Chelsea

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

What is Financial Fair Play and how will Uefa enforce it ?

Financial Fair Play (FFP) is Michel Platini’s, Uefa presidents design to crack down on debt-laden clubs and to level the playing field for the 660 top division clubs scattered across 53 European countries.
Principal objectives
• introduce more discipline and rationality in club football finances;
• decrease pressure on salaries and transfer fees and limit inflationary effect;
• encourage clubs to compete with(in) their revenues;
 encourage long-term investments in the youth sector and infrastructure;
 protect the long-term viability of European club football;
 ensure clubs settle their liabilities on a timely basis.

Clubs will be able to record maximum losses of €45 million (£39.5m) in total over the following three years. That can be subsidised by an owner but only if they invest the money permanently in return for shares, not by lending it as Roman Abramovich did when he first took control of Chelsea. If owners are unable to subsidise debts, the maximum loss is €5m (£4.4m). From 2014 to 2017, the overall permitted loss will fall to €30m (£26.3m) for each three-year block monitored by Uefa. Information collected from the 2011-12 and 2012-13 accounts, action can be taken for the first time during the 2013-14 seasons with the first possible exclusions from Uefa competition taking place in 2014-15.
Key factors
* Three years to ‘break even’
* Clubs will be able to record maximum losses of £39.5m before 2014
* From 2014 to 2017, the overall permitted loss will fall to £26.3m
* Owners cannot bail clubs out of debt with personal wealth
* Clubs could face exclusion from Uefa competitions in 2014-15
* Newly-created Club Financial Control Panel to ensure rules are abided by

The newly created Club Financial Control Panel is a team of eight independent experts chaired by former Belgium Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene. They are given the task of ensuring the rules are correctly applied. But how rigidly are these rules to be applied. If massive interest payments continue to push clubs into losses, clubs sign players with money they have not earned will Uefa lay down the law?  To have this momentum and then not enforce it would be the end of Platini and the end of Uefa versus the clubs.
Expenditure such as stadium infrastructure, youth development, community development  could be excluded.
Chelsea, for instance, estimate that around £10m a year is spent on a youth set-up, while another £9m can be dropped off for depreciation on tangible fixed assets such as spectator facilities at Stamford Bridge or training facilities at Cobham. FFP rules would allow Chelsea to reduce their expenses by £19m, which is a considerable portion of the £70.9m loss revealed on their last annual balance sheet.
Transfer fee do not automatically show up as an annual expense because clubs tend to amortise player acquisition costs over the length of their contracts. Fernando Torres’ £50m signature to Chelsea would not show up as one lump sum in Chelsea’s 2010-11 accounts  instead it would be an annual amortisation of £9m (£50m fee divided by the 5.5 years of his contract). Add in an estimated salary of £8m and the total cost of Torres. By FFP rules that is £17m per year.
If a club misses the target, it can still be granted a licence if it meets two criteria – the trend of losses is improving; and the over spend is caused by the wages of players that were contracted before June 2010(for reporting period up to 2012). Uefa have excluded 27 clubs from European competition over the last five years as they did not fulfil the club licensing criteria. Chelsea has over spent and has used cash injections from Roman to balance the books.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Chelsea who will be squad /benched/ loaned?

Confirmed OutJose Bosingwa (released)
Didier Drogba (released)
Salomon Kalou (released)

Current squad:
16. Raul Meireles
17.
24. Gary Cahill
26.
John Terry
27. Sam Hutchinson
33.
34. Ryan Bertrand
38.
Patrick van Aanholt
39.
40. Henrique
Hilario
44. Gael Kakuta

Eden Hazard - Just joined has no squad number yet
Marko Marin - Just joined has no squad number yet
Kevin De Bruyne - been on loan, future not confirmed
Yossin Bebayoun - been on loan, future not confirmed
Thibat Courtois confirmed as another season loan

Youth player to rise to the top?
Matej Delac - not quite ready for first team
Sam Walker - yet to be confirmed
Billy Clifford -not quite ready for first team
Tomas Kalas -not quite ready for first team
Aziz Deen-Conteh -not quite ready for first team
Daniel Pappoe -not quite ready for first team
Rohan Ince -not quite ready for first team
Nathaniel Chalobah -not quite ready for first team
Ben Gordon not quite ready for first team
George Saville not quite ready for first team
Conor Clifford not quite ready for first team
Lucas Piazon - Such a gifted player hopefully will be promoted to 1st team and go on to be a hero.
Milan Lalkovic -not quite ready for first team
Ulises Davila -not quite ready for first team
Adam Phillip not quite ready for first team
Patrick Bamford not quite ready for first team

Friday, May 25, 2012

Who's the boss? Roberto Di Matteo

Roberto Di Matteo tees off  during the Pro-Am round ahead of the BMW PGA Championship on the West Course at Wentworth.

Players' chants of "we want him to stay" on sundays tour bus after the club's first European Cup victory, which roman himself was sat on.

Former Chelsea striker Gianfranco Zola believes Italian compatriot Roberto Di Matteo is likely to remain in charge of the Blues next season.

Chelsea fans want him to stay and be given the chance


Perhaps the interim Chelsea manager was dropping a subliminal message to Blues owner Roman Abramovich as he lined up his shot in front of a massive 'Boss' poster.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Battersea Power Station could be turned into £1bn 60,000-seat stadium.


Chelsea unveiling plans to move to a new stadium at Battersea Power Station.
After years of deliberation, the club is ready to leave their home since 1905 for a new 60,000 capacity on the south bank of the Thames.
The £1.2billion project, which would include the largest single-tier seated stand in Europe and a shopping development, has a number of significant obstacles to overcome.
But as Roberto Di Matteo’s side aim for a fourth FA Cup triumph in six seasons, the announcement was a clear sign of Roman Abramovich’s determination to leave a legacy off the pitch as well as on it.
While the sale of Stamford Bridge – which would have to be agreed by Chelsea Pitch Owners, who own the freehold and rejected attempts to buy it back last year – would raise around £600million, that would still leave a similar shortfall.
Chelsea are ready to pledge up to £200m to help build a new Northern Line tube station to transport extra fans – the new stadium would hold a third more than Stamford Bridge’s 44,000 capacity.
That comes in addition to the £500m cost of the site, £150m to restore the facade of the iconic chimneys, towers and Grade Two-listed turbine hall of the power station, built in the 1930s but disused since 1983.
Chelsea, likely to borrow rather than ask Abramovich to stump up further after he has already spent more than £1bn since his takeover, insist they are still interested in Earl’s Court and have not decided, definitively, to leave the Bridge.
But going public on the concept is a clear sign of their intentions, with the new stadium potentially being completed by 2016 if planning hurdles can be cleared.
Chelsea said: “Our initial plans include a 15,000-all-seated one-tier stand behind the south goal, likely to be the biggest one-tier stand in football.
“Also as suggested by many fans, the stadium proposed is rectangular in shape with four separate stands.”

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

FA cups could all belong to Chelsea 2012

 Chelsea won the FA Cup at Wembley. Didier Drogba scored the decisive goal and Ashley Cole set an individual record of seven FA Cup winner's medals.
The FA Youth Cup
Chelsea: Blckman, Kane, Nkumu (Loftus-Cheek), Davey, Gordon (Nditi), Affane (Kiwomya), Swift, Chabolah, Piazon, Baker, Feruz.

Substitutes not used: Beeney, Nortey.

26/05/2012 FA Womens Cup Birmingham City LFC v Chelsea LFC
 yet to be played

 
 

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Ten-man went to mow down Barca !

     WHAT a night. What a display of defiance from Chelsea after
the dismissal of John Terry for kneeing Alexis Sánchez. To the
delight of their fans up in the Gods, 10 men went to mow a
meadow, and thrillingly, amazingly, they cut mighty Barcelona,
the European champions, the team of Lionel Messi, Xavi and Andres
Iniesta down to size. This really was a night for a Chelsea
knees-up.
     Terry's expulsion after 37 minutes for a cynical attempt to
incapacitate Barcelona's Chilean striker should have signalled
the end for Chelsea's hopes. They were trailing to Sergio
Busquets' strike. They were already manning the barricades and
now their captain was gone. In the 2008 Moscow final, Terry lost
his footing; here he lost his marbles. He let his team down.
     Gary Cahill had already limped off. To lose one centre half
could be considered a misfortune, to lose two smacked of
carelessness. Depleted in numbers, Chelsea were never down in
spirit. Even when Iniesta made it 2-0, Chelsea responded. RamiresP
was immense, defending and attacking relentlessly, even scoring
S
to make it 2-1 on the cusp of half-time, changing the mood,
B
giving Chelsea hope, even making light of a booking that
C
precludes his presence in the Munich final on May 19.
     The Brazilian's contribution echoed that of Roy Keane in
1
Turin in 1999 or Michael Ballack in Seoul in 2002; putting
personal heartache to one side to help drive their team to the
final. Matching Ramires's excellence was Petr Cech, who made some
vital saves. Didier Drogba was also terrific, working selflessly
for the cause. Fernando Torres, so derided by so many, came on
and scored in the last minute.
     Roberto Di Matteo has brought calm to the dressing-room, an
easily assimilated tactical game-plan and defends his players.
His credentials for the full-time post are strengthening by the
game. If the desire in the Chelsea corridors of power is for a
bigger name, well just give Di Matteo a while longer. His profile
grows and grows.
     Even if Roman Abramovich looks elsewhere, and sadly the
Russian was absent on Tuesday night last week, Di Matteo will
always have Barcelona. Oh, and Lisbon and possibly Munich. Heaven
knows who he will pick for the showdown: also joining Terry andRamires in the banned stand are Branislav Ivanovic and Raul
Meireles.
     Whatever happens to Di Matteo, he will always have the
memory of outwitting Pep Guardiola, of Lionel Messi failing to
score, of his players rallying to the cause against one of the
most feted sides in history and of the blue flag flying over the
Nou Camp. He can also take pride in the way he reorganised his
side, giving strength in adversity. Cahill's injury brought Jose
Bosingwa on at right back with Ivanovic moving to partner Terry.
Another centre-half departed, Gerard Piqué sustaining concussion
in a clash with keeper Victor Valdes.
     The pressure on Chelsea intensified. Frank Lampard was
booked. Messi had a shot saved. Iniesta's follow-up was blocked
by Terry. Then Cesc Fabregas hit the side-netting. Danger rose
from every quarter. Even Javier Mascherano let fly, narrowly
over. Then came 10 mad minutes as the half closed, Barcelona
first digging up a jewel from the wreckage of a corner. Dani
Alves slipped the ball left to Isaac Cuenca, who crossed low and
accurately to Busquets. The finish was neat, left-footed from 10
yards and the Nou Camp erupted.
     A goal down on the night, Chelsea were soon a man down. AsTerry kneed Sánchez in the back, as the Chilean fell to earth,
the assistant referee signalled the offence to Cuneyt Cakir, the
excellent Turkish referee, who reached for the red card.
     As Terry made the walk of woe, Chelsea's remodelled
back-four was Ramires-Ivanovic-Bosingwa-Ashley Cole and it was
soon breached. Messi was the catalyst, gliding forward, sliding
the ball to Iniesta, who finished unerringly. This looked Mission
Impossible. Yet Chelsea stood firm, breaking out and scoring a
fine goal just before the break. Lampard made it, releasing
Ramires, who galloped down the inside-right channel, showing all
that famous stamina and then finishing like the Brazilian he is,
the ball chipped elegantly over Valdes.
     After the break, Barcelona could not have set up camp more
in Chelsea's half if they had pitched a row of tents across the
18-yard line. Within three minutes, they should have regained the
initiative. Drogba challenged Fabregas, who went down. Cakir
pointed to the spot and Messi stepped up. Surely he would inflict
pain on the visitors. To the disbelief of all, the Argentine
drove the ball against the bar.
     Frustration seeped into Barcelona's veins. Messi pushed
Lampard and then pulled him back. Chelsea fans began tauntingP
locals with chants of "Jose Mourinho". Cech continued his
S
masterclass of goalkeeping, tipping a Messi shot on to the post
B
and pushing away a Mascherano strike.
C
     And then Torres ran free, rounding Valdes and scoring. What
a night.

Josh McEachran Chelsea future talent Part 7

Joshua Mark "Josh" McEachran (born 1 March 1993 in Oxford, England) is an English footballer who plays as a midfielder for Premier League club Swansea City, on loan from Chelsea. He is a left-footed central creative midfield player.
McEachran was born in Oxford to Scottish parents.He grew up in the village of Kirtlington with his sister Danielle and younger brothers Zach, Will and George. He began playing football for Garden City F.C. in the Oxford Mail Boys League, where he was spotted by a Chelsea scout.He then joined the Blues as an academy player at the age of 8 and rose through the ranks while juggling his academic responsibilities at Marlborough School in Woodstock.
McEachran made his competitive first team debut for Chelsea against MŠK Žilina on 15 September 2010 as a substitute.He became the first player to be born after the UEFA Champions League started on 25 November 1992 to take part in the competition. McEachran made his home debut in a League Cup tie against Newcastle United, where he again came on as a substitute. He made his Premier League debut on 25 September in a 1–0 defeat to Manchester City. On 23 November 2010 manager Carlo Ancelotti announced that McEachran would make his first start against MŠK Žilina, which he did. He followed this up by playing the entire game away to Marseille in a UEFA Champions League group game.
McEachran started for Chelsea against Newcastle at Stamford Bridge on 15 May 2011, a 2–2 draw at home to Newcastle and in total, he made nine starts and 13 sub appearances in campaign with then manager Carlo Ancelotti preferring to use him in a deep midfield role. His inclusion in the line-up was viewed by pundits as a suggestion that the Chelsea administration are keen to retain McEachran and that they recognise the importance of younger players in an otherwise ageing team. He then came off the bench to make his ninth league appearance away to Everton F.C. in the final game of the 2010-11 Premier League season. In his debut season in the Chelsea first team, McEachran was awarded the Chelsea Young Player of The Year award on 19 May 2011.
On 15 July 2011, he signed a new five-year deal, Fifteen days later, he scored his first Chelsea senior team goal against Aston Villa with a first minute tap-in to open the scoring. Chelsea went on to win the game 2–0 after a 58th minute Fernando Torres roundup and won the Barclays Asia Trophy. On 12 August 2011, Chelsea announced he would wear the number 20 shirt, last worn by Deco, for the 2011/12 season. He requested a loan transfer to Wigan Athletic but Chelsea turned down his request, with Chelsea citing him in their first team plans. He started the Carling Cup match against Fulham which Chelsea won 4–3 on penalties. Josh McEachran made his first Premier League appearance of the season as he came on as a 82 minute substitute in Chelsea's 4–1 win over Swansea.  Josh McEachran started the Carling Cup match against Everton and won a penalty for Chelsea, the game ended a 2–1 win for Chelsea.
On 17 January 2012, McEachran completed a loan move to Swansea City. On finalising the deal he told Blues News that he was looking forward to working under former Chelsea reserves coach and Swansea manager Brendan Rodgers. 'I want to get game time to be honest, and it will be good playing for Brendan. Swansea play really good football and I'm looking forward to it. McEachran was given the number 17 jersey. McEachran made his debut for Swansea City against Sunderland coming off the bench in the 66th minute for Gylfi Sigurdsson, the match ended 2–0 loss for Swansea City.  McEachran made his first start for Swansea in a FA cup match against Bolton Wandarers which ended in a 1–2 defeat.

Ryan Bertrand Chelsea future talent Part 6

Ryan Dominic Bertrand (born 5 August 1989) left back.
Bertrand was signed by Chelsea in July 2005 from Gillingham for an initial £125,000, which was set by a tribunal and is subject to increase depending on progress
During the 2006–07 season he was twice sent on loan to Bournemouth, at the same time as former Chelsea youngster Jack Cork. He suffered a ruptured spleen in a youth team game against Arsenal that ruled him out of the later part of that season.
In August 2007, Bertrand joined Oldham Athletic on loan until January 2008.
On 4 January 2008, a matter of days after his spell at Oldham came to an end, Bertrand joined Norwich City on loan for the rest of the 2007–08 season.  He put in a number of impressive displays playing at both left full back and on the left wing, and admitted he would welcome a longer stay with the club. Bertrand became popular with the Carrow Road crowd earning him the nickname 'Plastic' in reference to the Belgian singer Plastic Bertrand.On 4 July 2008 he rejoined the club on loan until January 2009, with an option to extend to the end of the season. On 17 July 2009 Bertrand joined Reading on a season-long loan. He scored his first professional goal against Derby County on 10 March 2010. He also got voted by the fans of Reading FC runner up on the player of the year award behind Gyfli Sigurdsson Respectively.
On 5 August 2010 Betrand signed an on loan with Championship side Nottingham Forest in an initial six-month deal.  He made his debut for Forest as a substitute in the 1-0 away defeat against Burnley. He was a regular for Forest for whom he made a total of 19 appearances. Forest were interested in either extending Betrand's loan spell for the rest of the season or sign him permanently[11] but when his loan period expired on 3 January 2011 he returned to his parent club Chelsea.
Bertrand's Chelsea debut came on 20 April 2011, when he came on as substitute to replace Ashley Cole in a Premier league 3-1 win against Birmingham City. Betrand provided a cross which Florent Malouda headed past the Birmingham goalkeeper. On 15 July 2011, Bertrand signed a new four-year contract with Chelsea. He was made back-up to Ashley Cole by then Chelsea manager André Villas-Boas as he remained with Chelsea and Patrick Van Aanholt another left back went out on loan. Six years after signing for Chelsea as a school-boy, Bertrand made his first starting appearance against Fulham in the Carling Cup. The match finished in favour of Chelsea who won on penalties 4-3 as the match ended goalless. Bertrand also played 90 minutes in Chelsea's 2-0 defeat against Liverpool in the Carling Cup.  He made his first league appearance of the season coming on as a late substitute for Ashley Cole against Everton, the game ended in a 2-0 defeat for Chelsea. Bertrand was handed his first Premier League start against Wigan on the 7th April, in which he produced an outstanding performance as Chelsea won 2-1 and he was named fan's Man Of The Match. He started again against Arsenal, on the 21st of April, for his third Premier League start. The game finished 0-0. Once again he continued to impress, winning the Barclays Man of the Match Award

Kevin De Bruyne Chelsea future talent Part 5

Kevin De Bruyne (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈkɛvɪn də ˈbrœynə]) (born 28 June 1991)  plays for Racing Genk, on loan from Chelsea as an attacking midfielder or a winger.
On 31 January 2012, transfer deadline day, Chelsea and KRC Genk announced the permanent signing of De Bruyne, with the fee rumoured to be in the region of £7 million. He signed five-and-a-half-year contract at Stamford Bridge, but was loaned back to Genk for the remainder of the 2011/12 season. De Bruyne told the club website: "To come to a team like Chelsea is a dream but now I have to work hard to achieve the level that's necessary."
On 18 February 2012, De Bruyne scored his first goal since being loan back to Genk and also assisting the other goal in a 1-2 win for Genk against Mons.

Thibaut Courtois Chelsea future talent Part 4

Thibaut Nicolas Marc Courtois born 11 May 1992 is a Belgian footballer who plays for Atlético Madrid, on loan from Chelsea and the Belgium national team, as a goalkeeper.On 14 July 2011, Genk agreed a fee with Premier League club Chelsea for Courtois.  On 26 July 2011, Chelsea confirmed on their website that the transfer of Courtois was finalised and that he had signed a five-year contract with the club.On 26 July 2011, Courtois completed a season-long loan deal to Spanish La Liga club Atlético Madrid. Courtois was given the number 13 shirt, last worn by David de Gea before his transfer to Manchester United.

Romelu Lukaku Chelsea future talent Part 3

 (born 13 May 1993) who plays as a forward.
 10 appearances since joining in 6 August 2011 for a fee reported to be around £13 million, rising to £18 million in add-ons.
 Lukaku was given the number 18 shirt (formerly worn by Yuri Zhirkov) and signed a five-year contract.[6] He made his home debut in a 3-1 victory over Norwich City in the 83rd minute, coming on as a substitute for Fernando Torres. Lukaku made his second Chelsea appearance coming on as a substitute in the 3-1 defeat to Manchester United. Lukaku made his first start for the club in the Carling Cup against Fulham. Chelsea went on to win the match on penalties. He made another appearance on the 21st of January 2012, against Norwich City, coming on as a substitute for Fernando Torres in the 76th minute.
Lukaku was the subject of an acclaimed television documentary series called De School Van Lukaku (Lukaku's School) shown on the Dutch-speaking Eén network. The reality show followed the teenage Lukaku and his classmates during the course of a year at the Saint-Guidon Institute, a multi-cultural school in Brussels, where the footballer was based while with the Anderlecht youth team.  In 2009, the series followed the school as it made a field trip to London visiting Chelsea's Stamford Bridge ground. Lukaku said at the time: “What a stadium. If one day in my life I will cry, it will be the day I play here. I love Chelsea.”

Lucas Piazon Chelsea future talent Part 2

Gustavo Lucas Domingues Piazón, known simply as Lucas Piazón born 20 January 1994 He is primarily a Forward, although he has also been deployed as a winger, as an attacking midfielder or in the hole behind the striker.
In early 2011, Chelsea secured the services of Piazón by means of a pre-contract, having to fight off the interest from a number of the world's leading clubs, including Italian giants Juventus. On 15 March 2011, São Paulo announced that Piazón could only play for Chelsea senior team after 20 January 2012 when he became eligible to obtain a work visa, but he would join in the 2011 summer transfer window. Chelsea announced 10 days later with Piazón passing a medical in London in early March 2011. It was reported that Chelsea paid in the region of £5 million to acquire Piazón, which could rise to £10 million depending on several clauses. He was transferred to Chelsea during the 2011 summer transfer window and started playing for the reserves. In an interview he stated, "[I chose Chelsea because] I like the Premier League. I think my way of playing and my skills are more suited to the Premier League."
Piazón made his debut for the reserve team against Fulham, thereafter he said, 'I am able to play in the Youth Cup now,' he added. 'Everybody knows I am here to play, so my main aims for the season are to play as many youth games as possible and hopefully feature in the reserves as well, and I want to win the Youth Cup.' He also stated, 'I am enjoying the company of Ramires, Alex and, of course, David Luiz is my best friend here. He is so funny and always joking so it's nice'. Piazon scored his first reserve goal in an away victory against Arsenal, just before full-time with a solo effort, inside the box before firing it into the net.  He has scored twice in five games for the reserves and once in six for the youth team, most notably the winner in the FA Youth Cup tie against Doncaster Rovers.
On 20 January 2012, his 18th birthday, Piazón obtained a work visa and became eligible to play for the Chelsea senior team. On 26 January 2012, he signed a contract extension that will keep him with the club until 2017. Piazón was handed the number 35 shirt, having impressed at Under-18 and Reserve level. Piazón was an unused substitute on the Chelsea bench, on 31 January 2012, in their 1-1 league draw against Swansea City and on 5 February 2012, in the 3-3 draw against Manchester United. Former Chelsea manager, Villas-Boas said of Piazón, after the Manchester United game: "He has trained more with the first team, which is very good for him. He's made great progress since arriving and in the last two games was on the bench. Unfortunately, he had no opportunity to enter, but has done a great job in the reserves team. He is a player that we have high hopes for."

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Oriol Romeu Chelsea future talent Part 1

We recently have agreed a deal to buy Chelsea new boy Marko Marin so it's time to look at some of our up & coming young stars.

Oriol Romeu
(born 24 September 1991) Mainly a defensive midfielder, he can also operate as a central defender only 23 appearances since joining on 4 August, the English club announced the completion of the transfer, with the player signing a four-year contract in a deal worth €5 million. The deal also gave Barcelona first refusal via a buy back option should Chelsea deem him surplus to requirements, seeing Barcelona pay €10 million in 2012 or €15 million in 2013 to bring him back to the Camp Nou he was given the number 6 shirt for the 2011–12 season.    Romeu made his official debut for Chelsea on 10 September 2011, being brought on as a substitute in the 79th minute of the 2–1 away win against Sunderland. He received his first start on the 21st, in a 0–0 draw (penalty shootout win) against Fulham for the season's Football League Cup. Romeu made his first UEFA Champions League appearance on 19 October 2011, playing the full 90 minutes in a 5–0 group stage home win against K.R.C. Genk.   He also added 76 minutes in the second game between the two teams, a 1–1 draw in Belgium. Romeu made his first start for Chelsea in the Premier League against Wolverhampton Wanderers on 26 November 2011, putting in a solid performance in a 3–0 home win. He retained his position for the following league game, against Newcastle United at St. James' Park, which finished with the same score. On 11 December 2011, Chelsea issued a statement regarding the deal surrounding Romeu's buy back clause with Barcelona. The statement highlighted that the blaugrana did not have an automatic buy back clause as first suggested only having first refusal on any deal if Chelsea wanted to sell him in the future.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Chelsea and Werder Bremen officially confirmed an £8million transfer that will see German winger Marko Marin head to London.


The Yugoslavian-born Marin graduated from Borussia Monchengladbach's terrific youth development system and made his first-team debut as an 18-year-old. In the same year, he became a regular in the German U-21 international side and then featured for DFB-elf for the first time in 2008.
Werder Bremen spent £8million on the attacking-midfielder in June 2009 and he formed a thrilling partnership with German-Turk Mesut Ozil. Klaus Allofs, the club's sporting director, had an almost perfect model in place for the club to continue to compete at a high level, whilst still being able to cash-in on their hottest prospects.
welcome to Chelsea FC

Friday, April 27, 2012

How Roberto Di Matteo fixed the mess that was Chelsea under Andre Villas-Boas

He was the unlikely choice to hold the club together when it was falling apart.
Indeed, Roberto Di Matteo feared he would be getting his marching orders when Andre Villas-Boas was sacked, not asked to fill the breach.
But the Italian, who surely expected his contribution to Chelsea history was going to be those two Wembley Cup Final winners, is now just 90 minutes away from orchestrating the greatest triumph the club has ever achieved.
But even landing the ­Champions League might not be enough for Di Matteo to get the job full-time.
Yet what is unquestioned, as his players once again lined up to pay tribute after their remarkable Nou Camp comeback, is that Di Matteo has proved himself the most adept man-manager at the club since Guus Hiddink rescued their season three years ago.
As Villas-Boas’ assistant, Di Matteo could see every mistake the Portuguese was making. And ensured he did the opposite.
The internal exiles, like Salomon Kalou and John Obi Mikel, as much as the obvious Villas-Boas critics like Ashley Cole and Frank Lampard, have been brought into the fold.
Where the Portuguese believed explaining his decision was a sign of weakness, that conflict was preferable to consensus, Di Matteo has opted for free and open channels of communication.
Tactically, it brought a return to the core values instilled in the Jose Mourinho era - players ready to sacrifice themselves for the common good.
And that has ensured that even those most upset at Villas-Boas’ exit, the likes of Raul Meireles, David Luiz and Ramires, have bought in.
The result is just one defeat in 15 matches, capped by that night of nights in Catalonia, with the greatest prize now within their reach.
Yes, they have had their breaks along the way.
In that astonishing four-game run, Barcelona hit the woodwork twice in both games, as did Arsenal at the weekend, while Spurs hit the post before the ghost goal that should haunt referee Martin Atkinson for the rest of his career.
Yet if the tactical framework had not been right, had the players not believed in this manager just as they so patently did not in his predecessor, good fortune would not have been enough.
Only a squad that has unity and purpose would buy into the game-plan Chelsea adopted against Barca, what became nine white shirts camped on the edge of their own penalty area for most of Tuesday.
Di Matteo, while pointing to what he has done, shrewdly still attempts to deflect praise away from himself and onto the players.
“Stability helps every player and every club,” he said. “The players know that they have to perform and they have a responsibility towards themselves and the club. You just have to try and get the best out of them.
“I’ve tried to speak to the players individually and focus them on the next task, to get them to take responsibility and make them aware of what our targets are, to bring a bit of that team spirit back and the spirit of sacrifice and passion for the game.”
Simple, yes. Unquestionably effective.
A policy that works in a strong dressing room. But you need to have strength in yourself to see it through. And Di Matteo certainly does.