Friday, April 2, 2010

Midweek Rest Gives Blues The Advantage In Heavyweight Bout With Manchester United

All week, Sky Sports have been relentlessly promoting a clash taking place in Manchester this weekend that could well define the two contenders' professional future.

No question about it, David Haye versus John Ruiz at the MEN Arena promises to be an intriguing boxing bout. But come Saturday, there will be only one battle that is really worthy of the interest of the majority of sports fans. And it will take place at Old Trafford.

In the Red corner, weighed down by three consecutive league titles and the 2008 Champions League trophy, is Manchester United.

In the Blue corner, weighed down by insecurity and self-doubt having failed to win the league since 2006 and falling short in that 2008 Champions League final, is Chelsea.

On offer — as long as there is a knockout victor, at least — is a potentially decisive advantage in the ever-shortening race to the Premier League title. And if the preparation for such events is anything to go by, Carlo Ancelotti’s side could be poised to secure a dramatic victory in front of a hostile crowd at the 'Theatre of Dreams'.

Enjoying an uninterrupted week of recuperation and training after demolishing Aston Villa 7-1 at the weekend, the Blues have been able to sit back and cackle — although perhaps slightly reservedly, considering their own shortcomings against Inter Milan — as it slowly went wrong for their title rivals in Europe.

Arsenal, already off the pace in their table after their draw against Birmingham City at the weekend, drew with Barcelona but lost captain Cesc Fabregas for the foreseeable future in the process.

More importantly, United, amidst being given a taste of their own medicine by Bayern Munich, suffered the one crisis they were hoping to avoid above all else — an injury to Wayne Rooney.

The striker, with 34 goals to his name so far this season, has been diagnosed with minor ankle ligament damage and early estimates suggest he will miss between two and four weeks of action.

That means he will definitely be absent for Saturday’s early kick-off against the Blues, and could well sit out a sizeable portion of his side’s other five remaining league games.

Without him United seem to have a clear lack of a goalscoring threat to call upon. Dimitar Berbatov (12 league goals to his name this season, just one more than the number of own goals United have been able to call upon), will lead the line at the weekend, but he will do well to occupy both John Terry and Ricardo Carvalho.

Not that United will admit they are concerned.

“In games Wayne has missed recently, we've scored some goals. Dimitar has come in and done ever so well,” defender Rio Ferdinand said after Tuesday’s defeat to Bayner Munich, echoing the views of a number of his team-mates.

“Rooney is a great player and has been very influential in our season so far but we know we have players who can come in and deliver.

“We don't like losing. You've got to take things on the chin and get on with it. On Saturday we'll see a better, brighter team.”

Chelsea, however, have their own worries over their leading scorer. Drogba might be four goals shy of Rooney’s current record, but he has been equally important to his side throughout the current campaign. Struggling with a number of slight ailments, he is rated as a doubt for the big game. Although, considering how well Ancelotti’s side coped without him last week (and throughout January when he was at the African Cup of Nations), perhaps the 32-year-old’s absence would actually be a blessing in disguise.
Whatever the case, perhaps it would be fitting if these two sides would face off without their most potent weapons. Then we can find out which squad comprises the better team — rather than simply which one is blessed with the most talented talisman.

In that respect, the game is too close to call. United's midfield is unarguably a more well-oiled machine at the minute than Chelsea's, while defensively both sides have been forced into unwanted rotation in recent weeks due to injuries. With their forward lines both weakened, individual battles might take on extra significance.

Florent Malouda, for example, will be salivating at the prospect of taking on Gary Neville down United’s right. The Frenchman will have seen the torturous time his international team-mate Franck Ribery gave the veteran defender at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday, and considering his current form (four goals in the last two games) will be confident of putting on a similar display.

Even if Sir Alex opts for young Rafael instead, the inexperienced Brazilian will have a job dealing with someone who is playing as well as anyone in the Premier League right now.

But on the other hand, Antonio Valencia did not start in midweek and, especially after being tactically very effective in the last game between the two sides, might cause Chelsea's stand-in left-back Yury Zhirkov a number of problems with his strong running and ever-improving crossing ability.

How will midfielder Darren Fletcher cope with the late runs of Frank Lampard. Will John Obi Mikel be able to stop Paul Scholes or Ryan Giggs from playing in their team-mates around the edge of the Chelsea box? On such encounters the game might well be decided.

In front of 75,000-plus supportive fans, United will be buoyed by their record this season which has seen them drop only five points from a possible 48 on home soil (losing to Villa, drawing with Sunderland — although they did also lose to Leeds United in the FA Cup). But Chelsea will take confidence from the 1-0 win they secured when the two sides met at Stamford Bridge in November.

"The fans at Old Trafford are always great in the big games, so they’ll hopefully help us over the line," Darren Fletcher told FourFourTwo magazine recently.

"It does give you a slight advantage but this is top Chelsea side we’re talking about. They’re capable of coming to Old Trafford and winning.”

What is more, following their four previous away trips in Europe this season United have only subsequently managed to win once — following a victory in Turkey against Besiktas with a last-minute 4-3 victory against rivals Manchester City. Every other game they lost — with Villa (at home), Liverpool and Everton the grateful benefactors.

Whatever the case, perhaps it would be fitting if these two sides would face off without their most potent weapons. Then we can find out which squad comprises the better team — rather than simply which one is blessed with the most talented talisman.

In that respect, the game is too close to call. United's midfield is unarguably a more well-oiled machine at the minute than Chelsea's, while defensively both sides have been forced into unwanted rotation in recent weeks due to injuries. With their forward lines both weakened, individual battles might take on extra significance.

Florent Malouda, for example, will be salivating at the prospect of taking on Gary Neville down United’s right. The Frenchman will have seen the torturous time his international team-mate Franck Ribery gave the veteran defender at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday, and considering his current form (four goals in the last two games) will be confident of putting on a similar display.

Even if Sir Alex opts for young Rafael instead, the inexperienced Brazilian will have a job dealing with someone who is playing as well as anyone in the Premier League right now.

But on the other hand, Antonio Valencia did not start in midweek and, especially after being tactically very effective in the last game between the two sides, might cause Chelsea's stand-in left-back Yury Zhirkov a number of problems with his strong running and ever-improving crossing ability.

How will midfielder Darren Fletcher cope with the late runs of Frank Lampard. Will John Obi Mikel be able to stop Paul Scholes or Ryan Giggs from playing in their team-mates around the edge of the Chelsea box? On such encounters the game might well be decided.

In front of 75,000-plus supportive fans, United will be buoyed by their record this season which has seen them drop only five points from a possible 48 on home soil (losing to Villa, drawing with Sunderland — although they did also lose to Leeds United in the FA Cup). But Chelsea will take confidence from the 1-0 win they secured when the two sides met at Stamford Bridge in November.

"The fans at Old Trafford are always great in the big games, so they’ll hopefully help us over the line," Darren Fletcher told FourFourTwo magazine recently.

"It does give you a slight advantage but this is top Chelsea side we’re talking about. They’re capable of coming to Old Trafford and winning.”

What is more, following their four previous away trips in Europe this season United have only subsequently managed to win once — following a victory in Turkey against Besiktas with a last-minute 4-3 victory against rivals Manchester City. Every other game they lost — with Villa (at home), Liverpool and Everton the grateful benefactors.

Ancelotti: A Good Moment To Play United

With Wayne Rooney and Cesc Fabregas dominating the sports news the last two days, it could be easy to believe the injury wheel of fortune has turned in Chelsea's favour. Carlo Ancelotti dismisses the idea.

The loss of Manchester United and Arsenal's most revered players, for however long, has made Chelsea the favourites to take the league championship title according to some observers but as we prepare for a top of the table clash at Old Trafford, no-one at Cobham is taking comfort from the other teams' medical problems.

'Every team has a lot of injuries at the moment,' argues Ancelotti, 'and I would like that Manchester United could use Rooney and Fabregas could play for Arsenal if I could have my injured players ready to play.

'I want to remind everyone that we have out Michael Essien, Ashley Cole, Jose Bosingwa, Branislav Ivanovic and also Ricardo Carvalho, so I don't know if we can claim advantage from injuries.'

Happily one injury problem the Chelsea manager doesn't have is Didier Drogba despite the player missing training on Tuesday and Wednesday. The cause was an accidental kick on the knee by Yury Zhirkov during one of the sessions.

'Drogba trained very well on Thursday and is fit to play,' Ancelotti reports.

'I think he will start against Manchester United. The other strikers did a fantastic job against Aston Villa but Drogba is a very important player for us.'

The back four will remain the same as the Villa game - Paulo Ferreira, Alex, John Terry and Zhirkov. The only player returning to the squad following injury is Juliano Belletti. He is back from Brazil where he underwent treatment on a knee problem and is fully recovered.

Ancelotti has expressed doubt over Michael Essien playing again for Chelsea this season. The midfielder is on the way back from knee surgery.

John Terry Urges Chelsea To Face Manchester United With No Fear


John Terry says his Chelsea side must approach Saturday's meeting with Manchester United at Old Trafford with no fear and use the momentum gained in recent weeks to take a potentially crucial lead in the title race.

Chelsea travel to Manchester this weekend one point behind the leaders United with six games to play. Sir Alex Ferguson's side will be without Wayne Rooney, but Carlo Ancelotti today suggested that Didier Drogba could return to the Chelsea line-up after injury.

"There is so much on the game on Saturday and the way we have played the last couple of games, we have to take that momentum and that same gameplan into this match," said Terry. "We have to approach the game with no fear and we must go into it playing our own game. It is a tough place to go and the way we got beaten there and the way we played there last year was not good enough."

The Chelsea captain said that the experience of last season's visit to Old Trafford – when they were comprehensively beaten 3-0 – would be a motivation. "We go there not only with confidence from the last few games but still hurting from that defeat, and that will spur us on," he said.

Grin It To Win Against Drogba


Florent Malouda has told Manchester United how to halt Didier Drogba: Make him laugh.

The Blues midfielder revealed the trick was the best way to put off his Chelsea pal in training.

Malouda said: "I know him very well and can give him a lot of trouble. You need to be clever with him. It's best to destabilise him.

"Sometimes I make him laugh so he loses focus. That's the best way to defend against him."

But Malouda - whose team goes to Old Trafford on Saturday in a table-top clash - warned that Drogba had a hunger to excel.

He said: "People dream about things - Didier dreams about goals and scores the goals he dreams about."

Carlo Ancelotti Doesn't Expect Manchester United To Struggle Without Injured Wayne Rooney


Carlo Ancelotti has warned his Chelsea players not to expect an easy ride against Manchester United on Saturday, even if the Red Devils are without star striker Wayne Rooney.

The 24-year-old limped off against Bayern Munich in the Champions League in midweek, and is expected to be out for up to a month with strained ankle ligaments.

While he will miss Saturday's game, Ancelotti expects United to respond positively to the loss of their leading scorer.

"We know how Rooney is important for this team, he is a fantastic player, he is having a fantastic season and this injury could be an advantage for us," Ancelotti acknowledged in his press conference ahead of the game.

"But maybe sometimes a team can give more than 100 per cent when a very important player is out, and so we have to pay attention to this — because I think Manchester United has the experience and the players to support the absence of Wayne Rooney."

However, Ancelotti revealed that Chelsea will be able to call on the services of their top scorer, Didier Drogba, who will be fit to start after missing training earlier in the week with a knee injury.

Eriksson Checks On His Elephants


Newly appointed Ivory Coast coach Sven Goran Eriksson was at Cobham on Thursday, but not only to meet Didier Drogba and Salomon Kalou.

The Swede, England's manager between 2001 and 2006 also caught up with Carlo Ancelotti who he knew well from his time in Italy, and met Frank Lampard, Ashley Cole, John Terry and Joe Cole, who all wore the three lions under his guidance.

'Carlo Ancelotti, I know very well,' said the 62-year-old. 'He is a good friend, we were opponents as coaches in Italy but before that he was my captain in Roma for three years, so I know him very well, he is a very nice man.

'It is nice to see this training facility, it is absolutely fantastic, I was here before at Cobham when there were cabins, but now it is like a five-star hotel,' he added.

Of course the main reason for Eriksson's visit was to meet his new captain, just days after being appointed to lead Ivory Coast at this summer's World Cup in South Africa.

'My first impressions are excellent,' he confirmed. 'Both Chelsea players seem to be very good human beings, which is important, and the quality they have, Kalou is very talented and Drogba is on the top, top, top level in the world today and has been so for years.

'For sure it is a very talented football team, with a lot of good football players. What I want to do is go as far as possible in the tournament and I will travel around to see more or less all of the players and find out what we need, to have their opinions about things. Then around the 20th, 22nd May, we come together to work, it is a very short period together.'

With experience of two such tournaments already, he knows he has a tough task in guiding Les Elephants through the notorious 'Group of Death', against the two sides that eliminated him as England manager.

'Well, of course, we are in the most difficult group of all,' he acknowledged, 'but I think it is difficult even for Brazil and Portugal. Also everybody who talks about the group forgets about North Korea, who are very similar to South Korea, and have they have the same style, they can run all day that is for sure.'

It will certainly be interesting to see how Eriksson gets on in South Africa, but having Drogba and Kalou on board will do him no harm at all.

Marcel Desailly Criticises Chelsea Before Manchester United Trip


Marcel Desailly has offered a scathing assessment of Chelsea's chances of regaining the Premier League title this season before Saturday's trip to Manchester United, with the club's former centre-half claiming "five players have to leave the club" in the summer.

The former France star spent six years at Stamford Bridge, joining them after winning the 1998 World Cup. He made 222 league appearances, before leaving in 2004, a year before José Mourinho secured the club's first league title in 50 years. He pinpointed United's consistency in midfield as potentially crucial as Sir Alex Ferguson's side pursue a fourth consecutive league championship success, with Chelsea still suffering from the loss of Michael Essien's dynamism in the centre.

"It looks like the [Chelsea] midfield have not really delivered protection to the defence," Desailly said. "The defensive block have had some problems this year. That is why they are not four, five or six points ahead because they have lost many points on free-kicks and just generally losing their concentration. Previously the midfield was absolutely amazing.

"Even if they weren't winning the Premier League, it was holding the team. The midfield was really playing well. Now Joe Cole is not expressing himself as he wanted, [Michael] Ballack has disappeared the last two months, [Jon Obi] Mikel is playing his best but the team misses Essien. So this is why the defence is suffering."

With those failings in mind, Desailly predicted a summer of change in south-west London. "First they need to get rid of four or five guys who are not Chelsea players," he told the Premier League's website. "I think five players have to leave the club. After that it depends on the finances. People are talking about [the Bayern Munich winger Franck] Ribéry but Ribéry is a problem because they have [Florent] Malouda on the left. I'm not sure if they will spend again.

"When you look at the two teams, United have a small advantage on the consistency they are showing in the midfield. Absolutely amazing. Players like [Darren] Fletcher, Nani coming back at a high level and [Antonio] Valencia have made a contribution. Let's not even talk about [Ryan] Giggs. Right the way back to [Edwin] van der Sar, it's a real team, a group. That's why I believe that Manchester United today have more energy than Chelsea."

Di Maria Dismisses Move To England


Benfica ace Angel Di Maria has played down talk of a possible move to England.

Di Maria is one of the most sought-after talents in Europe after catching the eye for club and country over the last year.

Manchester United, Manchester City and Chelsea have all been linked with the flying winger along with a host of other top European clubs.

"I am not interested in the rumours - in England they look through everything with a magnifying glass but I don't have to worry about it," said Di Maria.

"At the moment I am only interested in Benfica and I think we can win anywhere in Europe."