponents yesterday.

Manchester City were desperate against Chelsea.

Desperate at the back, desperate in midfield and totally devoid of any
desperation to win.

And while Chelsea chase Manchester United, the day when the Red
Devils’ neighbours are considered proper rivals remains a distant
dream.

Hiddink actually called that one too. Last Friday he said he thought
it was ‘unlikely’ that City could win the Premier League in the
foreseeable future. In reality, their performance at Stamford Bridge
suggested they would struggle to win a pub league.

The clash of football’s richest clubs turned out to be a contest
between the haves and have nots.

Forget City’s trillions versus Chelsea’s billions.

It was something much less expensive but more valuable which separated
the two teams at Stamford Bridge — heart.

The score said it was 1-0 to Chelsea but if you calculated the score
based on effort and desire it would have been much, much more.

Even Hiddink said: “We really weren’t under any threat from City for
the whole game.”

As a player, Mark Hughes was the epitome of ambition and hunger.

At United and Chelsea, he was always up for a fight and the last to give up.

Sparky by name, explosive by nature — that was the best way to sum up
Hughes the player.

Which makes it all the more puzzling why he sits placidly on the
sidelines while his team does even less on the pitch. Even worse, when
he hooked two of the worst offenders — Elano and Robinho — he
applauded them off the pitch.

For what? Their amazing contribution, tireless work-rate and
commitment to the team?

Or was he just humouring them because, having tried criticising them
before, he realises it only makes them moan and play worse.

In that sense, you have to have some sympathy for Hughes.

He knows it is a matter of weeks before he loses his job, so why go to
war with his players.

Well, one reason would be to improve his job prospects after City,
assuming his payoff will not be so great to allow him to retire.
Hiddink, on the other hand, looks more and more likely to walk out of
Chelsea in the summer a hero.

This game was a microcosm of how he has turned around the team’s
fortunes since replacing Phil Scolari.

Chelsea continue to defend as if their lives depend on it and attack
like there’s no tomorrow.

They should have been three up by half-time in this contest but for
some poor finishing and a worse decision by ref Mike Riley.

Michael Ballack should have scored from Didier Drogba’s brilliant
backheel, while Nicolas Anelka was hauled back and hacked down by
Nedum Onuoha. It should have been a penalty but amazingly, it was not
given. It did not matter.

After 18 minutes, Lampard played a fiendish pass from a free-kick
which Essien simply lobbed over Shay Given.

A move rehearsed on the training ground last week, neither midfielder
could quite believe they had been allowed the space to make it work.

City players, however, seem allergic to work. Pablo Zabaleta was
supposed to mark Essien, while Stephen Ireland just looked on.

Despite losing Drogba and Deco to injury — the Ivorian should not be
out for long, but the prognosis is not so optimistic on the Portuguese
international — Chelsea look to be in rude health.

On the other hand, City’s condition continues to decline — and even
money cannot cure it.



Mon Mar 16, 2009 6:46 am

stelloyd2001
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #1886 of 1944 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

The Times Michael Essien helps Chelsea see off Claudio Ranieri and Juventus Juventus 2 Chelsea 2 (Chelsea win 3-2 on aggregate) Matt Hughes, Deputy Football...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Mar 11, 2009
12:51 pm

The Times Michael Essien continues impressive comeback to send Chelsea into second place Chelsea 1 Manchester City 0 Matt Hughes at Stamford Bridge Manchester...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Mar 16, 2009
12:22 pm

The Times Benítez gamble nearly pays off after Liverpool come up shy in eight-goal feast Chelsea 4 Liverpool 4 (Chelsea win 7-5 on agg) Patrick Barclay, Chief...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Apr 15, 2009
1:15 pm

The Times April 23, 2009 Chelsea left chasing shadows as challenge comes grinding to halt Chelsea 0 Everton 0 Matt Hughes, Deputy Football Correspondent Guus...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Apr 28, 2009
6:16 pm

The Times Guus Hiddink's tactics frustrate Catalan giants Barcelona 0 Chelsea 0 Oliver Kay, Football Correspondent Hiddink's tactics frustrate Catalan giants I...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Apr 29, 2009
12:43 pm

The Times Arsene Wenger loses his grip on reality as Chelsea crush Arsenal Arsenal 1 Chelsea 4 Matt Hughes at the Emirates Stadium Such is Arsène Wenger’s...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
May 11, 2009
12:12 pm

The Times Andres Iniesta's strike denies Chelsea place in Champions League final Chelsea 1 Barcelona 1 (agg 1-1, Barcelona win on away goals) Oliver Kay,...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
May 11, 2009
12:12 pm

http://b90.blogspot.com/ ... The Times Guus Hiddink confesses it will be hard to leave Chelsea Chelsea 2 Blackburn 0 Kaveh Solhekol at Stamford Bridge Guus...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
May 18, 2009
1:23 pm

Guardian: Sunderland's survival party outshines even the golden boot of Nicolas Anelka Sunderland 2 Richardson 53, Jones 90 Chelsea 3 Anelka 47, Kalou 74,...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
May 26, 2009
11:36 am

Telegraph: Chelsea defeat Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan in pre-season friendly By Jason Burt at the Rose Bowl, Pasadena Goals from Didier Drogba and Frank...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Jul 27, 2009
1:07 pm

Telegraph: Chelsea new boy Yuri Zhirkov scores on debut in pre-season fixture against AC Milan Chelsea may not have added greatly to their squad this summer...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Jul 27, 2009
1:07 pm

also now on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?topic=9267&uid=45032123742#/group.php?gid=45032123742 ... Telegraph: John Terry is Chelsea's 'most...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Jul 27, 2009
1:07 pm

Guardian: Deco adds the gloss as Chelsea come from behind at Sunderland Sunderland 1 Bent 18 Chelsea 3 Ballack 52, Lampard (pen) 61, Deco 70 Louise Taylor at...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Aug 19, 2009
11:43 am

Times: Michael Ballack and Patrice Evra clash as Chelsea win Community Shield It has been the longest, laziest of summers for the sport that never sleeps, but,...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Aug 19, 2009
11:44 am

The Times Chelsea maintain 100 per cent start to Premier League season Fulham 0 Chelsea 2 Oliver Kay, Football Correspondent In terms of euphoria and...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Aug 27, 2009
12:10 pm

The Times Nicolas Anelka’s strike gives Chelsea laboured victory Chelsea 1 Porto 0 Oliver Kay, Football Correspondent Roman Abramovich has another holy grail...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Sep 16, 2009
12:55 pm

The Times Chelsea stay top after crushing Spurs in London derby Matt Hughes at Stamford Bridge Chelsea led from gun to tape on the two occasions they won the ...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Sep 21, 2009
12:30 pm

The Times Joe Cole steals limelight on Chelsea return Chelsea 1 Queens Park Rangers 0 Russell Kempson It may have represented little more than a duel for local...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Sep 25, 2009
12:42 pm

The Times Nicolas Anelka leads Chelsea to victory Apoel 0 Chelsea 1 Matt Hughes, Deputy Football Correspondent, Nicosia Chelsea returned to winning ways in the...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Oct 1, 2009
1:40 pm

Mirror: Chelsea 2-0 Liverpool: Didier Drogba puts the boot in on Liverpool By Martin Lipton Frustrating, ham actor, pain in the backside, someone who spends...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Oct 5, 2009
11:57 am

Times Salomon Kalou double eases Chelsea to easy win over Atletico Madrid Chelsea 4 Atletico Madrid 0 Matt Hughes, Deputy Football Correspondent When Salomon...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Oct 23, 2009
3:16 am

The Times Chelsea show class in easing way past Bolton’s pussycats Chelsea 4 Bolton 0 Patrick Barclay, Chief Football Commentator Maybe Bolton Wanderers were...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Oct 31, 2009
9:42 am

Independent: Drogba back with a bang to power Chelsea's progress Atletico Madrid 2 Chelsea 2 By Mark Fleming at Estadio Vicente Calderon Didier Drogba kept his...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Nov 5, 2009
1:09 pm

Times Header from John Terry takes Chelsea five points clear at Premier League summit Chelsea 1 Manchester United 0 As the ska sound of Madness reverberated...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Nov 9, 2009
1:24 pm

Independent: Drogba brushes past Arsenal's feeble challenge Arsenal 0 Chelsea 3: Powerful striker continues fine record against Gunners Chelsea move 11 points...
Steve Lloyd
stelloyd2001
Offline Send Email
Nov 30, 2009
12:53 pm
 First  |  |  Next > Last 
< Prev Topic  |  Next Topic >
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help