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Chelsea Cruise In Capital (Sky Sports)
Chelsea 2 Marseille 0
It
was a performance that was more perfunctory than perfect but
Carlo Ancelotti will be pleased enough after his
Chelsea side ended a tough seven days on a high as they beat Marseille 2-0 at
Stamford Bridge.
Didier Deschamps' return to West London got off to
a miserable start when John Terry
got in front of his man to flick home a corner in just the seventh minute,
before Nicolas Anelka
made light of any lingering nerves as he rolled in the most impudent of
penalties after Stephane Mbia was adjudged to have handled Michael Essien's
drilled cross.
Marseille
rallied after the interval in causing the odd moment of consternation for
the home side, but in truth never looked likely to get back into a contest
that Chelsea
negotiated with a workmanlike professionalism.
Indeed it was only the width of the posts that prevented Chelsea from
extending their advantage as Alex rasped a searing free-kick against the
upright before Essien did likewise twice with stunning efforts from range.
Ancelotti's
side are now ahead of Spartak Moscow on goal difference after the Russians
defeated MSK Zilina 3-0, while Marseille now face a real struggle to qualify
for the knockout stage of the competition.
Big win
Chelsea went into their Group F game on the back of two successive defeats
to Newcastle in the Carling Cup and Manchester City in the Premier League.
Deschamps had called for his side to show the same physical prowess and
counter-attacking guile that City used to overcome the Blues at Eastlands on
Saturday.
But his plan went awry when Chelsea took the lead in the seventh minute with
their first real attack of the game.
Florent Malouda's shot was deflected for a corner and when Gael Kakuta aimed
it at the near post, Terry stole in to flick the ball home.
It was a dream start for the English champions and it could have been better
in the 13th minute had Malouda been able to prevent his 10-yard shot from
going just over the Marseille crossbar.
Anelka, who was roundly booed by Marseille fans from the kick-off, brought a
fine save from Steve Mandanda moments later after Kakuta's ball had sent him
racing in on goal.
Chelsea's night got even better in the 27th minute when Mbia was adjudged to
have handled Essien's attempted cross.
The Marseille defender was booked for the misdemeanour and Anelka rubbed
salt into their wounds by tucking away the resultant spot-kick with ease.
Anelka was a constant thorn in the side of Marseille and he was just a yard
away from grabbing his second in the 42nd minute when he tried his luck from
20 yards.
Marseille had barely troubled Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech in the opening
period but the French champions picked up the pace after the restart.
Untroubled
Andre-Pierre Gignac, who had been largely kept well marshalled by Terry and
Alex, sent an overhead kick straight at Cech.
In the 57th minute, Brandao tested Cech's readiness with a 25-yard effort
that the Czech Republic international did well to hold on to.
Marseille replaced Gignac and Benoit Cheyrou with Andre Ayew and Mathieu
Valbuena moments later as they looked for a way back into the contest.
Chelsea reacted to Marseille's changes swiftly with Ancelotti opting to
replace Kakuta with Ramires on the hour.
Ashley Cole and Terry then combined to keep out a fierce shot from
Souleymane Diawara.
Chelsea went close to adding a third in the 67th minute but a fantastic
35-yard free-kick from Alex hit the inside of the post with Marseille
goalkeeper Mandanda well beaten.
Essien struck the right-hand upright in the 75th minute when Chelsea
opened-up Marseille with another move of fluid simplicity.
Malouda fed Ramires in the inside-left channel and the Brazilian calmly laid
the ball into the path of the onrushing Essien. But the man nicknamed 'the
Train' sent his thunderous right-foot shot against the post.
Missed chances
Chelsea removed Yuri Zhirkov in favour of Daniel Sturridge and the youngster
was later joined by teenager Josh McEachran, who replaced John Obi Mikel.
Moments later Sturridge squandered a simple chance to score when Anelka and
Cole combined superbly down the left flank to provide him with the
opportunity.
Sturridge met Cole's cross on the edge of the six-yard box but somehow
managed to turn the ball beyond the far post.
In the 89th minute Essien was narrowly wide when Cole picked him out on the
edge of the penalty area.
The Ghanaian looked to have done everything right but his left-foot effort
spun inches beyond Mandanda's right-hand post.
It was the last chance of a game Chelsea had bossed throughout to leave them
top of the group with a trip to Moscow looming in a fortnight.
Chelsea |
Team Statistics |
Marseille |
2 |
Goals |
0 |
2 |
1st Half Goals |
0 |
4 |
Shots on Target |
3 |
9 |
Shots off Target |
13 |
2 |
Blocked Shots |
5 |
2 |
Corners |
2 |
14 |
Fouls |
14 |
8 |
Offsides |
1 |
1 |
Yellow Cards |
2 |
0 |
Red Cards |
0 |
81.6 |
Passing Success |
82.8 |
16 |
Tackles |
24 |
62.5 |
Tackles Success |
66.7 |
47.2 |
Possession |
52.8 |
40.9 |
Territorial Advantage |
59.1 |
Click Here For Official Team Sheet
Chelsea
Cech, Ivanovic,
Terry, Alex, Cole, Essien, Mikel
(McEachran 88), Zhirkov (Sturridge 73), Kakuta (Ramires 61), Anelka, Malouda
Subs Not Used
Turnbull, Ferreira, Van Aanholt, Bruma
Booked
Mikel
Goals
Terry 7, Anelka 28 (pen)
Marseille
Mandanda, Kabore, Diawara,
M'bia Etoundi, Heinze, Gonzalez, Cisse, Cheyrou (Ayew 59), Remy, Gignac
(Valbuena 59), Brandao
Subs Not Used Andrade,
Azpilicueta, Taiwo, Hilton, Abriel
Booked
M'bia,
Heinze
Goals
Attendance
Referee
Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium)