
Swathes
of seats were empty in Baku for Chelsea's Europa League final win over
Arsenal - despite the best efforts of both clubs and UEFA to fill the
Olympic Stadium.
After the two Premier League sides sent back as many as 6,000 unsold tickets
between them last week, with the 5,000-mile round-trip deemed unmanageable
to a large volume of English fans, attempts by the governing body to sell
them on to local fans appeared unsuccessful.
The official attendance for the match was 51,370 in a stadium that holds
68,700, which UEFA confirmed as the third-highest of any Europa League
final, according to the Press Association.
And locals unfurled a banner at the end of the game that read: "We are part
of football. Thanks to UEFA for the final."
But Sky Sports reporter Dharmesh Sheth, who was inside the stadium,
described the atmosphere as "strange" and said it "didn't really have the
feeling of a major European final".
Huge gaps were evident around the stadium but there appeared to be
considerably more Arsenal supporters than Chelsea fans, despite the Blues
coming out on top in a 4-1 demolition of their London rivals.
The Gunners expected to have around 4,000 supporters in the stadium, having
sold more than 3,000 tickets and a further 500 or so going to supporters
clubs from across the world, while Chelsea sold around 2,000 of their 6,000
allocation.
Sky Sports reporter Gary Cotterill said: "Baku have been good hosts but the
attempts to flog spare tickets to locals didn't really work and there was a
lack of real passion inside the stadium."
Nevertheless, Maurizio Sarri lifted his first trophy as a manager amid
speculation he is set to join Juventus soon after the game, and Eden Hazard
may have lifted his last with Chelsea, having admitted afterwards: "I think
it's goodbye."
Hazard scored twice in a comprehensive performance from the Blues, after
Olivier Giroud opened the scoring early in the second half and Pedro made it
2-0, with just Alex Iwobi scoring for Arsenal to make it 3-1.