- My Account
- Logout
- Register
- Login
Lack of fighting spirit will be a shock for ghostly Jose
Related Articles
12 January 2009
In his official role, as Inter Milan coach scouting for the forthcoming Champions League tie against Manchester United, Jose Mourinho won't have enjoyed the combination of defensive surefootedness and attacking invention displayed by the hosts.
In his unofficial capacity as presiding ghost at this Chelsea famine, however, the Portuguese will have been transported to a paradise of self-righteous ecstasy. He tried to hide his feelings behind an expression of studied neutrality, but once or twice the camera caught a half-smile toying coquettishly at the corners of his mouth.
There was even an alleged eyewitness, or rather ear witness, account of his triumphalism. A certain Conor texted the BBC website early in the second-half to claim: "I'm in the box beside Mourinho and I just overheard him say that Chelsea are half the side they were under him!"
If anything, that flatters them. Yesterday, Chelsea weren't a quarter, and barely an eighth, of their previous selves. Mourinho's side were seldom pretty on the eye, but they had a cohesion, work ethic and resilience that made them exceedingly difficult to beat and such fearsome self-belief that even after he departed they came within the width of a goalpost of coaching themselves to a Champions League trophy.
Eight months on, these pliant pussycats were unrecognisable from the tigers of Moscow.
At the back, John Terry was a disengaged spectator as all three goals stemmed from poorly or barely defended crosses. In midfield, Frank Lampard's main contribution was a mildly malevolent early kick at Cristiano Ronaldo. And up front Didier Drogba, the planet's most physically imposing striker, could barely rouse himself to indulge the theatrics that induced Mourinho's recent admission that the Ivorian may be something of a diver.
The real worry for Luiz Felipe Scolari isn't that Chelsea yielded such a long and noble unbeaten record away from home. There is never any shame in the fact of defeat at Old Trafford. The concern lies in the manner of it, because Chelsea, such ferocious scrappers when behind under Mourinho, looked beaten the moment comatose defending gifted United the lead in first-half added time.
Having been dozing when Wayne Rooney took the novelty corner that led to that contentiously (but correctly) disallowed goal, their slumbers extended to the retaken corner that fell to an unmarked Nemanja Vidic.
Had Mourinho been in the dugout, you'd have been licking the lips during the interval in anticipation of a rousing second-half fightback. But that was then, and while Scolari responded by sending on Nicolas Anelka for Deco, a semi-detached presence when played out of position once again, the fatal flaw lay less with the system and personnel than lack of spirit.
These Chelsea boys, their confidence depleted by recent failures, seemed so meekly resigned to defeat that gossip about dressing-room disaffection visibly took on flesh. Meanwhile, Sky's cameras returned again and again to that spooky presence in the crowd as he waged war against the temptation to poke his tongue out at Roman Abramovich, an absentee yesterday but doubtless watching on one of his hyper-yachts.
Crisis is an overused word on sports pages but the most one-sided Big Four clash in memory (6-0 would hardly have flattered United) brought with it a sense of finality; the niggling suspicion that, with Liverpool matching Chelsea for frailty and Arsenal an irrelevance, the one true thoroughbred in the field has coasted up to the leaders and is poised to storm clear at the lightest tap from Sir Alex's whip.
For all the giant hint, it is too soon to declare an end to the title race, and equally premature to read the last rites for Scolari's Blues' career. But something ails Chelsea, and in the absence of the sort of spending power Mourinho enjoyed in his early days, there is little evidence that Scolari is the man to sort things out.
If Abramovich decides to allow the Brazilian more time, this may have more to do with his disinclination to blow more millions on paying off another coach than a rare attack of patience.
He's lost a few billion lately, after all, and we all know how unnerving that can be. Then again, the sight of his former employee affecting a more-in-sorrow-than-in-anger pose of effortless superiority will have done nothing to improve the oligarch's mood.
Comments
Top stories in Sport
Top stories in Sport
-
Locked up and banned: The Tube drunk whose vile racist rant was caught on film (video)
-
British housewife facing FIRING SQUAD over Bali drugs smuggling charge was 'neighbour from hell' -
Video: Intruder bursts into Leveson Inquiry to brand Tony Blair a war criminal -
British woman Lindsay Sandiford facing death penalty over Bali drugs haul is mother of violent robber who carried out raids in London -
Baroness Warsi calls in Lords watchdog to clear name over expenses
-
Usain Bolt is quick to tell fans he’ll be lightning fast again -
Invasion of the book snatchers: Brent Council sneaks into Kensal Rise library at 2am to strip it bare -
Video: Is this the World's most OTT marriage proposal? Hilarious film -
Lessons in love: Fifty Shades of Grey ignites desire to write erotica -
Drum'n'bass pioneer Goldie creates ‘rose’ portrait of the Queen
The O2
Check out the cool stuff happening under our tent such as the hottest gigs, comedy, sport, films, clubs, bars, restaurants and much more.
A home to be proud of with Halifax
Download the Halifax's brilliant, free new Home Finder app, and take all the pain out of finding your dream home.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Win a Silverstone track day with Zantac 75
Feel the burn of a different kind - 20 Silverstone motoring experiences to be won
Celebrate with MARTINI®
This weekend toast one royal with another and make your Jubilee sparkle with a MARTINI Royale.
Reader Offers email A fantastic selection of
offers, giveaways and
promotions.
TV Baftas - in pictures
London Fields forever: street style from the hipster park