Sunday, September 20, 2009
2009-09-20 Chelsea – Tottenham 3-0
Chelsea remained top of the Barclays Premier League after a 3-0 defeat of London rivals Tottenham at Stamford Bridge.
Ashley Cole put the Blues on the way to a comfortable victory with a first-half header and Michael Ballack made it two in the 57th minute.
Didier Drogba finished Spurs off with a third in the 62nd minute to make it six straight wins for the Blues and leave them three points clear of Manchester United at the summit.
To make matters worse for Spurs they lost both Ledley King and Sebastien Bassong through injury to leave Harry Redknapp with a defensive crisis.
There was bad news for Chelasea, too, as Drogba exited seven minutes from time with a calf problem.
Chelsea almost went ahead in the seventh minute when an angled drive from Jose Bosingwa cannoned off the crossbar.
But the Blues had Petr Cech to thank in the 11th minute when Jermain Defoe sprinted clear of the Chelsea defence only to see the Chelsea keeper stick out a leg to deny him.
Tottenham were now enjoying the majority of the possession and Jermaine Jenas was inches wide with a 20-yard drive that had Cech beaten.
It was enough to encourage Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti off his seat and into the technical area.
His presence almost had an immediate effect as Frank Lampard headed just wide from a cross by Nicolas Anelka in the 17th minute.
In the 22nd minute Anelka sent a powerful volley into the side netting after a cross from Florent Malouda had made its way across the six-yard box without attention from the Spurs defenders.
Chelsea felt they should have had a penalty in the 31st minute when Ballack collided with Vedran Corluka but referee Howard Webb rejected their appeals.
But his decision was of little consequence when Chelsea went ahead a minute later.
Drogba turned supplier with a superb cross into the middle of the Spurs penalty area and Cole got in front of Corluka to put a diving header into the net beyond former Chelsea keeper Carlo Cudicini.
The match had erupted into life at last and it was now a full-blooded derby with tackles flying in from both sides.
Chelsea won a free-kick in a central position some 25 yards out when Tom Huddlestone jumped into Ballack two minutes before the interval.
But Drogba hit the free-kick straight at Tottenham's defensive wall.
Chelsea should have gone two in front in the 46th minute but Lampard drove wide after Drogba had found him with a low cross.
In the build-up to Lampard's chance, Spurs defender King sustained a knock that forced his retirement from the action.
Alan Hutton replaced the stricken King with Corluka moving from right-back into the centre of defence alongside Bassong.
Spurs appealed for a penalty in the 54th minute when Robbie Keane went down under a challenge from Ricardo Carvalho.
Moments later Ballack made it 2-0.
Drogba's 57th-minute shot was well saved by Cudicini but Lampard followed up to roll the ball back into the six-yard box where Ballack was waiting to poke it home from point-blank range.
Chelsea were at their fluid best with a two-goal cushion and Bosingwa forced Cudicini into another save with a left-foot drive from 20-yards.
Not surprisingly the Blues went three in front in the 62nd minute when Drogba fired home from six yards for his fifth goal of the season.
Cudicini almost gifted Chelsea a fourth in the 73rd minute when he allowed a shot by substitute John Obi Mikel to creep under his body.
But the Italian keeper was alert enough to recover the ball before it could cross the goal line.
It got worse for Spurs when centre-half Bassong fell awkwardly on his shoulder and had to be carried off after lengthy treatment. He was replaced by Niko Kranjcar.
But Chelsea also lost striker Drogba with a calf injury in the 83rd minute which will give coach Ancelotti real cause for concern if he is out for any length of time.
2009-09-19 Aston Villa – Portsmouth 2-0


Gabriel Agbonlahor struck for the third successive match to propel Aston Villa towards a fourth Barclays Premier League win on the trot - and pile on more misery for bottom-placed Portsmouth.
Agbonlahor, overlooked by England coach Fabio Capello for the recent games with Slovenia and Croatia, netted the decisive second goal just before the interval.
Another 2010 World Cup hopeful in James Milner had broken the deadlock from the penalty spot as Martin O'Neill's side cruised to victory to sustain their early challenge for a European spot.
Apart from a spell mid-way through the second half, Villa were seldom tested and the memory of their opening-day setback against Wigan Athletic is fast fading.
Agbonlahor is looking sharp and hungry in attack while Milner continues to impress with his work-rate and commitment down the right flank.
Central defender Richard Dunne has also added a presence to the Villa back four after his move from Manchester City.
But Portsmouth look doomed even at this early stage of the campaign to a lengthy battle against the drop after slumping to a sixth successive league reversal which leaves them still searching for their first point of the campaign.
Only Kevin-Prince Boateng emerged with much credit for the visitors who look short of confidence.
Agbonlahor saw plenty of the ball during the early exchanges in a bright start by the home side but it was Mokoena who inadvertently almost gifted Villa the lead after 11 minutes.
Ashley Young whipped in a dangerous cross to the near post and Aaron Mokoena's flick header was turned over his own bar by David James in a fine reflex save.
Pompey started to come more into the match and created their first decent chance after 23 minutes.
A corner from Boateng - his side's first of the match - was only half cleared and Michael Brown was able to swing a cross back into the box.
Mokoena got up well at the far post and would have been disappointed to send his header over the bar.
After 33 minutes Milner broke the deadlock from the penalty spot.
Portsmouth could have few complaints as Nadir Belhadj brought down Villa captain Stiliyan Petrov after his surging run into the box.
Up stepped Milner and he powerfully drilled his spot-kick past James for his first league goal of the campaign.
Friedel made his first save after 39 minutes in parrying a low skidding drive from Jamie O'Hara.
But two minutes before the interval Agbonlahor struck to double Villa's lead.
Milner won the ball in the air and flicked it onto Agbonlahor who shrugged off the challenge of Tal Ben Haim before beating James.
The home side were soon back on the offensive and Carew miskicked when attempting to connect with a low cross from Agbonlahor.
James produced a fine reflex save to turn aside a shot from Petrov after a free-kick from Young had been blocked by the Pompey defensive wall.
Villa defender Carlos Cuellar became the first player to be yellow carded after 57 minutes for a challenge on Boateng.
Boateng then produced a stinging low drive which forced a good save out of Friedel away to his left.
Portsmouth enjoyed their best spell of the match and Friedel was well positioned to keep out Fredric Piquionne's shot from 15 yards out.
O'Neill made his first substitution after 65 minutes with Carew replaced by Emile Heskey.
Agbonlahor picked up a yellow card for a touch-line shove on Kaboul deep in the Portsmouth half.
James held on to a Cuellar header from a deep cross by Young before Hart made a double substitution with Kanu and Danny Webber replaced by Tommy Smith and Piquionne.
Heskey needed treatment after being fouled by Ben Haim but limped out of the action to be replaced by Fabian Delph.
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Manchester City 4 Arsenal 2
Emmanuel Adebayor scored the decisive third goal in a pulsating encounter from which Manchester City emerged with their 100 per cent record intact.
Two weeks after dominating at Old Trafford, yet finishing on the losing side against Manchester United, Arsene Wenger experienced similar emotions on the blue half of the city after a staggering contest where for long periods, they appeared the most likely winner.
When Shaun Wright-Phillips sent over a vicious cross, ex-Gunner Adebayor had no intention other than to find the net, which he duly did, sending a capacity crowd into ecstasy.
It meant City have now won four matches, the Togo striker scoring in the lot.
It was the visitors who started better and William Gallas should have put them ahead with a far post header. Instead, the Frenchman sent it fizzing over, providing City with an escape the fickle finger of fate ensured they took full advantage of.
True, without Gareth Barry's curling free-kick after Craig Bellamy had been blocked off by Bacary Sagna, or Richards' towering header, there would have been no goal.
Yet as Almunia pushed the header onto a post, then helplessly turned it home as the ball cannoned straight back towards him, the assist should go down in a column marked 'luck'.
So eager to impress, Adebayor was a notable presence without doing anything significant.
Had Bellamy not wasted a cross, he might have been presented with a tap-in.
Wenger has been criticised for his lack of summer signings. But after 20 months on the sidelines following major knee surgery, having Tomas Rosicky available must feel like a new arrival.
The momentum definitely changed following the Czech star's introduction for Denilson, their passing becoming more threatening, their attacks presenting more obvious danger.
Gallas had already brought one excellent reaction save out of Given with a stooping near-post header when Rosicky collected Sagna's short pass and fed the ball calmly through to Van Persie.
Joleon Lescott lunged in despairingly, but Van Persie simply skipped past the £22m man and drove a precise shot into the bottom corner.
Wenger probably could not believe how Arsenal failed to get their noses in front during the minutes that followed, as his team assumed total control.
But when Richards cut inside Song after receiving Wright-Phillips' pass he found Bellamy, who swept home to City's glee.
That would have brought joy enough to Eastlands. But, having presented Wright-Phillips with a tap-in after beating three men near the by-line, only for the England star to miss, Adebayor decided it was time to do the job himself as he headed home the third.
City survived a breathless finale in which Wright-Phillips stretched their lead before Rosicky pulled one back and van Persie hit a post.