Chelsea 4-0 Portsmouth: Late show from Torres the creator, Ramires books passage

By: Jack | January 8th, 2012
   

Fernando Torres, Chelsea’s No. 10.

The Spaniard again failed to find the score sheet, but provided the necessary creativity that resulted in a late torrent of goals and a largely flattering 4-0 victory over visiting Portsmouth in the third round of the FA Cup. We weren’t anywhere near our best, but we’ll take it.

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Talisman

Unless you were at Stamford Bridge this afternoon, you probably haven’t had chance to see the match. It was nowhere to be found on the tele or interweb. What we were left with was either the ridiculous commentary provided by Chelsea TV or the ridiculous radio commentary provided by the BBC. I managed to hang on for the opening 45 minutes before packing it up and heading back to sleep. Yes, I found the work done by the BBC to be of that poor a quality. Egregious stuff.

So, with that being said, this isn’t going to be the most complete or analytical of match reports. In honesty, the same could probably be said had I seen the game. The first half came off as an insipid affair, largely devoid of scoring chances for both sides. Dave Kitson apparently had a glorious opportunity inside the first minute – thanks to some more concrete defending/communication by our central defensive pairing – but spurned his shot inches wide. Aaron Mokoena and David Norris also carved out openings in front of goal, though neither made Petr Cech really work that hard.

Chelsea, meanwhile, were monopolizing possession without doing much in the attacking third. I believe we’ve seen this romantic comedy before. I do recall Torres popping up to meet a Florent Malouda cross around 15 minutes only to see his header palmed away by the Portsmouth goalkeeper Stephen Henderson. There was a also a scant penalty shout, with Torres and Pompey’s Jason Pearce involved, that was waved way.

That was pretty much it for the first half. Monotonous.

At this point, I take it that many of you, like me, were even more bemused by the team selection. Andre Villas-Boas’ decision to deploy probably the strongest starting XI he could at the moment was met with a look of confusion from me prior to the match and, with Frank Lampard and company failing to make a dent against a disciplined but grossly average Portsmouth defense, that look had grown into one of not disdain but a bit of anger.

136562867 Expecting changes to be made at the interval was far too much to ask, however. There were none. Florent Malouda continued despite continuing his recent trajectory of being shit (aside from setting up Torres’ header that is). Like Jacobim Mugatu, I was now fiery hot with anger. But, hell, what do I know?

Not three minutes into the second half, Malouda popped up with some sublime individual work down the left of the penalty area. It really was excellent (I checked it out on YouTube), like watching the Frenchman during the second half of the 2009 season. He slalomed his way to the byline, past a couple of statues, before pulling back for Juan Mata to deposit expertly at the near post. 1-0, trick.

You’d think that, at this point, we were about to tear off a foot in Portsmouth’s ass. Not so much. We started to sit back a bit, and we’re nearly caught with a sucker punch. David Luiz, who by all accounts was otherwise excellent, was caught doing his samba thing in our own third. Kitson proceeded to rob Bob – of the ball, not his manhood – and find Marko Futacs. Cech stepped up to save initially from Futacs before John Terry flew into the picture and chested Joel Ward’s goal-bound rebound off the line. Norris followed that up, but Cech was in position to finally quell the fucking roller-coaster scenario.

Pompey was on the ascendancy. Fortunately for us, they began to tire and we took full advantage with a three-goal burst over the final five minutes. Ramires popped up with two, both assisted by Torres. The second was a real peach, with the Brazilian chipping the ball over the keeper after being played in by Nando. A return to the Spaniard was probably on, but I’m not going to fault Ramires for going on his own. Frank Lampard capped the game’s bizarre end with what might have been the final kick of the ball. He picked up the ball on the left side of the box and slid a shot inside the near post under/just beyond Henderson.

And that was that. The scoreline was certainly flattering; Portsmouth were worthy of defeat, but they didn’t deserve what they received. What does it all mean in the grand AVB scheme? Well, we’re going need to improve pretty drastically if we want to make it three wins out of three against a Sunderland side seemingly reborn under Martin O’Neill. That’s six days away, though, leaving plenty of time to regroup. For now, let’s enjoy the win. Carefree, bitches.


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  • Dumitru86

    excellent point jack. torres doesnt score, but he created alot of goals lately. 

  • Joshua Sutton

    http://soccernet.espn.go.com/n...
    If Ba is less than 7m, why haven't we got him yet?  He's scores more regularly than any of our guys, save maybe Sturridge.

  • Mateo

    HAHAHA Mugatu reference ftw!

    ramires has became my blue man crush over the past season and a half. such a workhorse.
    but it makes mew think, considering how we are expecting to make changes to have a more creative midfield, it would crush me to see Rambo sacrificed

  • TheSpecial1

     No way Ramires gets sacrificed. He is a horse and one of a handfull of players guaranteed a starting XI spot every week.

  • Ebenodiazubike

    i agree raimires is dedicated

  • Ryan

    http://www.footytube(DOT)com/video/Chelsea-vs-Portsmouth-101187?ref=lchan_results

    There is the highlights. Just the goals, but still. 

  • Austex

    after watching the highlights I don't know if theres anybody in the 
    EPL that works harder than Ramires, love it

  • We should play a 4-4-1-1 with torres behind sturridge or drogba

  • JG

    Twitter is buzzing with the apparent fact that Kalou to Arsenal is inching ever so closer, ever so closer, for the apparent fee of 3-5 million pounds.
    I'll admit, I don't watch your lot regularly, so can anyone seriously tell me why he's persona non grata at the Bridge? He seems like your version of our Gervinho- a lot of dazzle, flashy tricks, speedy dribbling, but close to no end product. Is that correct?

  • Nymphateminez

    He has moments of brilliance, but he is far too inconsistent. He had a time in his career, end of 09/10 when he was playing brilliantly, but it went away. We moan when he starts the games. HE saves us a lot in the last minutes when he comes off the bench, alternatively sometimes he sabotages us. I wont be sad to see him go though, take Mikel whilst your at it.

  • Darren_true_blue

    Fernando Torres is Chelseas number 9!

  • Um, you clearly didn't get what I did there. It's a play on the fact that he's performing more like a playmaker (a No. 10) rather than a striker at the moment.

  • ChinaBoy

    i am saying the same thing. i wonder if he can take up that role.
    he his faster as well....mmmmhhhh... i wonder

  • Sidthecoolkid

    i wouldnt want him to take the playmaker role, at least not now... if he does then his chance to make it to euros 2012 is over... he needs to prove himself as a striker and a deadly one at that to play in the national side... but then, it is great to know that he can play that role as well... he can switch over to the no 10 role later on in his career...
    ps: since we are talking about shirts, no 7 for ramires?? he is the least creative player (despite him being a brazilian!!!) in the team and 7 is usually reserved for players with the creative flair...

  • Dave

    Lol, dude what is with you and Ramires. 

  • Darren_true_blue

    Well I apologize I wasnt meaning it in a bad way just incase you didn't mean it hopefully he starts actually being the mighty chelseas number 9!

  • Really starting to get tired of Torres. He's been here almost a full year, with only 6 goals to show for it. The law of averages would say that his production would have to improve eventually, as this has apparently been the least productive 12 months of his professional senior career. But needing to pad the scoresheet in the final few minutes against a Championship side is not the reason Chelsea dropped 50 millions pounds on the guy. 

    I'd love for the guy to come out of his shell, but I'm starting to lose my patience. 

  • ChinaBoy

    if you are not watching the matches, keep your mouth shut.

  • ChinaBoy

    Jonathan moss

  • Not sure what you're getting at. He's played damn well in his last two starts. I'm sticking it out with him.

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