Thursday 18 September 2014

Diego Costa 'can't play three games a week', says Jose Mourinho, as Chelsea boss admits £32m signing needs seven days to recover after matches

  • Mourinho says Costa isn't fit enough to play more than one game a week
  • Striker signed for £32million from Atletico Madrid in the summer
  • Costa was left on the bench as Chelsea drew 1-1 with Schalke
  • Loic Remy and Costa came on in 74th minute at Stamford Bridge
  • Jose: 'If he had started, maybe after 20-25 minutes I would have had to change him'
  • Mourinho blames Spanish national team for problems 
Jose Mourinho claims Diego Costa cannot play three games a week for Chelsea because of a hamstring injury he picked up on international duty with Spain.
Costa, who scored seven times in his opening four Chelsea games, was forced on to the substitutes bench with the problem ahead of their 1-1 draw with Schalke in the Champions League.
Although Mourinho did not go as far as criticising the Spanish national team for their handling of the striker’s delicate muscular issues, he admits they are having to treat him carefully.
 



The Chelsea coach said: ‘He went to the national team in perfect conditions and came back injured. 
‘But what happened to Diego happens to many other players in other national teams. I have nothing to say about it. It's just what happens. He played one match and was perfect, then went to the national team, played against France and came back injured.’ 
Costa came on for the final 17 minutes last night and will start Sunday’s Barclays Premier League clash with Manchester City.
Mourinho, though, has already ruled him out of next week’s Capital One Cup tie with Bolton art Stamford Bridge.
He added: 'Costa has a problem and he can't play in this moment three matches in a week. If he has one week to let the muscle recover, he can start again like he has been since he had that problem with the national team. ‘But three days, after Saturday, is not enough. It was not to protect him for the game for Sunday, but because today he was not in the condition after Saturday.
‘He signed for us and was completely fine. He had a problem again in the national team, not with us. 
‘And now we have a problem and now we have to resolve it as best we can. Today he was not in condition to play. Sunday we believe he is. 
‘Next week, against Bolton, for sure he isn't. We have to manage the situation until the moment he's completely fine. ‘I don't know (how long that will be). If today he had started the game, for sure he could not play on Sunday. We have to go step by step.’

Bayern Munich 1-0 Manchester City: Joe Hart helpless to keep out Jerome Boateng's deflected last-minute strike after series of saves

  • Joe Hart beaten in last-minute as Jerome Boateng strike deflects off Mario Gotze and flies into the net
  • England No 1 had been in fine form and had kept the Premier League champions in the game with series of stops 
  • Manchester City stopper Hart was consoled by former team-mate Boateng at the full-time whistle 
  • Substitute Arjen Robben appealed for a penalty in the second half as did Muller in the first period but referee waved claims away
 
Joe Hart’s reaction said it all. Wow. It wasn’t just Jerome Boateng’s goal that had stunned him, but news of Roma’s 5-1 win over CSKA Moscow. 
The last minute winner was bad enough, but it was the glimpse of Manchester City’s future in another hellishly tough Champions League group that rocked Hart back on his heels.
He had done so much to keep City in the contest here, but it was not enough. Then, in his televised post-match interview, came the revelation that Roma may just be the pick of it from Italy in this season’s competition. 
You could see Hart doing the maths. City were already three points down on Bayern Munich, with Roma to come next – and last, in the Olympic Stadium in December. That could turn out to be a must-win game. Suddenly, Boateng’s goal took on significance greater than just a straightforward home win. What a difference a draw would have made here.












Not that City deserved it, in strict technical terms. Bayern Munich had the best of the game, the best of the chances and the goalkeeper was City’s man of the match. Yet when an away team has held out against one of the powerhouses of Europe into the 90th minute, to lose will always have the feel of hard cheese. 
Boateng’s goal took a deflection, too, but it would not be right to say it was lucky. City had several opportunities to clear a Philipp Lahm cross that continued to outstay its welcome in their penalty area. Munich are one of the best teams in Europe – and they will punish any weakness. So it proved.
The ball fell to Boateng, one of the players who helped Manchester City take their first baby steps towards major European competition, he drew back his right foot and pulled the trigger.
It was always going to take something special to beat Hart, and once the ball had clipped the back of Mario Gotze, this was one shot he could do nothing about.
It may be an important one, too, make no mistake of that. Had City earned a draw here, they could have thought of targeting either Munich or Roma in this group, with CSKA Moscow already set up as the whipping boys. 
Now the Roma game at home on September 30 looms large. They are certainly no mugs. They were 4-0 up to Moscow after just 31 minutes, the shortest space of time any Italian team had taken to establish such a lead in a Champions League tie. 
The draw has rarely been kind to City in Europe and now the action is turning against them, too. Grow a pair, they are often told. City are trying, but it is hard when they keep getting kicked up them all the time.
Of course, it could be that the Russians are quite hopeless and the scoreline overstates Roma’s threat, but City cannot afford to be complacent. They will certainly need to find another level next time. Even had they got the draw, the best that could have been said about this performance is that it was defiant, rather than convincing. 
Even Hart’s magic faded a little as the second-half wore on, and nobody could argue that Munich were not worthy winners – particularly as they were without Franck Ribery, and Arjen Robben only came on with 14 minutes remaining following injury.













Not that City were without merit. Having stood firm, with Hart exceptional, they had a very good chance on 63 minutes when a cross from Jesus Navas from the right was met by David Silva unmarked close to goal. Aerial strength is hardly his strong point, and this was a stooping header, but the ball was on a plate and it was desperately poor form not to at least get it on target.  
At the opposite end, Hart came to City’s rescue on numerous occasions. He was magnificent in the first-half and if his handling dipped as the game wore on, he may have been punchy as much as nervy. This is a Pep Guardiola side, after all, and the danger can come from anywhere. 
In the 55th minute, a quite marvellous moment of improvisation from Thomas Muller teed up Gotze, but Hart matched his shot with a fine save.
Soon after, he committed a rare error, missing a cross from Rafinha, but recovered just in time to divert Juan Bernat’s attempt over the bar. The pressure continued to mount, particularly once Robben came on and started throwing himself about, shamefully, in search of a penalty. In the 88th minute, Hart made another outstanding one-handed save from David Alaba.
It is always eventful when Hart goes up against the might of the Bundesliga and this was no different. It was a year ago that his mistakes against Bayern Munich in Manchester City’s annual Champions League fixture caused Manuel Pellegrini to doubt him. The season before he excelled against Borussia Dortmund at home. Thankfully, this had more of the Dortmund display about it. It is no exaggeration to say that Hart kept City in the game. Pellegrini’s continued hints about giving his favourite Willy Caballero a chance are curious on this evidence. 
Munich were already looking very threatening when he made his first good save after 19 minutes. Juan Bernat crossed, Thomas Muller met the ball with a header and Hart did well to stay equal to it.

Wednesday 17 September 2014

( ˘˘̯) Manchester United cannot afford my players and their fall from grace is a lesson to all big European clubs, says Pep Guardiola

  • Bayern Munich boss Pep Guardiola has warned Louis van Gaal he cannot afford his players
  • Manchester United spent over £150million during the summer 
  • Van Gaal forked out £60m on Real Madrid superstar Angel di Maria
  • Germany ace Thomas Muller claims he rejected a move to Old Trafford
Bayern Munich manager Pep Guardiola has warned Manchester United they can't afford his best players and claimed the likes of Arjen Robben, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Thomas Muller don't want to leave for the Barclays Premier League anyway.
United manager Louis van Gaal had the three Bayern stars on his initial hit list at Old Trafford but summer moves for the trio never really got off the ground.
Asked this afternoon if he had to say no to Van Gaal, Guardiola nodded and said: 'They [United] didn't have enough money.





'I saw they spent a lot of money. It’s good for my friend Louis. It’s part of the game. 
'All of the clubs in the world want the players of anther club. It depends on the player. If the player wants to play he will play. If he wants to stay he will stay.'
Asked for his views on United’s failure to play in the Champions League this season, Guardiola added: 'It’s a good lesson for the big clubs.
'They think: ‘We are unbeatable and strong’ and they are not here. Maybe the next season they are out.
'That’s why football is magnificent.
'Every single week you have to be ready. Every week you have got to show you are ready.'

Liverpool 2-1 Ludogorets: Steven Gerrard rescues Reds with injury time penalty in dramatic finale after Ludogorets levelled late on




  • Steven Gerrard scores injury-time penalty to give Liverpool Champions League victory against Ludogorets
  • Reds lead through Mario Balotelli who scored with ten minutes to play
  • Bulgarian champions responded in dying minutes as Dani Aabalo raced through to round Simon Mignolet
  • Javier Manquillo earned Liverpool a penalty after defender was brought down in the box by goalkeeper Milan Borjan
  • Captain Gerrard kept his cool to slot home to get Liverpool off to winning start in Group B





  • Step forward Steven Gerrard, the man for the big occasion. No messing, no mistake. Not when it really mattered.
    From the penalty spot in the 92nd minute, he coolly, expertly, steered Liverpool to their opening Champions League victory against Ludogorets on Tuesday night.
    Visiting coach Georgi Dermendzhiev claimed his side deserved better and he was right. But no one in red really cares and why should they?
    An injury-time penalty, taken in front of the Kop for good measure, is Stevie G territory, all right. He scored and Liverpool are off to a winning start in Group B.

    They had conceded an equaliser in the 90th minute and Javi Manquillo won the penalty 60 seconds later.
    It was exhilarating and there was barely time to pause for breath before the Kop was in full song. They can’t get enough of this team.
    It would be easy to tell another tale, the real story behind the 81 frustrating minutes of this game until Mario Balotelli scored for the first time in a Liverpool shirt.
    To do that, though, would be to highlight the technical difficulties this team encountered against spirited and somewhat unfortunate Bulgarian opponents.
    Far better to stick with the romance, to fuel those Champions League desires and speak of a dream that ends with Liverpool walking out for the final in Berlin next June.
    How they have missed these European nights, a glaring omission from the Anfield calendar over the past five seasons. It must have hurt.
    Gerrard was certainly psyched up on Monday night, admonishing Philippe Coutinho for giving the ball away cheaply in the opening spell and having another crack at the little No10 when he shoved Junior Caicara.
    At times, this new, withdrawn position carved out for Gerrard to spare his ageing legs must frustrate the Liverpool captain.
    Until he struck the winning goal, he rarely crossed the halfway line.
    There was so much enthusiasm about the place, so much energy in those red shirts that they spent too much time throwing bodies forward for the majority of the game.
    Relax, guys.
    It will come together — it has to with a team boasting the creative talents of Raheem Sterling, Adam Lallana and Coutinho in that forward line.
    Add the attacking thrust of Alberto Moreno, with those eye-catching runs down the left and his brilliant recovery tackles, and Liverpool will give anyone a game at this level.
    The target is to get to grips with a dual season, competing at the top of the Barclays Premier League at the weekend and then facing the challenge of Ludogorets, Real Madrid and Basle on these midweek nights.


    The Bulgarian champions were decent enough, forcing corners in the first half and relying on Anicet Abel and captain Svetoslav Dyakov to get them going.
    They certainly gave Liverpool a game, capitalising on the growing sense of anxiety which was spreading as this fixture wore on.
    Patience, patience.
    There is time and Liverpool had 90 minutes, plus all the other bits and pieces added on at the end of each half, to win their first group game. They had to use all of it. 
    When they scored through Balotelli, Liverpool should have settled and protected their lead.
    By then they had worked hard enough for it.
    The goal arrived via the dangerous left-boot of Moreno — a swirling cross that found its way to the feet of Balotelli inside the box.
    His finish was cool, under pressure to perform after a couple of games without a goal since his return to English football.
    He is off the mark now. 
    The game was nearing its end when Balotelli scored in front of the Kop and that should have been the signal for Liverpool to smother the contest and see it out.
    Goodness knows they had enough players on the park equipped to do so. Gerrard, Jordan Henderson and substitute Lucas Leiva are streetwise enough to put their foot on the ball.
    Instead, with the vocal backing of the Kop, they set off in search of a second goal.
    To blame Sterling simply because he lost the ball on the edge of the Ludogorets penalty area would not do justice to his energetic and captivating peformamce.
    Nevertheless, Ludogorets sped away with the ball and within seconds of Sterling being dispossessed, substitute Dani Abalo was rounding Simon Mignolet. 
    It was a classic European counter-attack.
    Anfield fell flat, at least until Manquillo was bundled over by Milan Borjan inside the area.
    Rodgers admitted afterwards: ‘Steven studied videos of their keeper, but then they put in Milan Borjan at the last minute and we had nothing on him.’
    It required a cool finish, the game-changing strike that we associate Gerrard with over the years.
    Naturally, he didn’t let anyone down.

    Borussia Dortmund 2-0 Arsenal: Ciro Immobile and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang fire hosts to victory on humbling night for Gunners

    • Ciro Immobile scored the opening goal for Borussia Dortmund after a solo run which started inside his own half
    • Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang rounded Wojciech Szczesny to score a second early in the second half
    • Danny Welbeck missed three good chances for Arsenal as they looked to equalised
    • Dortmund belied their status as second seeds and made Arsenal look anything but a 'Pot 1' team
    • The Gunners' failings ran deep in Germany 
    And right here was the reason the Champions League seedings have got to change next year.
    Arsenal are about as close to being among the top eight teams in Europe as Borussia Dortmund’s mighty and magnificent Westfalenstadion is to a wet Wednesday at Gresty Road, Crewe.
    They were outclassed in Germany, outplayed, at times torn apart, reduced to an imitation of a team that UEFA blithely placed in Pot 1 when the draw was made earlier this month. Arsenal have no business sitting beside the champions of Europe and the Goliaths of the strongest European leagues right now.










    They have been allowed to make the most of an impressive run of qualifications and the odd foray into the last eight, but this can no longer hide the reality. The scoreline did not flatter Borussia Dortmund. Their margin of victory could have been doubled, even trebled, without complaint. 
    Their opening goal, in the final minute of the first-half, was their 15th attempt – and if anything their chances after half-time were better, if less frequent. They totalled 22 by the time referee Olegario Benquerenca of Portugal called a halt to a very one-sided contest.
    Quicker, sharper, more intelligent, with greater determination at the back, quite simply Dortmund should not be this far ahead. Jurgen Klopp is a fine coach, but he presides over a club that is constantly battling to keep its finest players, often without success. The best are picked off, by Bayern Munich or the elite of England’s Premier League – Arsenal would fancy their chances of getting a player out of Dortmund every time, as they once did with Tomas Rosicky.
    Yet the Germans were on a different plane. Only mistakes in front of goal stopped this being a painfully sobering rout. As it was, even the appearance of a 19-year-old rookie, Hector Bellerin, at right back cannot excuse Arsenal’s inferiority. Nothing that happened was Bellerin’s fault; and Dortmund were missing Marco Reus and Mats Hummels.
    Yes, Arsenal had the odd chance, too – but even this meagre resistance raised more questions than answers, all falling to new signing Danny Welbeck, who did little to refute Louis van Gaal’s criticisms of him. The Dutchman, not reluctant to back his judgement even in the worst of times, may be saying that he told us so.
    Arsenal were desperate for a striker to supplement the injured Olivier Giroud, but their problems run deeper than that. Mikel Arteta was deployed to guard the back four, but that is not his natural role and it showed. 
    Dortmund were too quickly into the heart of Arsenal’s defence; any team of attacking quality will enjoy playing against them now. Arsene Wenger was once invincible with men like Patrick Vieira in midfield. It seems incredible that he no longer finds such physically imposing figures relevant to how Arsenal play.
    The goals summed up Arsenal’s malaise. The first was horridly soft and come from a bungled visitors' throw-in. Possession was lost, the ball was cleared and Ciro Immobile picked it up inside his own half.

    Confounding those who love to mock his rather unfortunate surname, he began a run that took him through a very half-hearted Arsenal midfield and into the path of Laurent Koscielny. The centre half – outstanding here last season – put in a lame challenge which Immobile shrugged off easily, before striking the ball across Wojciech Szczesny in goal. It was no more than Dortmund deserved. They had been by far the best team until that point.
    The second was little better from Arsenal’s perspective. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, French born but playing for his father’s country, Gabon, had been wasteful in the first half but he made amends three minutes after the restart. 
    A ball from substitute Matthias Ginter caused unnecessary confusion in the Arsenal ranks, allowing Aubameyang to nip in ahead of Per Mertesacker, round Szczesny and finish smartly as Koscielny collided with a post in a frantic attempt to block on the line.
    And, yes, it could have been worse. So much worse. Immobile nearly grabbed his second, forcing an outstanding one-handed save from Szczesny, Aubameyang had another shot hit the bar, and Henrikh Mkhitaryan lashed one over when a cooler head would surely have netted Dortmund’s third.
    The first-half had been equally frustrating for Dortmund, not least after 27 minutes when Aubameyang failed to take advantage of a lovely move that saw his team-mates switch the play from right to left. Erik Durm, Sebastian Kehl and Kevin Grosskreutz were all involved before the ball found its way back into the centre where Aubameyang was charging towards the target. 
    He shot first time, but straight at Szczesny from close range. Soon after, again picking up on a pass from Kehl, Aubameyang forced another good save from the Arsenal goalkeeper. Sokratis Papastathopoulos and Mkhitaryan also wasted decent chances. Arsenal barely got a look in.
    When they did, Welbeck disappointed. After 31 minutes a cross from Alexis Sanchez eluded Dortmund goalkeeper Roman Weidenfeller, only for the ball to get trapped beneath Welbeck’s feet at the far post. His second miss was more glaring. 
    Put through by Ramsey, with only Weidenfeller to beat, his finish was snatched and wide. In the second-half, he had a last chance to apply pressure but demonstrated only the inconsistency that supports Van Gaal’s decision to sell. Everything about his build-up play – his run, his touch – was lovely, but the finish was that of a novice, panicked, and a long way over. Dortmund were equally loose but their sheer volume of goalmouth opportunities ultimately won the game. With chances limited, Welbeck’s misses stood out.
    There is a way to go yet, obviously, but Arsenal may already be eyeing second place in Group D. Galatasaray are the next opponents, at the Emirates Stadium, and a win is vital, if only to regain their confidence in European competition. This was a humbling night