Sunday, 17 December 06, 10:56 PM · Comments (11)
Daily Telegraph, Clive Tyldesley: "Functional? Effective? Boring even? Not a bit of it. Chelsea's true champion pedigree was underlined by moments of rare brilliance and beauty in a stunning success at Goodison Park. Trailing 2-1 with less than 10 minutes remaining, they turned a damaging defeat into what could prove to be a pivotal success with two memorable late goals from Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba. Chelsea may have a bit of an image problem, but no team in Europe could have won a vital game more dramatically."
The Times, Matt Hughes: "With their passing particularly poor, Mourinho changed his team around at half-time, summoning Salomon Kalou as an extra striker from the bench. Ballack emerged from the lethargy that has surrounded him this season to force the equaliser, his shot hitting a post and Tim Howard’s back before crossing the line, and they continued to dominate, Kalou hitting a post and Drogba firing over the bar."
The Guardian, Dominic Fifield: "It was Didier Drogba who settled this glorious contest. The hosts were still coming to terms with the reality that their resilience had not been enough to retain an advantage, Frank Lampard having plucked an equaliser across Tim Howard and into the corner six minutes earlier, when the Ivorian gathered Andriy Shevchenko's flick. The ball cannoned up from his chest, Drogba spinning instinctively to hammer a wondrous volley which soared for 35 yards then dipped over the goalkeeper at the last."
The Independent, Andy Hunter: "But for three sublime strikes from distance on successive Sundays - Michael Essien's against Arsenal starting an internal competition at Stamford Bridge - and Drogba's late winner against Newcastle, Chelsea would have dropped six points in three outings. As things stand, their position as United's closest challengers has improved dramatically. They are displaying the tenacity of champions, laced with occasional brilliance, not the brilliance of champions laced with occasional tenacity."
Official Chelsea FC Website, Neil Barnett: "Chelsea twice came from behind without injured John Terry to win with two late fantastic goals from Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba. Terry has been struggling with his back since the Newcastle game and pulled up in training yesterday. That forced Ricardo Carvalho to play today after missing the second-half against Newcastle with his ankle injury."
A Living Room in the South East, 87 minutes gone, Jonathan Dyer: "Another bloody two points dropped, Mancs about to play one of the worst teams in the country, the title is going out of the window and we’re punting hopeful long balls upfield and hitting speculative thirty-five yardOHYEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEES! YOU F*CKING BEAUTY!!!!"
Didier Drogba. One of the finest goals you’ll see all season and one which may turn out to be vital in the big scheme of things. Frank Lampard’s wasn’t bad either; a record breaker too — he is now our most prolific midfield goal scorer of all time with 77, overtaking Dennis Wise’s tally in far fewer games.
A fantastic result and if you saw one goal of the calibre of those that Chelsea scored today in a season you’d be lucky; three in ninety minutes was an early Christmas present to be remembered long after the decorations come down. But really, do we need to be a goal behind and play like a pub team for forty-five minutes before we really get going?
Apologies for the short post this evening; lack of time and available match reports (more will be added as they become available) at this point on a Sunday prevented anything more substantial. But hey, it was one of those games that is probably best described by those who watched it, so over to you — post your views in the comments section. Was this the day when the race for the title race turned in our favour?
The quality of the goals and the excitement of the game took the focus away from our continuing problems re the 4-4-2 diamond. First half: 4-4-2, 1-0 down. Second half: 4-3-3, 1-1 and all over the Toffees until poor defending let us down. Two wonder goals and a never-say-die spirit rescued us, United lost and all is well.
When Kalou was introduced at half-time, I turned to a fellow Blue and said, "He's not the answer." How silly did I feel? He was brilliant and changed the game.
Or did he? Or was it simply switching to 4-3-3 that changed the game? There's a pattern developing here.
There is a pattern here and it looks to me mostly due to the narrowness of midfield allowing the opposition to close down the space denying Lampard and Ballack the room to be effective. The solution of moving Essien to right back means we can accommodate all our "untouchables" but I doubt this is Essien's most effective role.
The simple fact remains that we have 2 hugely talented but almost identical players in midfield (save for heading ability) and maybe our problems result from this and means we fail to get the best out of either of them when playing the diamond.
On another note, my admiration for Drobga grows with every game. If we were to win the ECL he would surely be in the running for Footballer of the Year on current form. He truly is the genuine article.
Who says that the Premiership is filed with Cheap imports form the Ivory Coast (me! ;-)
What a great game and result! One that will long live in the memory, mainly for the quality of the goals!
But it does detract from our first half performance being below par yet again. Is it only me, or does labelling the likes of Ballack & Ashley Cole as 'untouchables' remove a bit of the motivation they should have knowing the likes of Wayne Bridge and Arjen Robben are breathing down their necks?
By the way, can anyone tell me what formation we were actually playing towards the end when we had Drogs, Sheva, Kalou, Bridge and Cole on the field? It certainly was effective!
And bearing in the mind the important Xmas Premiership fixtures coming up, should we put out a weakened team in the Carling Cup on Wednesday?
Cheers.
Cheers!
Neil Barnett's take on the game (and tactics) on the Chelsea website is interesting.
LINK
Wednesday night? Starts for Bridge, Obi, Ferreira, Kalou and Sheva, perhaps. Not sure whether that counts as weakened...
Nick
Spot on about the goals and the formation issue.
It is amazing that we are amassing so many points yet playing with so little coherence. I think it is testimony to the talent in our squad (i.e. at least one of them will produce something potentially match-winning every game - thank God three of them did on Sunday!) rather than any tactical genius from Mourinho, who to be honest seems to have lost the plot a bit - the kissing the ring at the end as if he had single handedly won the game and then slagging off Andy Johnson - what was all that about?!
The team spirit he has fostered is incredible - we would be nowhere near as high in the league if it were not for it - but tactically we have been all over the place for almost the entire season (with the exception of both the Barca games in my opinion).
Having moaned though the game was brilliant and what a fantastic result providing United's later loss to the Hammers. I doubt Fergie will be joking about Mourinho's mind games too much during the press conferences over Christmas after Sunday's results. The psychological advantage is now with us and we must ram it home with successive victories over the Christmas period.
Come on Chelsea!
Okay with the result...
As much as the team got out there and did their thing... I am one to say that it was down to tactics.
Everton had our moves and we had to change this.
Lampard got the space to shoot because the guys that were meant to be marking him hard to step back to mark another player.
Wayne Bridge and Ash Cole... This is another innovation from the special one..We have done it on the right before but on the left...Those two together should be an option exploited further...There is a switch there...for England as well...about the formation it was 442 (diamond) to 433 to 3133... Genius
Did Jose's note to maka said:
"Stop trying to get into Everton's penalty box"?
11 Comments · Add yours
Magnificent second half display......... Chelsea will win the Premiership, simply because they do not know when they are beaten..... The press can write as many articles as they like about unhappy players ruining team spirit, but the reality is that Jose's greatest achievement has been to bond the group into such a tight-knit bunch that they play for each other for 90+ minutes, every single week.
Great result, and one that obviously put the fear into United, who played no worse than they have for the last month but without any of the breaks, and were ultimately reduced to the sort of hit-and-hope football they're supposed to eschew.
Once again, though, be nice to turn up in the first half...
Loved the quote from Jose, though:
'If you can play great music then you play great music, but if you cannot then at least play something,' said Mourinho. 'That's what we're doing.'