ARS 1: 1 CHE
Sunday May 06th 2007, 8:56 pm
Filed under: Sports

      Arsenal 1 Chelsea 1: Boulahrouz’s blunder derails Chelsea’s defence of the title
      
      

 
      
       
      

   

       

       

It was one last stand of defiance that typified Chelsea’s season: a moment
  of spectacular self-destruction followed by a heroic battle against the odds
  to right that wrong. And as Jose Mourinho finally led his players across the
  Emirates pitch to throw their shirts into the crowd, so the Chelsea manager
  passed up the Premiership title in much the same way as he has won it in the
  past: with resilience, grit and a touch of the absurd.

      
       
         
         
       

 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
   
   
   
   
      
      
      
       
       
       

 

      
      
      
 
   
 

      

      

       
         
         
            

  Manchester United are the champions again and still Mourinho contrived to
  steal centre stage. As Sir Alex Ferguson made a mess of opening the
  champagne live on Sky Sports, the Chelsea manager was poker-faced in front
  of the Arsenal fans while his assistant, Steve Clarke, gave them the "
  zero" sign with his fingers to denote the amount of trophies Arsenal
  have won. You can imagine how well that went down at the Emirates.

  The home crowd had come here hoping to witness the final humiliation of
  their rivals from west London but what they got was another Chelsea
  performance of courage, even when they were down to 10 men and with their
  Premiership trophy slipping from their grasp.

  With Khalid Boulahrouz sent off and Arsenal in the lead from Gilberto
  Silva’s penalty this had the potential to be a humiliation for Mourinho, but
  by the end it was the Chelsea manager who could say he regretted not winning.

  Boulahrouz is a footballer in danger of becoming a bad joke at Chelsea. The
  Dutchman was not a Mourinho signing last summer and he has been treated
  accordingly. A centre-back played at full-back by his manager and then,
  during the injury crisis, ignored altogether in favour of makeshift central
  defenders like Michael Essien and Paulo Ferreira. When the chance came for
  the man they call "the Cannibal" he made a true mess of it; a
  clumsy sending off that will eat away at him all summer.

  That was Chelsea’s darkest moment, but they fought back and could have
  stolen a win to keep the title race alive after Essien’s equaliser.

  Then, at the end, a coded message from Mourinho to the absentees, Michael
  Ballack and Andrei Shevchenko who have risked their manager’s fury by
  refusing to play through injuries in the past week. This was a game, he
  said, that would help certain individuals to understand "why some
  people have success at Chelsea and other people have no success",
  Mourinho said.

  The Chelsea manager was not prepared to expand on that point but it will be
  interesting to see what becomes of Shevchenko and Ballack, previously his
  manager’s golden boy but now very much out of favour for choosing to have an
  ankle operation at a crucial stage of the season. Mourinho’s words suggest
  that those two are now in serious trouble with their manager. Their
  long-term futures at Stamford Bridge must surely be in doubt.

  Mourinho has an FA Cup final to think about in 12 days’ time, Arsène Wenger
  has a summer in which to rebuild. Yesterday the Arsenal manager picked four
  central midfielders in a midfield that lacked any width and a team that
  lacked any bite until the closing stages of the first half.

  The post-match lap of honour at the Emirates was a reminder that ­ in the
  likes of Thierry Henry and Robin van Persie ­ there are a lot of key players
  missing from Wenger’s side.

  Still, the XI on the pitch had 45 minutes to beat a 10-man Chelsea and they
  could not make the advantage count.

  There was no Didier Drogba in the Chelsea side, Mourinho’s decision to rest
  him ahead of the FA Cup final a clear indication that he considered the
  Premiership all but lost. But while they missed their top goalscorer, his
  absence did at least force Chelsea to play in a different way. Wayne Bridge
  scurried down the left wing, while Joe Cole was the playmaker behind Shaun
  Wright-Phillips and Salomon Kalou. Not so many long balls this time.

  Three minutes to half-time and a mistake by Boulahrouz that may be his last
  for Chelsea, if Mourinho has his way.

  A gentle throughball was looped into Julio Baptista’s path and he muscled
  past Boulahrouz with ease. The Chelsea man had no real option but to drag
  the Brazilian to the ground and it was as clear a red card as any this
  season. Gilberto dispatched the penalty past the goalkeeper Petr Cech, the
  ninth penalty of Arsenal’s season at the Emirates and they have scored them
  all.

  There was not so much as a glance for Boulahrouz from Mourinho as he sloped
  off the pitch. At the start of the second half it threatened to be an
  ignoble end to Chelsea’s defence of their title as Wenger’s team at last
  found the urgency to take the game to the 10 visitors in blue.

  A two-footed challenge from Paulo Ferreira on Denilson was unpleasant and it
  meant the young Brazilian was taken off on a stretcher.

  With 20 minutes left, Mourinho’s side drew level. Wright-Phillips, another
  impressive performer, picked the ball up on the right and angled a fabulous
  ball into the six-yard area which required just the slightest touch from
  Essien to direct past the Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann.

  There was an absorbing finish. The German Lehmann saved brilliantly from
  Kalou after Joe Cole’s cut-back, then Alexander Hleb went up the opposing
  end and crossed the ball across an empty goalmouth. The efforts of Cole and
  Essien were impressive coming in the despair of losing the title race. With
  seconds to go, and Chelsea at breaking point, Fabregas spread the ball right
  to Emmanuel Eboué and he struck Cech’s crossbar.

  Chelsea did not take leave of the place without causing their usual
  commotion ­ they always do. There were shirts flung into the crowd, there
  was some provocative applause to a rowdy home support: Mourinho has an art
  for covering up the bad days with a bit of drama. This was his first season
  in five that he has not won the league title in the country he is managing ­
  Portugal and England ­ but as usual you could be forgiven for thinking he
  had won it.

  Goals: Gilberto (pen, 42) 1-0; Essien (70) 1-1.

  Arsenal (4-4-2): Lehmann; Eboué, Touré, Gallas, Clichy; Fabregas, Denilson
  (Hleb, 59), Gilberto, Diaby (Hoyte, 79); Baptista, Adebayor. Substitutes not
  used: Senderos, Djourou, Almunia (gk).

  Chelsea (4-1-3-2): Cech; Ferreira, Boulahrouz, Terry, Bridge; Mikel (Diarra,
  74); Essien, Lampard, J Cole; Kalou, Wright-Phillips (Sinclair, 79).
  Substitutes not used: Makelele, Cudicini (gk), Sahar.

  Referee: A Wiley (Staffordshire).

  Booked: Arsenal Adebayor; Chelsea Mikel, Essien.

  Sent off: Boulahrouz.

  Man of the match: J Cole.

  Attendance: 60,102.