LONDON:
Chelsea sent Sporting Lisbon crashing out of the Champions League as
the Blues got back on track with 3-1 win at Stamford Bridge on
Wednesday.
Jose Mourinho's side had suffered their first defeat
of the season at Newcastle on Saturday and they wasted little time
erasing the bitter taste of that Premier League loss with a dominant
display in their Group G finale at Stamford Bridge.
The Blues
were already certain of qualifying for the last 16 as group winners, but
Sporting needed a point to be sure of progressing in second place and
they weren't up to the task.
Cesc Fabregas opened the scoring with an early penalty and Andre Schurrle extended Chelsea's lead.
Jonathan Silva reduced the deficit for Sporting in the second half, only for John Obi Mikel to net Chelsea's third.
Sporting's defeat, combined with Schalke's win against Maribor, meant
the Portuguese club were consigned to the Europa League as Chelsea did a
big favour for their old boss Roberto di Matteo, who led the Blues to
their first Champions League title in 2012 and is now in charge at
Schalke.
With Chelsea already through, Mourinho was able to
rest Eden Hazard, John Terry and Oscar among others, as he made six
changes from the loss at Newcastle.
There was no opportunity
for Diego Costa to indulge in some Christmas shopping, however, as
Mourinho, concerned about the Chelsea striker's spluttering displays
following a series of injury problems, named his team's leading scorer
in what was still a strong starting line-up.
While Chelsea
ostensibly had nothing to play for, losing to Newcastle had stung
Mourinho and it was no surprise to see his players start as though they
had a point to prove.
Filipe Luis was the catalyst for
Chelsea's eighth minute opener as the Brazilian left-back, finding
himself in an advanced position, kept his composure to win a penalty
with a clever nutmeg of Ricardo Esgaio that provoked a flustered trip
from the embarrassed Sporting defender.
It was a clear foul and
Fabregas stepped up to calmly stroke his spot-kick down the middle as
Rui Patricio dived the wrong way.
Sporting's hesitant,
nerve-ridden start was at odds with the do-or-die nature of their task
and Chelsea took full advantage to double their lead in the 16th minute.
Nemanja Matic clipped a pass into Schurrle and the Germany
winger took one touch before turning and driving a fine, low strike past
Patricio from the edge of the penalty area.
Islam Slimani
headed narrowly wide as Sporting finally mustered an attack of note, but
Chelsea were soon back on the front foot and Schurrle's strike was
pushed away by Patricio.
Sporting had 45 minutes to save their
Champions League campaign and they made the perfect start to the second
half when Silva struck in the 50th minute.
Andre Carrillo's
cross was headed away by Schurrle, but the ball fell to Silva on the
edge of the area and he fired a clinical finish into the bottom corner.
But Mourinho's men killed off Sporting for good in the 57th minute when
Gary Cahill glanced a Fabregas free-kick to the far post where Nigerian
midfielder Mikel tapped in for his first goal since January.
Midway through the half, news filtered through that Schalke had taken
the lead against Maribor, meaning Sporting were heading for elimination.
They responded by throwing bodies forward and Slimani drew a good stop from Petr Cech with a powerful header.
But Chelsea were never seriously threatened and there was time for
Ruben Loftus-Cheek, an 18-year-old midfielder, to make a lively
seven-minute debut as a late substitute.
No comments:
Post a Comment