Chelsea, as most pundits predicted, have lost to Barcelona in the last sixteen of the Champions League. But as is anything involving Chelsea and Barcelona these days, it was not short of drama. Yet, when all the smoke cleared, Barcelona have their vengeance and, as José Mourinho said, we all are now reduced to watching the Champions League on television, just like Barcelona did last season. " /> Soccer: The Return of the Vengeful Kings - Nigerian Village Square

09

Mar

2006

Soccer: The Return of the Vengeful Kings PDF Print E-mail
By Kennedy Emetulu

The image “http://www.chelseafc-art.co.uk/images/chelsea_fc_artwork.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.Chelsea, as most pundits predicted, have lost to Barcelona in the last sixteen of the Champions League. But as is anything involving Chelsea and Barcelona these days, it was not short of drama. Yet, when all the smoke cleared, Barcelona have their vengeance and, as José Mourinho said, we all are now reduced to watching the Champions League on television, just like Barcelona did last season.

Now, there are those who probably see this as some form of poetic justice after last year’s controversial header by John Terry that saw us get into the quarter-final at their expense. After all, how else can you explain the fact that it was Terry’s headed own-goal that opened the way for Barcelona’s win at Stamford Bridge, when even with ten men, we had actually gone ahead? But of course, there is much more to it than that. While it was clear that we had their measure at the Bridge before Terje Hauge, the Norwegian referee decided to send off Asier Del Horno for a challenge that deserved no more than a yellow, Barcelona played the more attractive football and, on balance, deserved the win. We cannot blame them for whatever the referee has done; they just took advantage of it, like any ambitious team would do.

After that though, I still felt we could go to Camp Nou, turn them over and get the result; not because I was confident we were going to play the sexier football, but I was rather banking on the English grit that is the spine of our team. When we have our back against the wall, as we were last season at the same stage of the competition against the same team, we produced the goods. In fact, it took only another English team to controversially knock us out and that team went on to lift the trophy coming from three nil down, and they were thirty-seven points behind us in the league! Again, a few days ago, Arsenal, another English team whose powers have waned dramatically at home (not least because of Chelsea’s dominance), trudged over to the Santiago Bernabéu and walked away with a clean sheet, a win and a lot of swagger. They did this in spite of Real Madrid’s embarrassment of riches in attack and with three of the regular Arsenal back four sidelined by injuries. So, I was getting confident that the English character was now beginning to have the Indian sign over the Spanish character in these situations.

Yet, after all the diversions of the Barcelona hate-mob, when hostilities really resumed on the pitch, we didn’t turn up. We played from the beginning as though we were the ones who needed just a draw to go through. Mourinho’s initial line-up and formation was adventurous as it was interesting. It was perfectly legitimate and indeed sensible to try new things when you’re chasing a game; but he wasn’t going to go to the pitch and do it himself! Drogba’s lethargy, Carvalho’s panicky defending, Makelele’s near-anonymity, Duff’s spinelessness, Cole’s self-indulgence, Robben’s sightless runs, Lampard’s ordinariness and so on all showed we were the second best team on the night. Of course, Mourinho is a coach and he has reasons to say the better team lost and that the game was already decided by the Stamford Bridge sending off of Del Horno, but I’ll have to disagree with him. The truth is that on the night, Barcelona matched our physicality without compromising their usual stranglehold on possession or their creativity. The fact that Ronaldinho’s goal was all physical, rather than the usual skillful stuff says it all. Our equalizing goal, the penalty, was dubious, to say the least.

Of course, I’m not criticizing Mourinho and the team; I’m just stating how I see it over both legs and I’m doing so only for us to learn the lessons and move on. Mourinho has a point to say Barcelona have never defeated us with eleven men on the pitch, but it is not something you want to trumpet loudly, otherwise the neutrals begin to interpret such as the whimpers of a sore loser, rather than a dutiful compliment for his players - an indirect way of telling them that despite the outcome, they need not feel inferior to any team. It is good that Mourinho concedes that the team that goes through deserves it and that in this case, it’s Barcelona. Well, that is as close Mourinho would come to complimenting Barca; so they better take it and run!

Seriously, if the truth must be told, we’ve come a long way as a football club over a very short period of time. For the second year running, we’re going to win the league by a mile. And this season still threatens to better last season if we can add the FA Cup. Already, friends and foes alike have conceded that we are and will remain the dominant force in British football for sometime, based on the work Mourinho, the players and the staff are doing. Today, we’re being mentioned in the same breath as the European football powerhouses, not because we have money to burn, but by virtue of what the boys are achieving on the field. In fact, at the beginning of the season, the unofficial title of the best team in Europe was being contested by three teams – Barcelona, Chelsea and Juventus. Barcelona’s defeat of Chelsea means we’re out of the running; but it’s good for us to realize how far we’ve come and to appreciate the fact that ill luck has played its part in our ‘travails’ this season.

The summer’s most talked about and indeed costliest transfer was that of Michael Essien from Lyon to Chelsea. We acquired Essien specifically for this kind of encounter. Yet when he was most needed, he was cooling his heels on the sidelines, not through injury, but because of a UEFA ban over the two legs. The mobility and balance of our team depends hugely on our natural left-backs, but without Del Horno, Wayne Bridge his natural replacement was out on the treatment table. William Gallas, who would always put up a fine display anywhere on the backline, was not there in the first leg and in the second, while it was obvious he had the pace to handle Messi, he lacked the left leg to whip the crosses in when it mattered. Besides, chasing a game where you need to score two clear goals to be in contention was always going to be difficult. Mourinho is a great motivator, but those boys on the pitch on Tuesday night didn’t look like people who’d suffered two consecutive Champions League heartaches while losing in the semi-final two years in a row before now. They didn’t look like they knew history was beckoning them to tame the dancing matadors and that they really had a chance to do it if only they hadn’t fallen for the intimidation of a large stadium and a baying full-house mob.

So, let’s go on and claim what remains of our glory for the rest of the season. I personally won’t want to swap places with any other fan in the world. I believe in the Chelsea vision and mission and I believe that the holy grail of European football will be attained sooner, rather than later. The reaction of our fans to all the frothy negativity being bandied around about our club, our manager and players in the last few weeks convinces me that we are now becoming wiser to the game – which is that you stick to your own through thick and thin and don’t beg for love! I believe it’s a great compliment that people are having the kind of expectations they now have of us on the biggest European stage when this is just our fourth attempt in our history! Of course, we have to live with the Scousers baiting us with their five European Cup triumphs; but what would you do if you were Barca playing in the same league with the nine-times winning Real Madrid? For all their history and flair, Barcelona have only won the Cup once, a record no better than Aston Villa’s!

We can trust Mourinho to look hard at this team and begin to make the necessary provisions for the summer. Our attack is actually the problem. In Drogba and Crespo, we have two fine strikers who, on their day will match the best anywhere; but we need a consistent goal scorer. We need a striker with flair and panache; someone who’s always hungry, always scoring and always prepared to receive the ball and create something out of nothing. That was the difference between Eto’o and Drogba last night. One looked sluggish and uninspiring; the other mobile, eager and creative. Yes, Drogba is a great battering ram when he’s in the mood, but an inconsistent performer and of late has become somewhat unreliable when it matters most. Crespo, of course, is not the force he used to be and to be fair, he isn’t the type that can effectively play upfront alone as Mourinho normally prefers. In any case, he’s coming to the end of his career, so we really should be looking elsewhere. Mourinho should look at how to create the kind of attack that would be the envy of others – just like Barcelona! Yes, they are the standard-bearers now and we shouldn’t be afraid or ashamed to copy and better ourselves. We have the resources, so let’s just do it.

But while I look forward to an interesting summer of shopping at Stamford Bridge, I think our foray into the transfer market this time should be more strategic. No matter what has happened, we don’t want to break the team spirit that is the hallmark of this Chelsea team. Just one or two more real quality additions upfront will be fine.

And the King is dead….

About a week ago, we lost the man I consider the greatest Chelsea player ever. The magic of Peter Osgood lured me to Chelsea in my tender years and I’ve remained Blue ever since. I couldn’t bring myself to read the tributes or look at his all-over-the-place pictures. My grief was just too much for me to bear. But I prayed silently for release; I prayed that a turnaround in Barcelona would be a perfect way for me to explode and shed my tears of joyful sorrow for Peter the Great. It was not to be. Losing Osgood so suddenly and that ‘young’ wasn’t on the cards for me. I’m still terribly hurting and the restless tears are burning my insides. We’ll have to wait and see what form of tribute the club have in mind for him; but I’m sure they know that for a lot of us, he’s the embodiment of what our club should be, on and off the pitch – a stylish cut above the rest.

Adieu, King of the Bridge.



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 09.03.2006 23:16

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JayJay1JayJay1 is offline

 # 2 | 10.03.2006 03:19

Stop deceiving yourself, you are a Nigerian; hence your club is Enyimba

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pappilopappilo is offline

 # 3 | 10.03.2006 04:29

Mourinho is rubbish. He is a very rude and arrogant man and he isnt even a good coach. Good coaches are the likes of gus hiddink, sam allardyce and arsne wenger. These coaches have exploits that are there to be seen and rivalled. These expoits were ahieved with very moderate budgets. These coaches developed talents such as ashley cole, Y S park and cesc fabregas and have contributed to the game positively unlike mourinho who chats rubbish and makes FIFA referees(Frisk) pi*s their pants and quit. what else would you do if you were dealing with the russian mafia. How many proper players has mourinho contributed to the game. Mourhino is just like a lazy housewife who would rather buy her husband expensive chinese takeaway instead of cooking a proper meal. If mourinho were such a great coach, seeing that chelsea have already won the premiership, why doesnt he help sunderland FC out of relegation trouble with his 'exceptional coaching skills. Chelsea is all about money, where in the real world can a football club have operating losses of of £180 million over 2 years and remain in business. chelsea have bought the title on both occasions and will fall to their lower place in the league when the likes of arsenal, Man U and liverpool which are proper football clubs return to their best. Remember proper football is about nuturing teams a la Man U of '99 and Arsenal of '03/04 and not assembling teams like a cheap korean car which always falls apart no matter how good it looks. What happened to blackburn when they bought the title in 95, they fell by the wayside. The same faith awaits 'Chelski'

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MannyManny is online

 # 4 | 10.03.2006 08:26

Give me a break. What dominance? The team Chealsea has assembled is not value for money. Wait till Abrahamovic sort his problems at home and see your beloved team go the way of Leeds United.

£140 million pounds loss per year, how long is it going to last?
Get of your horse, get rid of your blue top and don a red top (gooners of course) because red is the in colour.

Sexy football is here to stay.

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MurinhoMurinho is online

 # 5 | 10.03.2006 09:24

what is with with all you chelsea playhaters . morinho is the best couch in the wrold and he has proved that with FC Porto and will do the same with chelsea. All you Arsenal and Man U fans should shut up and give us a break. Jelousy people.

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BIG PHILBIG PHIL is online

 # 6 | 10.03.2006 10:13

Brother,
Close your eyes for one minute and imagine Chelsea with Thierry Henri and Gerard next season. The premiership will collapse- don't you agree? The point I have always made is that what Chelsea needs at this point is two players, one in the mould of Henri, a Gerald play alike. Then we will over-run Europe, and all the player haters will shut up.

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KennKenn is offline

 # 7 | 10.03.2006 10:48

Murinho & Big Phil,

Una don sabi dem finish; na jealousy wan kill dem so. If dem like make dem cry from now till thy kingdom come, Chelsea go still dey dust dem dey go. Their problem be say dem don dominate the Premiership for ages, but now wey this new kid on the block don come take over the show, dem dey halla!

Dem go see pepper!:biggrin:




Pappilo,

First, on the charge of Mourinho being “a very rude and arrogant man”, I think it’s all about perception. Self confidence can be confused with rudeness or arrogance. To me, Mourinho is a self-assured and confident man who knows what he wants and goes out to achieve it.

There is nothing the coaches you’ve mentioned as good coaches have achieved that Mourinho has not bettered, EVEN WITH A SMALLER BUDGET. With Porto, Mourinho achieved great things in Portugal and in Europe on a shoestring budget - a budget far smaller than any of the teams coached by your ideal coaches. Mourinho won the UEFA Cup and the Champions League in successive years with the club (including successively winning the Portuguese league title) and within a very short time in management he made a name that brought every suitor to his door. None of the coaches you mentioned can match these even with their longer careers. Yet I’m talking of a pre-Chelsea Mourinho, not to talk of what he’s now achieved in less than two seasons at the Bridge.

And talking about coaches developing talents, Mourinho is no slouch. While you’ve mentioned Ashley Cole, Park and Fabregas as talents developed by your ideal coaches, I personally wouldn’t consider Park that great. If he is, he wouldn’t be warming the bench at Man United. For every Ashley Cole you name, I’ll raise a Ferreira for Mourinho; for every Fabregas, I’ll name Deco. And do not forget that the wayward talent of Joe Cole is only today being channeled properly by Mourinho. Chelsea today has the biggest youth ‘factory’ in football and with time, you’ll see the result.

As for that talk about Sunderland, I really don’t know what you expect from Mourinho. Are Sunderland his club? Is he employed by Sunderland to help them out of relegation? Did Mick McCarthy tell you he needed help or are you sure he asked for it? In any case, if you must know, Mourinho is revered by his peers not only for what he’s achieved or the breath of his football knowledge, but precisely because he is always ready to help when approached. If you’ve been listening, you would have heard people like Paul Jewell, Chris Coleman and Steve Bruce – all Premiership managers - credit him with helping them at one time or the other. Now, that the draw for the Champions League has been made and Benfica have drawn Barcelona, you can be sure that Ronald Koeman is going to consult Mourinho on how to undo Barcelona (even though Chelsea lost to the latter). When and if that happens, I’ll let you know. Besides, I’m sure you know how Mourinho helped the Angolan national team through their World Cup campaign. Any surprise they achieved what they achieved even at our expense?

In all, all you’ve regurgitated here are the usual, but now worn-out lines being bandied about by people attacked by the green-eyed monster. The line about Chelsea’s money is so last century and it is indeed laughable to think Chelsea would end up like Blackburn or to consider only Liverpool, Arsenal or Man U as “proper football clubs”. Worse still is to expect that they would be dominating Chelsea anytime soon. You obviously don’t know what is going on at Chelsea; you obviously don’t know how much Chelsea is investing in youth (including Nigerian youths) worldwide. If you know what people like Frank Arnesen are doing right now to prepare Chelsea for the future, you will shiver. So stop dreaming, get real and acknowledge that a new football superpower is in town and there’s nothing you, Arsenal, Man U or Liverpool can do about it.


CHEERS!




Manny,

I haven’t seen much “sexy football” from you guys lately; at least, not with your unfamiliar banishment to near mid-table obscurity. For the first time under Wenger, it looks like you won’t be qualifying for the Champions League. And how very sad would it be if Spurs pips you to fourth place. I’m reserving my worst wicked guffaw for the end of the season, when you miserable Gooners will begin to buy up all hankies in sight to wipe away your tears. I’ll be offering you buckets; so, book now….

For now, I’m in a friendlier mood with you Gooners. You’ve just drawn Juventus for next round of the Champions League and since I have this “little” affection for the Gooners in Europe now that we’re out of it, I’m rooting for you. But you guys need to gird your loins very well, because Vieira and his crowd are not over-pampered Madrid.:smile:



CHEERS!

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Naija4LifeNaija4Life is online

 # 8 | 10.03.2006 13:59

I watched a documentary on the Merchant Prince of Milan not too long ago, I can visualize Roman doing same 10 years from now if he stays on. I really think Chelsea is fresh air to the football world, the team has a good mentality from the boardroom to the top striker. I am no Chelsea fan, but I welcome their contribution. Jose brings drama, which is what the game is all about, not forgetting passion.

Berlusconi had in the second half of last decade remarked that Milan's problem was psychic (Milan then had Baggio, Weah, Boban, and most members of the team that went 58 games unbeaten few years earlier in her books) because he was more successful with few big stars. Chelsea might suffer similar frustration and go the go the way of Parma or Marsielle of '93 if similar short term approach continues. The cup with the "big ears" does not come easy. Barca has only one to show for their 5 straight years (1990-94) dominance of La Liga, same goes for Ajax, Bayern, name them, some like OM were even less fortunate. Chelsea cannot claim to have dominated the English tournament the way these team theirs then, so patience.

As a parting shot, refusing to accept defeat, like Arsenal at Old Trafford in October '04 could spell disaster, as productive energy would be frittered pointing at shadows.

All said, nice entertainment by Chelsea and Jose, we are watching.
 

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