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jimmy
01-09-2008, 01:45 AM
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Chelsea 2, Everton 1
Jan 8 2008

The undeniable fighting spirit that has galvanised Chelsea’s season was prevalent again as Avram Grant’s side earned a slender first-leg advantage in their Carling Cup semi-final against Everton.

Shaun Wright-Phillips was key to the win, scoring the first and putting Joleon Lescott under pressure to force the decisive own goal in added time.

It was a win the Blues had carved out of adversity after Mikel John Obi had been controversially sent off in the 55th minute.

Ayegbeni Yakubu grabbed a 64th-minute equaliser but there was late drama to come as Wright-Phillips outjumped Lescott, who inadvertently nodded in Michael Ballack’s cross.

Mikel was instantly given his marching orders for a one-footed lunge at Everton captain Phil Neville.

Ironically, like Everton goalscorer Yakubu and defender Joseph Yobo, Mikel had been allowed to play in the game by the Nigerian federation before leaving for the African Nations Cup.

Mikel’s dismissal left Chelsea to face the last 35 minutes of a pulsating cup-tie that sprang into life after his departure.

The first half, while dominated by Chelsea, produced few moments of note although it would have got off to a better start had Blues right-back Juliano Belletti managed to get his 20-yard drive on target.

Chelsea, much the better side in the opening skirmishes, were finally rewarded for their endeavours with the opening goal in the 26th minute.

A throw-in on the left flank was brought under control by Florent Malouda before he cleverly found the unmarked Wright-Phillips lurking with intent on the edge of the penalty area.

The England winger has often squandered such opportunities this season but this time he sent a curling shot beyond the outstretched Tim Howard and into the net via the far post.

Three minutes later Chelsea almost made it two when Joe Cole’s run was halted unfairly on the edge of the penalty area and Ballack’s free-kick flew inches wide of the far post with Howard beaten.

Everton had offered little in the opening half but they raised the tempo in the second period even though they could have been two down from the restart.

Wright-Phillips found himself with just Howard to beat on the edge of the penalty area but sent his shot straight at the goalkeeper.

But then came Mikel’s indiscretion, though referee Peter Walton’s decision looked a harsh one after a lunge at Neville.

But it was also the catalyst for the game to turn into a bad-tempered affair, with Walton handing out six yellow cards in the end.

Chelsea could have doubled their advantage again when Wright-Phillips put Claudio Pizarro in the clear but the Peruvian striker could not find a way past Howard.

They paid for it in the 66th minute when Walton awarded Everton a free-kick for handball by Alex.

When James McFadden sent the ball into the box, Chelsea’s defence could only half clear their lines and Yakubu lashed his shot into the roof of the net.

The heated exchanges continued when Lescott took umbrage at a rash challenge by Belletti and yet Walton failed to take any action against Neville when he floored Malouda on the edge of the Everton penalty area.

Everton were unlucky not to grab the lead themselves when a great run and cross from McFadden eluded everyone in the six-yard box.

Chelsea, ravaged by injuries and the loss of Salomon Kalou, Michael Essien and Didier Drogba to the African Nations Cup continued to search for a winner.

The game was marred throughout by blustery conditions and while Chelsea had mastered them better than their opponents, the Blues were thwarted by a determined rearguard action from the Merseysiders.

The last four minutes of added time brought with it a sense of anticipation and yet the Chelsea faithful were rewarded with a goal out of nothing.

There appeared to be little danger when Ballack’s hopeful overhead kick pitted the diminutive Wright-Phillips against England defender Lescott.

But the Chelsea winger outjumped Lescott, and the defender was pressured into heading the ball beyond Howard to secure Chelsea’s well-earned victory.

ChrisGeorge
01-24-2008, 12:55 PM
Hard luck, Everton! :handclap:

Chris

Gnomie
01-24-2008, 01:08 PM
we did not play very good Chris :Smiliz_Kingz_PDT_13

Waterways
01-24-2008, 01:39 PM
Everton were a few players light. In a squad like Everton's that makes a difference. A full strength team would have won last night. Everton were second best to Chelsea without doubt. Everton didn't have much of a mid-field, where Chelsea dominated. All they needed to do was win 1-0. Well it looks like the EUFA Cup trophy then. :-) I wish!

Ged
01-24-2008, 02:11 PM
We started this season chasing 4 things realistically.

Two domestic cups, the Uefa cup and 4th place (probably the most prestigious of all as far as income is concerned tho i'd swap it for 5th or 6th and a cup)

We just weren't good enough last night and petr Cech was, on another day... maybe, I think Moysie was a bit slow converting to 4-4-2 and it would have been Fernandez off first as it caught up with him having not played for a while and he was passing a lot to them and they can keep it well.

We should at least progress past Brann Bergen of Norway - then who knows?

Finishing 4th isn't just about helping our own income for new players but snuffing out the other rivals possible future income. We need to not blow it now and treat every next game as the cup final we never got to.

H_Asbo
01-24-2008, 03:44 PM
Everton were a few players light. In a squad like Everton's that makes a difference. A full strength team would have won last night. Everton were second best to Chelsea without doubt. Everton didn't have much of a mid-field, where Chelsea dominated. All they needed to do was win 1-0. Well it looks like the EUFA Cup trophy then. :-) I wish!

Chelsea were a 'couple' light too, you had a great chance last night, Andriy Shevchenko (leg), John Terry (foot), Florent Malouda (knee), Frank Lampard (thigh) and Carlo Cudicini (rib) and Michael Essien, Salomon Kalou and Didier Drogba, Ballack too I think? If he played I didn't hear him mentioned.

I was dragged to Old Swan by my 2 'Blues Brothers' mates to watch it in the pub and they were gutted.

Ged
01-24-2008, 03:58 PM
Surprisingly, I wasn't, as I thought we'd already thrown it away a fortnight ago. We'd have defended like demons last night if we were sitting on a 1-1 as only Everton can. I agree it was a great chance with so many of that main spine of Terry, Lampard and Drogba missing but what a 2nd string spine they have in Carvalho, Makele and Anelka who must be so made up he swapped Bolton for Wembley.

However, and no excuses here, but as Waterways says, if a 2nd tier team is missing their leading scorer and having to slot Jagielka in Yobo's place and a player who hasn't played for a while into Pienaars place as Neville had to go right back to replace the suspended Hibbert, it meant rushing broken toe victim Osman back earlier than anyone expected, giving him a run out against Wigan to get him a bit sharper.

Maybe the moral is - don't buy African players then!

Waterways
01-24-2008, 04:09 PM
Chelsea were a 'couple' light too,


They have generally superior players and a deeper squad. Them losing a few is very different to Everton losing a few.

Ged
01-24-2008, 04:23 PM
Jags talks about it here...

I like this bit:


“The boys are all disappointed but if you take a step back and look at the bigger picture, you will see we are fourth in the league, we’ve been in the semi-final of a cup and still going along nicely in Europe.


“It’s not been a bad season so far. All the boys wanted to go to Wembley and we will just have to make sure that happens next season. We are getting closer to them and as long as we keep progressing, nights like this will come around and we’ll be cheering at the end.”


No time for moping -the full article is here:


http://icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk/0400evertonfc/0100news/tm_headline=fourth-spot-can-ease-carling-cup-pain-phil-jagielka%26method=full%26objectid=20389772%26sitei d=50061-name_page.html



and another piece here:


I was there too and it WAS a generous applause, no effing and jeffing like we on other teams forums ;)

A travesty that true fans didn't get to Wembley when all those stay away Chelsea fans (2000 tickets returned for a semi they're ahead in and even the final is on 'home' soil) don't deserve any success.

http://icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk/0400evertonfc/0100news/tm_headline=time-for-everton-to-go-fourth-and-conquer%26method=full%26objectid=20389867%26siteid =50061-name_page.html


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