Terry and Lampard Hospital Letter

Rooney praises John Terry

“John Terry is an old-fashioned centre-half who is not afraid to get his foot in. He was fantastic for (England). Together with Paolo Maldini, he was one of the two toughest defenders I have played against. He has made his decision to retire and we have to respect it. But he will be a loss to us.” – Wayne Rooney (ESPN)

Mourinho backs John Terry

“John Terry is not a racist, that’s 100 per cent. Chelsea had a squad where we had 12 African players in the squad. It was a fantastic squad and he had always a great relation with every one of them. But in football it can happen, and I know it can happen, that during a football match – because sometimes it’s more than a game – sometimes you have reactions that don’t represent what you are really. Probably, he had a racist comment or a ‘racist’ attitude against an opponent and, sometimes in football, we look to our opponents in the wrong way. But to pay, he has to be punished. But please, don’t say that he is a racist, because I know what I am saying. Didier Drogba will say, Geremi will say, Claude Makelele will say, all of them will say that he is not a racist.” – Jose Mourinho (Eurosport)

Terry rushes back for squad

“I said to the physios, the way things were here, I just wanted to push myself and be involved and try to get back as quickly as possible.” – John Terry (Chelsea TV)

The Demise of Andre Villas-Boas

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Andre Villas-Boas was sacked earlier today, the 5th manager to leave the club since Jose Mourinho was axed on September 19th, 2007 (not including Ray Wilkins who managed 1 game). Of these managers, AVB had the worst winning percentage…

…and it wasn’t even close. A full 10% separated AVB from the last Chelsea manager who didn’t make it a full season, Phil Scolari. (stats courtesy of thechels.co.uk)

Another shocking stat is the goal difference per game of Chelsea under AVB – a meager 0.63 which is less than half of the difference under Ancelotti and 75% less than the next worse Chelsea manager (Hiddink – 1.09). The stats are clear even though some may disagree with the decision – AVB did not have Chelsea playing anywhere close to the same level as his predecessors.

So how exactly did the demise of AVB happen? Let’s recap his time at the club…

June 22, 2011 – Chelsea pay Porto £13.3m in compensation to land AVB, fans rejoice. Some are hopeful he can have a 20 year run at the club – he didn’t last 20 months or even half of that.

August 2011 – AVB, unlike some managers before him, attempts to plan for the long-term future of Chelsea by signing the likes of Juan Mata, Oriol Romeu, and Romelu Lukaku – the first 2 have been solid first-team players, the latter still only 18 with the physique and upside to be one of the best strikers in the world.

September 2011 – After going undefeated in the first 5 matches under AVB, Chelsea lost 3-1 to United on September 18th. It was their only loss of the month.

October 2011 – Chelsea lose only once in the month of October (against QPR with 9 men) until October 29th, when they lose to Arsenal 5-3.

November 2011 – Anelka starts his last “real” game for Chelsea in a 1-1 draw against Genk on November 1st, Alex on November 5th against Blackburn. This is where I think AVB really started to lose the locker room after he froze out two players who were not only key members of the club’s success in the past but also highly respected by senior players. Chelsea won only 39% (9 wins, 7 draws, 7 losses) of their matches after the win against Blackburn, down from 59% (10 wins, 4 draws, 3 losses) before this date.

December 2011 – After a 2-0 defeat on November 29th to Liverpool, Chelsea replace Fernando Torres with Didier Drogba who rejuvenates Chelsea, guiding them to convincing wins against Newcastle (3-0), Valencia (3-0), and Manchester City (2-1). Drogba scored 3 goals combined in these matches. After a shock draw to Wigan and a respectable draw to Spurs, Drogba left for the Africa Cup of Nations and Chelsea lost all momentum, losing 3-1 against Aston Villa at the end of the month.

Sturridge predicts England defense

“I think if (Gary Cahill) is playing from now until the end of the season alongside John Terry and Ashley Cole then it should only be the right-back position available in the England starting 11.” – Daniel Sturridge (CFC Official)

Terry Praises Cahill Signing

“Cahill is a great player, he can play his left and right foot, he’s great in air and he is quick. He’s a really solid defender.” – John Terry (Sky Sports)