toptop
A
lacklustre display from UEFA Champions League holders Chelsea saw them lose 2-1
to Shakhtar Donetsk on Tuesday.
Early goals in either half from Alex Teixeira and Fernandinho settled the
contest in favour of the Ukrainian hosts, with Roberto Di Matteo's Blues barely
getting out of the blocks and only managing a late reply from Oscar.
There were just three minutes on the clock when Chelsea failed to deal with a
long throw and Teixeira took full advantage to calmly slot the ball past Petr
Cech.
Shakhtar, who have taken maximum points from their opening 12 fixtures in
domestic competition this season, looked like a side full of confidence and
could have extended their lead before the interval were it not for the smart
reflexes of Cech.
Chelsea, who saw Frank Lampard forced off with an injury during the first half,
failed to improve after the break and fell two behind on 52 minutes.
Eden Hazard lost possession on halfway, allowing Adriano to surge clear and play
in Fernandinho, who drilled across Cech and into the bottom corner.
Oscar pulled one back for the Blues late on, as he converted a Branislav
Ivanovic cross, but it was all too little, too late.
Shock
Chelsea were spared dropping out of the qualification places by Juventus' shock
draw at Nordsjaelland, but they will need to do much better at Stamford Bridge
in two weeks to avoid doing so.
John Terry's first appearance since accepting his racism ban got off to the
worst possible start as he unwittingly set up Shakhtar's opener inside three
minutes.
But he was arguably the least culpable Chelsea player on a night which cost the
Premier League leaders dearly and a risible performance from Fernando Torres
scuppered their hopes of a comeback.
The defeat was their first since their UEFA Super Cup thrashing by Atletico
Madrid and the performance was almost as alarming at times as they were carved
open by an outstanding Shakhtar side.
The build-up to the game was predictably dominated by Terry's return, the timing
of which was quite extraordinary.
It not only coincided with his four-match domestic ban for racially abusing
Anton Ferdinand, but came a year to the day since the offence took place and
also saw him take part in an initiative in which he wore a 'Unite Against
Racism' armband.
The race row was the lowest point of Terry's already-chequered career, making
Tuesday's game arguably the biggest test yet of his legendary ability to thrive
under pressure.
It was also against opponents on a quite extraordinary run, Shakhtar having not
lost for exactly 11 months while winning their last 21 league games.
Nightmare
And it was a nightmare start for the defender as the home side scored from their
first attack after two minutes and 53 seconds, Luiz Adriano's shot hitting
Terry's elbow and falling perfectly for Teixeira to slot past a helpless Cech.
In what was a fiercely-contested game in a fizzing atmosphere, Oscar tried to
respond with a tame low drive before Willian almost lived up to his manager's
promise to make Chelsea pay for not signing him by drilling wide.
That was in the 15th minute and it immediately got worse for the visitors when
Lampard went down injured, forcing an early end to his record 100th European
appearance for the club and the introduction of Hazard.
Ashley Cole was then needlessly booked for dissent as the relentless action
surged from end to end, Torres wasting a great chance either to score or set up
a team-mate before Terry twice produced vital blocks to prevent Shakhtar adding
to their lead.
His early misfortune aside, Terry was having a stellar game, repeatedly reading
attacks.
But he could not stop Willian brilliantly setting up Henrik Mkhitaryan, Cole
doing enough to force Shakhtar's goal machine to shoot too close to Cech.
That sparked a flurry of chaotic corners, which Chelsea defended frantically and
saw Cech produce a wonder-save to deny Tomas Hubschman from point-blank range
after Oscar inadvertently set up the midfielder.
Torres' weak hooked volley from Ivanovic's cross summed up a half in which he
proved a real liability, a theme that continued after the restart.
Gaffe
Chelsea were otherwise looking capable of equalising, Juan Mata firing over
after good work from Hazard, who immediately produced a horrendous gaffe to gift
Shakhtar their second goal in the 52nd minute.
He was pickpocketed in the centre-circle by Fernandinho, who fed Adriano and
both raced goalwards for the former to slot past Cech.
Hazard tried to make amends with a low drive tipped wide by Andriy Pyatov, who
then palmed a Ramires blockbuster behind for a corner.
Shakhtar weathered the storm, although Olexandr Kucher was booked for cynically
bringing down Hazard and John Obi Mikel hooked over a chance for his first ever
Chelsea goal.
Torres was finally withdrawn for Daniel Sturridge with 20 minutes remaining and
Mkhitaryan twice went close to making it 3-0.
Hazard scuffed a great chance to make him rue the miss, Hubschman almost bundled
home a third for Shakhtar and Hazard was thwarted one-on-one with Pyatov.
David Luiz and Hubschman were both booked in the closing stages, which saw Oscar
set up a tense finish two minutes from time when he swept home Ivanovic's cross.
Shakhtar Donetsk
Pyatov, Srna, Kucher, Rakitskiy, Rat, Hubschman, Fernandinho, Teixeira
Ilsinho 82), Mkhitaryan, Willan (Douglas
Costa 88), Adriano,
Subs Not Used
Stepanenko, Kanibolotskiy, Gal, Kryvtsov, Eduardo
Booked
Kucher, Hubschman
Goals
Teixeira 3, Fernandinho 52
Chelsea
Cech,
Ivanovic, Terry, Luiz, Cole, Oscar, Ramires, Mikel, Lampard (Hazard 17),
Mata, Torres (Sturridge 70)
Subs Not Used
Turnbull, Azpilicueta, Romeu, Cahill, Bertrand
Booked
Cole, Luiz
Goals
Oscar 88
Attendance
50,000
Referee
D. Skomina (SVN)