Oct
18
2006

Chelsea need to find balance

Written by Ahmed Bilal

Chelsea need to find balance

It is indicative of Chelsea’s ill reputation that Jose Mourinho’s just concerns about Petr Cech were scorned and his comments on Stephen Hunt criticised and vilified in the media.

It’s not that Mourinho’s was wrong in what he said (that the challenge was reckless and could have been avoided), but the way he said it, and the way Chelsea FC fell behind their manager’s statements, that gave the media reason to turn against him.

Mourinho and Chelsea are hated because of the money they represent (and really, because they can buy the best players and no one else can), but they are also disliked because of their arrogance and the heavy-handed manner they deal with the media, clubs, players and individuals outside football.

Chelsea know that the fact that they have so much money would create a backlash, and instead of choosing to face it with boorishness all they had needed was a little humility and grace. The taunts of buying the title would never go away but at least the public cruxification that goes on every time a Chelsea player or club member does something wrong would not have happened.

In Cech’s case, Mourinho has made two specific claims. First, he said that Hunt made a stupid challenge and that he could have avoided it. Mourinho is correct, but the way he compared it with Thatcher (a case where intent had been proven through video evidence and more so through the punishment) and how he decribed the incident (once again, correctly) turned the press against him.

Here’s an extract – first Mourinho calls the Cudicini foul a yellow-card offense (spot on), and then he says this:

“But the first challenge is unbelievable.

The goalkeeper grabs the ball, has the ball in his hands, slides because he dives and the pitch is wet, and the player goes direct for him.

He cannot go for the ball and goes with his knee on his face. If he didn’t break a bone in his face, Cech is a lucky boy.

I am not saying the intention was to send my player to hospital. That is something only the Reading player can say. He says that it was not intentional and I believe players. But it was a very stupid challenge and it was a challenge for a red card.

In every game, you see players jumping over the keeper, players avoiding the keeper or going with the foot to the ball. But when the player goes with knee direct to the face, he doesn’t want to avoid.

It is one for the authorities to look at in the same way they looked at Thatcher on Mendes.�

Key part – where he said that the player “went direct for him (Cech)”, and more importantly, when he made this statement:

“But when the player goes with knee direct to the face, he doesn’t want to avoid.”

Mourinho is right, of course. But the price of being direct and forthright here is to invite a wave of anti-Chelsea sentiment from the media (who have all done their level best to convince the public that Mourinho and Chelsea are paranoid and that it was just an unfortunate accident) when tact and self-control would have been more prudent.

It’s easy to succumb to emotions at this point – two of his players have been sent to the hospital – but Mourinho is a master tactician and for once he should have controlled his emotions and played the media. That Chelsea have in the past, and now as well, refused to use common sense in dealing with such sensitive matters

Is Hunt guilty of deliberately trying to hurt Cech? He’s probably not, but he’s not the saint everyone’s making him out to be either.

Then there is Mourinho cribbing about the ambulance – it’s a bad stance to take because there is a lot of room for the NHS people and Reading to find flaws in his statement. It’s sad really – Chelsea and Mourinho are right for once, and no one listens to them because a) the media is heavily biased) and b) they insist on shooting themselves in the foot every time they talk about the incident.

Finding a solution

There’s little point to this debate unless we look at the bigger picture – that keepers need more protection from such challenges. I’ve seen van der Sar come out of every match looked winded, and he’s undoubtedly had a couple of hard knocks during the game. Lehmann gets it as well, even if he’s easier to wind up and reacts badly.

Drogba’s paranoia apart, there’s a genuine case to be made about teams playing the big clubs and using the physical, in-your-face approach to getting results. It’s a tactic that works well if used properly and in moderation, but when aggression leads to near-fatal injuries then we have a problem.

In the Chelsea – Reading game the ref was at fault as well for failing to punish both players. It was a tough call to card Hunt in the first minute of the game but you have to be tough, and part of the ’solution’ could be to institute the same type of strict laws that FIFA brought in the World Cup.

The second step would be to retrain referees to apply the law more uniformly. In one match Ballack’s trod on Sissoko’s ankle gets him a straight red (an incident in which Sissoko is off the ground immediately after the card is shown), and in another Hunt puts a knee to Cech’s head and walks away with a warning.

The third step would be to weigh the severity of an injury before deciding punishment. It is a fair extension of the law in everyday life, and while football is a contact sport that does not mean that you can get away with putting people in the hospital through reckless challenges.

What about Chelsea?

And in all this mess, Chelsea need to think about their own image, and how they are poisoning the chalice for themselves. Champions in football are hated, yes, but Manchester United and Liverpool (in their time) won grudging respect for being graceful champions even if they had a lot of money. Chelsea are like the unwanted child who is suddenly the most powerful magician in the world but cannot understand why he’s not respected. Respect is earned, not bought, and right now, every move they make is losing them respect and earning them more hate.



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Discussion - 5 Responses

  1. 18/10/2006 Hugo Steckelmacher

    Ahmed, you talk about better protection for goalkeepers. Can you tell me when the last time a goalkeeper sustained a “near-fatal” injury was? I’m afraid that I feel you are guilty of sensationalism on this matter. And goalkeepers already have an unbelievable (excessive) amount of protection given to them. There seems to be some unspoken rule which states that any player jumping in the vicinity of the goalkeeper will immediately concede a free-kick (the amount of times this happens directly from a corner is quite astonishing). Take this for what it was – a freak incident (whether or not you believe that Hunt is guilty).

  2. What a bunch of twaddle.

    Can someone explain how if Cech is on the floor – how did Hunt’s knee hit him in the face? It does not make sense – Hunt dropped his knee to catch Cech and for that should be banned just like Thatcher. Physics dictate that when Homo sapiens run, our knee’s stay at least 1/2 metre over the ground – cech’s skull was on the floor so only 20/30cm’s from the ground.

    If hunt’s boot had clipped his skull, fair enough – but his knee!! It is not possible that if you are running normally your knee could strike an object 20cm’s from the floor.

    The reason Hunt was not given a card and not berrarted in the media is because it was the chelsea keeper. Just imagine if Essien had done that to the Reading keeper – there would be calls to have him disbarred from the league!!

    It makes me laugh this anti-chelsea sentiment at the momment – hahaha – it’s all loser talk. We bought the title? Of course we did – so what – so did manu and LFC. £30 million of ferdinand – £25 million on Rooney!! come on.

    Whatever you chelsea haters – we don’t care what you think we just enjoy winning. You carry on whining while instead should be focusing on why your team is shite instead.

    God bless Roman’s blue army!!

  3. Hugo,

    The reason i’m making such a big fuss about this is that if this is swept under the rug as a ‘freak incident’, we’re going to keep seeing more of this behavior as teams become more physical in a bid to intimidate the opposition and win the game. This sort of incident would have been acceptable in the Championship, and that’s the scary bit.

    Yes, keepers have too much protection when they are jumping for the ball, but they have no protection for when they are on the ground, or the fact that if someone flies into them like Sonko does it’s not protection, it’s a legitimate foul and a card.

    My concern is that too little will be made of it, and as a result fouls against keepers will become more common.

    your point, about keepers being protected, is fair but i’m not opposing it.

  4. 18/10/2006 Hugo Steckelmacher

    I am currently unsure as to whether I think hunt was in the wrong or not. My initial impression was that it was an accident, but now I am somewhat suspicious. Anyway, mr True Blue (a partisan name indeed), given your sound knowledge of physics, presumably you are aware that people are able to stumble? I.e. that not every path is trodden at a steady rate with each pace being of the same length and with the foot raised exactly the same amount off the ground.

  5. Last time I checked football was a contact sport. Last time I checked players and goalkeepers clashing in an attempt to get the ball didn’t start during the Chelsea-Reading game.

    The actions of the Reading players on Chelsea’s two keepers aren’t sometime we should be all cheery about but we shouldn’t confuse Mourinho’s lunacy as a debateable topic. When Alan Smith severly broke his leg last season you didn’t hear SAF shouting from the roof tops calling for the head of the opposing player or throwing consipracy theories out there.

    I do hope that Cech and Cudicini recover from their injuries for both a talented players but injuries are an inherent risk when you play the game of football. Mourinho attention crys should be ignored and not entertained.

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