Chelsea 3-1 Southampton Match Report (Premier League) – Sunday 1st December 2013

Chelsea fought back from the shock of conceding a goal after just 13 seconds to beat Southampton 3-1 at Stamford Bridge on Sunday and move up to second in the Premier League table.

It was never going to be an easy task against a side that had won at Liverpool and taken a deserved point from Old Trafford, and having conceded the early goal many Chelsea fans – and players? – could have been forgiven for thinking this was not going to their day.

The Pensioners have been struggling of late, with a tame loss at Newcastle followed in the league by the controversial 2-2 home draw with West Brom and another insipid performance – and a loss – against Basel in the Champions League (albeit proceeded by a straightforward 3-0 win at West Ham). Whilst it’s far too early to speak of pressure on Jose Mourinho, a home defeat here could have been the cue to start the debate given the short-termist nature of life in the Premier League, not to mention Roman Abramovich’s well known penchant for wanting champagne football and first class results yesterday if not earlier.

The goal that would have set Mourinho’s pulse racing here came as the result of an awful attempted back pass from manager’s favourite Michael Essien, making his first start of the season. The Ghanaian midfielder let in Jay Rodriguez who had no problem beating Petr Cech in the Chelsea goal.

Southampton have a fine blend of velvet and steel, with midfield enforcers Victor Wanyama and Morgan Schneiderlin constantly closing down and breaking up the home attacks. Oscar occasionally managed to wriggle free of their attentions and was Chelsea’s most likely source of a goal but – save for a decent strike from 18 yards that was well saved – Saints keeper Artur Boruc was rarely tested. The Brazilian attacker was subbed off after 42 minutes injured and at that stage it really looked like being Southampton’s day.

At half time The Special One made another change, bringing off Essien and switching to two up front, Demba Ba joining Fernando Torres. The change, and no doubt stern words from the boss at the interval, produced the desired effect and the Blues began to control possession and look to create chances. This urged the crowd on and, as the pressure built, Gary Cahill managed to bundle the ball in after a header from Ba.

At 1-1, with 35 minutes remaining the home side knew this game was there for the taking and captain John Terry scored with a fine header on 62 minutes. Juan Mata, making a rare start, was pulling the strings now and as Southampton tired the home side looked to make sure of the win. Torres and Ba both had chances to seal the win before the latter made sure of the points at the death after good work from Ramires.

On the balance of play it was the right result but Mourinho and his side know they have a lot of work to do if they are contest the title. A trip to Sunderland on Wednesday awaits and another three points will be required.

Chelsea v Southampton Match Preview (Premier League) – 1st December 2013

Chelsea face a stern test at Stamford Bridge on Sunday as Southampton come to town. It will certainly be a sterner test than that offered by Basel on Tuesday night in the Champions League, but the Swiss side still managed to get the better of the Blues by a 1-0 scoreline.

Jose Mourinho’s men put in an impotent display in which they failed to produce even a single shot on target, and many of the players looked as though they were in need of a rest, which is far from ideal given the hectic Christmas schedule is just around the corner.

Given Chelsea looked jaded and devoid of attacking ideas on Tuesday it is a mystery why Mourinho decided to leave Juan Mata on the bench as an unused substitute once again. The Spaniard was Chelsea’s best player last season – and one of the best in the Premier League – and his creative guile could be just what the Blues need at the moment. But the Special One will apparently not be moved, and though Eden Hazard and Oscar possess undoubted talent, Mata could certainly add something to the side.

They will certainly need a spark of creativity on Sunday when they face the meanest defence in the Premier League. Mauricio Pochettino’s men are not one-trick ponies, though, and have a good deal of attacking intent to go with their exceptionally hard-working and well organised midfield and defence. In Adam Lallana, Rickie Lambert, Jay Rodriguez and Gaston Ramirez, the Saints have a group of players capable of mixing it up in attack, playing it on the ground or in the air and this has allowed a combination of directness and patient build up which has undone many a side this season.

Having already beaten Liverpool (who are currently in second place in the Premier League table, ahead of Chelsea on goal difference alone) at Anfield as well as earning a well deserved point at Old Trafford against champions Manchester United, the Saints will be fancying their chances ahead of their trip to the Bridge, especially if they watched how West Brom came so close to victory there before the international break.

On that occasion Mourinho’s men were very lucky to escape with a point after an injury time penalty was awarded to the home side (and converted, much to the relief of Blues fans). Chelsea will need to put in a much more rounded performance on Sunday as Southampton are better organised and more skilful than the Baggies. In some ways a home draw might not be a bad result, and we expect a close encounter as both sides battle for supremacy but ultimately cancel one another out. Given that 11 of the Saints’ 12 league matches this season have produced two goals or fewer, we don’t anticipate a goalfest, and a 0-0 or 1-1 draw could be on the cards.

LCN Verdict: Chelsea 1-1 Southampton

Basel 1-0 Chelsea Match Report (Champions League) – 26th November 2013

The good news – the only good news according to Blues boss Jose Mourinho – is that Chelsea have qualified for the Round of 16 of the Champions League. The bad news is that they were beaten 1-0 in Switzerland by Basel and qualified for the knockout stages as a result of Schalke’s inability to get a win when they visited Steaua Bucharest (with whom they played out a 0-0 bore draw).

Basel’s victory over Chelsea means they have beaten them home and away in Group E, much to Mourinho’s chagrin. And – despite there being just a single goal in it – Basel were worthy victors: they had the majority of the possession and created far more chances than the visitors. In fact Mourinho’s men failed to get a single shot on target, something that will be a major concern to the manager and fans alike.

Mohamed Salah – who scored the first in Basel’s 2-1 victory at Stamford Bridge in September – was the sole scorer on Tuesday. The Egyptian got free of Branislav Ivanovic before latching on to a ball from Fabian Schar and beating Petr Cech. A point against Schalke in their final group match will now be enough to see Basel through to the knockout stages.

To make matters worse for the Blues, Samuel Eto’o was carried off with a groin injury late in the first half, and though he was replaced by Fernando Torres – himself returning from injury – the Spaniard looked devoid of energy and lacked any bite or creativity. Why Mourinho let the free-scoring Romelu Lukaku go to Everton for the season is still anyone’s guess!

Despite losing to Basel twice in the group stage, Chelsea are still top of Group E on nine points, one ahead of their conquerors, and two ahead of Schalke. As such a draw in their final match against Steaua Bucharest will be enough to see Chelsea finish as group winners if Basel fail to beat Schalke, but we would expect the Blues to hammer the Romanians at the Bridge given they won over there by an emphatic 4-0 scoreline.

Prior to that though Chelsea have some key games back in the Premier League, starting with a tough-looking home match against a Southampton side who have confounded pundits with their fantastic form this term. Following that there are two eminently winnable away matches against Sunderland (who the Blues will also meet in the League Cup quarter-final on 17th December) and Stoke, but either of those could be potential banana skins too if Chelsea don’t raise their game from the level of performance they showed in Basel.

Intriguingly – and frustratingly for many Blues fans – Juan Mata was left on the bench as an unused substitute on Tuesday, and given the side lacked spark, invention and guile, surely now is the time to bring the Spaniard back into the fold? But then who are we to make such a suggestion to the Special One?

West Ham 0-3 Chelsea Match Report (Premier League) – 23rd November 2013

Chelsea put in a solid display when they took the short hop across the capital to visit West Ham on Saturday, with Frank Lampard grabbing a brace against his former club on the way to a 3-0 victory.

Jose Mourinho’s men never looked in any serious danger of conceding, as much an indication of the Hammers’ lack of attacking options as Chelsea’s solidity. And after a confident start the Blues got the breakthrough after Oscar was brought down by West Ham keeper Jussi Jaaskelainen in the area after a poor back-pass from Guy Demel. Lampard duly converted from the spot against the club at which he made his name but whose fans never really appreciated his talents (fools!).

Oscar and Eden Hazard, with decent support from Lampard, were pulling the strings in the centre of the park and it was Oscar himself who made it 2-0 after 34 minutes when his drilled strike went into the bottom corner.

Hammers boss Sam Allardyce obviously gave his side something of a rollicking in the dressing room at half time as they emerged after the break showing more fight and desire. But they still fell way short of their visitors in the quality stakes and managed to muster only a single shot on target in the whole match.

The Blues, meanwhile, played with an assurance that will have pleased Mourinho, and after they created a number of goal-scoring opportunities it was left to Lampard – already Chelsea’s all-time highest scorer – to put the icing on the cake in the 82nd minute when an initial shot from Hazard was blocked and fell to Lamps who made no mistake from the edge of the box.

Another West Ham old boy, Demba Ba, who came on for a cameo minutes before his side’s third goal, had a goal disallowed for offside late in the game, but on another day the marginal decision could have gone the way of the Blues. But overall it was a dominant display, and while Chelsea were expected to win they still had to do the business on the pitch, and they did it without needing to overexert themselves.

The win moves the Blues up to third in the table, level on 24 points with Liverpool (who drew 3-3 at Everton) and four points behind leaders Arsenal, who themselves put in a solid performance as they beat in-form Southampton 2-0 at the Emirates.

Chelsea’s next Premier League match will be played on Sunday 1st December when the Saints will visit Stamford Bridge looking to bounce back from that defeat to the Gunners. Prior to that, though, is a Champions League trip to Basel, where Mourinho will hope his side can seal progression to the knockout stage of the competition. If they play like they did on Saturday we think they’ll certainly have a very good chance.

Chelsea 2-2 West Brom Match Report (Premier League) – 9th November 2013

Jose Mourinho maintained his unbeaten Premier League home record when West Brom were the visitors on Saturday, but only just. His side relied on a controversial late, late penalty (which was imperiously converted by Eden Hazard) to earn a point against a spirited and powerful Baggies side who battled bravely and almost got the rewards for a solid and well-organised display.

The Blues went in to the break 1-0 after a close range effort from Samuel Eto’o, but the visitors came out fighting in the second half with goals from Shane Long and Stephane Sessgnon in the 60th and 68th minutes. Although the Baggies’ goals represented two thirds of the total number of their shots on target, their performance was all about containment, which they did exceptionally well, with two lines of four which the home side appeared to find impenetrable at times.

Mourinho was getting increasingly frustrated on the touchline as his players failed to find the inventiveness required to weave their way through West Brom’s rearguard action, and the points looked to be going back to the West Midlands before referee Andre Mariner awarded a penalty in the fourth minute of injury time.

Clearly the Portuguese boss agreed with the decision and his former protégé Steve Clarke took the opposing view, but there was clearly contact between defender Steven Reid and Ramires. Whether that contact was sufficient to send the Brazilian sprawling, or indeed whether it even constituted a foul, is open to debate; but it was given, duly converted, and Chelsea’s blushes were saved.

The Baggies won at the Bridge exactly 30 years before this match (a 1-0 triumph in the League Cup), and they last won in the league there in 1978, but it wasn’t to be this time as the visiting players and manager felt robbed of what would have been a famous victory.

For Chelsea, an improvement is certainly called for if they are to challenge for the title. After just one point earned from their last two matches (after their 2-0 defeat at Newcastle prior to this one) there is the sense that Jose still doesn’t quite know his most effective side. The international break will give the Special One time to take stock and then it’s West Ham away on 23rd November – eminently winnable, but then so too looked Newcastle away and West Brom at home.