Sunday, 24 December 06, 05:50 PM · Comments (5)
Sunday Telegraph, James Mossop: "On many a Saturday Jose Mourinho becomes the clown with the scowl but here absolute honesty prevailed. He admitted that Wigan deserved a point, that his Chelsea side thought the match was over when they went two up and publicly thanked his central defender, Ricardo Carvalho, for covering up the errors of his team-mates."
The Observer, Paul Wilson: "While their comeback at Everton was gripping, here it was much less inexorable and decidedly cruel on Wigan. The home side had fought back brilliantly from two goals down to come within four added minutes of holding a top four team for the first time and giving Sir Alex Ferguson the most unexpected of 65th birthday presents, only to be undone by Arjen Robben with two minutes remaining."
Sunday Times, Jonathan Northcroft: "If the championship is retained, it will come down to something more precious than even Roman Abramovich can buy ”” a priceless spirit. Of all the qualities Mourinho has brought to Stamford Bridge, this is the special one. Having moved five points ahead at the top of the Premiership with their victory over Aston Villa earlier in the day, Manchester United’s lead was reduced to two by Robben’s stoppage-time goal. It was classic Chelsea, a strike of solo brilliance that arrived out of nothing and seemed unlikely when the team was under pressure a few minutes before."
The Independent, Jon Culley: "It was with a goal in stoppage time here on the opening day of last season that Chelsea launched their title-winning campaign and they were celebrating again at the last gasp yesterday evening. Coasting after scoring twice in the opening 31 minutes, the champions suffered the unaccustomed experience of seeing a two-goal lead wrested from them as Wigan mounted a wonderfully spirited comeback."
Official Chelsea FC website, Neil Barnett: "Chelsea threw away a two-goal lead but won the game with Arjen Robben's first goal of the season two minutes into stoppage time. Jose Mourinho now has 100 wins in 142 matches as Chelsea manager."
Arjen Robben. Two assists and a vital goal, his first since February — he will be crucial over the Christmas period.
If we win anything this season, it will be a triumph of tenacity and spirit above all else. To win games in such a thrilling manner having largely played like the kind of mid-table fodder we have feasted upon in the last two seasons defies belief; Sir Alex will certainly be confident in his own team’s abilities, but to be stalked by such a relentless machine as Mourinho’s Chelsea must be slightly unnerving at times. When this team adds the football we know we are capable of with the kind of spirit we have shown recently, literally anything is possible.
And apologies to my neighbours for the general unrest and bad language emanating from my residence over the last couple of weeks; if you could hold off the ASBO until after Christmas, I’d be very grateful.
Wow what a match, all I got to say is I think this way of winning is good, because of two things one other teams will get nervous when playing us due to we don't know how to lose lately and two by having this belief that we can always come back means will never give up in a match that easily no matter how many goals scored against us. Also Kalou what a player was brilliant to watch in the first half only 21 years old he can only get better.
Champions are teams that never say die in a tight contest. But champions ought to be able to maintain dominance though out a game against a struggling opponent. It was a terrific show of tenacity against Wigan. But, it was against Wigan. Carvalho, Kalou, and Robben were heroic. Lamps was solid. Essien was out of place. And Boulahrouz ought to be traded to the highest bidder.
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A few too many pre-Christmas drinks were imbibed, which is hardly surprising given what the club put us through for a third consecutive weekend.
I second your analysis of Boulahrouz, J - there's potential in there somewhere but it may take time for it to be realised. His positioning and awareness of team-mates is awful at times. At present he's definitely more liability than asset.
Although Robben was instrumental and delivered a great Christmas present for us all, I would give MotM to Carvalho. It was great to see Mourinho walk onto the pitch to thank him after the final whistle.
Heskey almost ruined my Christmas. Thank you, Robben! My Santa!... Merry Christmas!