Corinthians 1 - 0 Chelsea: Corinthians rule world as Chelsea crash

CHELSEA added global disappointment to their European embarrassment yesterday as they became the first Champions League holders to fail to win the Club World Cup for six years.

SCORERS:

Corinthians - Guerrero (69)

Referee: Cakir

Attendance: 70,000

A week and a half after making the wrong sort of history by crashing out of the competition that means the most to them, the Blues were at it again in Japan as they passed up a trophy opportunity for the fourth time already this season.

Despite being firm favourites to beat Corinthians in Yokohama, they were outplayed and – more worryingly – outfought by the South American champions, who sealed victory through Paolo Guerrero in front of a partisan crowd of die-hard supporters.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Fernando Torres had a golden chance to take the game to extra-time – as Didier Drogba managed so famously in the Champions League final – but the Spaniard missed an absolute sitter and saw a stoppage-time header ruled out for offside after Gary Cahill was sent off.

It all added to the feeling that Chelsea’s £80 million summer overhaul had left them with a team of also-rans, with interim manager Rafael Benitez unable to instil a winning mentality.

Afterwards, Benitez admitted his side had been out-fought and out-thought. “This is the final of the World Cup for the South American teams. You could see this from the first minute,” he said. “Our players have some quality but, physically, some of them aren’t so strong.”

Some of Corinthians’ players had tried every trick in the book to get the referee on side, forward Emerson repeatedly rolling around the floor under contact. Benitez added: “You could see they have experience and, every second they were around the referee and doing well – and wasting [time] near the end.

“I don’t say that as a negative. They were ‘managing’ the game quite well.”

Emerson was also at the centre of Cahill’s late sending-off, which Benitez admitted might have been justified after his defender lashed out. “He lost his temper,” Benitez said. “I didn’t see it in the game, but I’ve seen it on the replay and it could be a red card.”

Despite being second best for much of the game, Chelsea created enough chances to snatch a draw. But Benitez refused to blame Torres for his late miss. “Try to find the positives in the situation,” said the manager. “He was there. He had the chances. He scored the goal that was disallowed. He has to take these chances in a final because it’s not easy to create too many.”

The defeat will do nothing for Benitez’s hopes of being given the Chelsea job full-time or winning over his own club’s supporters, whose opposition to his appointment is bound to continue. But the Spaniard insisted he was not concerned about that, adding: “We are improving, for me, every day and every week.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“Hopefully it will be the same over the next week and it will be easier to keep winning games.”

In the build-up to the final, Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic claimed the match could be the defining game for the current generation but it was their opponents who were the history boys, whose tens of thousands of fans took their seats in the Nissan Stadium as early as the third-placed play-off.

They gradually cranked up the volume and unfurled a succession of supportive banners in similar scenes to those the Blues faced before the Champions League final in Munich.

Corinthians outworked Chelsea from the first whistle but there was encouragement for Benitez’s men when, in a goalmouth scramble from a corner, Cahill narrowly failed to stab the ball past Cassio in what came close to being arguably the first high-profile test of goalline technology.

David Luiz, restored to centre-half, did well to outfox Emerson after Juan Mata uncharacteristically passed straight to the forward, Corinthians being given too much space in midfield. And Luiz came to the rescue again after wasting a free-kick from which the Brazilians broke, while Guerrero appealed in vain for a penalty, having brilliantly nutmegged Cahill. Cahill then got away with a major error just before the half-hour mark as Emerson panicked after the defender’s slip and blazed over.

Corinthians continued to call the tune and Emerson just failed to squeeze home Guerrero’s cross-shot.

Torres had offered little threat but that almost changed spectacularly eight minutes from the break when he superbly brought down Frank Lampard’s ball over the top only to stab straight at Cassio.

But the goalkeeper then excelled himself as a lightning Chelsea breakaway saw Hazard feed Victor Moses – the pair having switched wings – and the latter’s superb curling finish forcing a wonderful fingertip save.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Cassio also held Mata’s volley as Benitez’s side ended the first half on top, and they continued to probe after the restart.

Lampard saw a shot charged down, Hazard was denied by the legs of Cassio after bursting on to an inch-perfect Mata pass, and Moses’s knockdown was just behind Torres.

Jorge Henrique picked up the game’s first yellow card for tripping Mata but, roared on by an increasingly fervent crowd, Corinthians began to apply serious pressure of their own, Paulinho firing just wide.

In a game this tight, Torres’ inability to hold up the ball was threatening to prove costly and so it proved as Corinthians took the lead in the 69th minute. Chelsea’s defence simply stood off as Henrique and Danilo danced across the box, Cahill’s block simply teeing up Guerrero to head home.

Corinthians celebrated jubilantly and it was too much for Luiz, who soon got himself booked for a foul on Emerson before Moses was hauled off for Oscar.

Benitez’s lack of attacking options became apparent when he withdrew Ivanovic for Cesar Azpilicueta. And Torres’s Drogba moment arrived five minutes from time when the ball broke perfectly for him to beat Cassio from six yards but he shot straight at the ’keeper.

Oscar’s control also let him down after he got in behind and Chelsea’s misery was complete when Cahill was sent off for an off-the-ball clash with Emerson, Torres’ header was rightly ruled out, and Mata failed to poke home from a narrow angle.

Delighted Corinthians manager Tite said: “I took a photo with this trophy in 2010. I didn’t know if I would ever hold it. Now I have it and I am very happy.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He added: “Corinthians winning this gives us a very important lesson. A team is more important than individual talents. Maybe someone else’s girlfriend looks better than yours but you have to stick with the one you have.”

Corinthians: Cassio, Alessandro, Chicao, Paulo Andre, Fabio Santos, Ralf, Paulinho, Emerson (Wallace 90), Danilo, Jorge Henrique, Guerrero (Martinez 86). Subs not used: Julio Cesar, Douglas, Anderson Polga, Willian Arao, Edenilson, Fernandes, Guilherme Andrade, Felipe Monteiro, Giovanni, Romarinho.

Chelsea: Cech, Ivanovic (Azpilicueta 83), Cahill, Luiz, Cole, Ramires, Lampard, Moses (Oscar 72), Mata, Hazard (Marin 87), Torres. Subs not used: Turnbull, Mikel, Ferreira, Sturridge, Terry, Bertrand, Piazon, Saville, Hilario.

Related topics: