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Kategori: Chelsea (Side 2 af 2)

Carlo Ancelotti says Chelsea cannot lose to Copenhagen

• Manager admits most of his team not playing their best
• Champions League is Chelsea's last chance for silverware

A defiant Carlo Ancelotti has refused to countenance the possibility of his ailing Chelsea side enduring Champions League humiliation to FC Copenhagen on Tuesday. Elimination from the FA Cup on Saturday intensified the pressure on the Italian, who insisted that he would not consider his own position even if Chelsea's season continued to unravel.

Defeat to Everton on penalties on Saturday was the London club's first in the FA Cup since 2008 and, with Manchester United now a distant 12 points clear of the title holders, has left the Champions League as Chelsea's only remaining route to silverware. Ancelotti and his side were due to fly to Denmark on Monday before the first leg of their European tie with the stark admission that only two or three of his players are playing near their best, but insistent that a loss to Danish opponents is unthinkable.

"Chelsea will not go out against Copenhagen," he said. "Playing this game gives us the right kind of pressure. We have 180 minutes coming up to win this tie. We have to maintain our levels, stay together and work hard together. Maybe this game will be a good moment to get a result and, obviously, keep our season alive. We are out of the FA Cup, and we haven't done well in the Premier League: to win the Champions League will not be easy, but it brings great motivation for all of us.

"As for me, I am not here to consider my own position. It is the owner who has to consider my position. I just have to work and try my best. The pressure is football – you have to be able to manage at moments like this." Ancelotti has a year to run on his contract at Stamford Bridge beyond the end of this season, with no talks scheduled until summer at the earliest over extending his stay. Both parties are apparently at ease over that arrangement. Asked whether he would ever walk away from the job, he replied: "No."

Regardless, the repercussions of elimination to the Danes would threaten his position. Chelsea already face a stern test to finish in the top four this year – they trail Tottenham Hotspur by two points after only five wins in 16 league matches – but losing over two legs to FC Copenhagen would represent humiliation. Stale Solbakken's side have not played a competitive fixture since their last group game in early December and have never reached this stage of the knockout phase before. To be jettisoned by such unfancied opponents could yet make Ancelotti's position untenable, whether immediately or at the end of the season.

Ancelotti was painfully realistic in conceding his team's confidence was fragile at best. Asked how many of his players other than the goalkeeper Petr Cech were performing near their peak, the manager replied: "At this moment? [Branislav] Ivanovic, who is playing consistently. And [John] Terry. A couple of others are not, at this moment, playing with 100% fitness."

That would appear to refer to the likes of Frank Lampard, Chelsea's scorer against Everton, and Didier Drogba, but may also apply to Fernando Torres. The £50m forward, who has shown only flashes of his best in his two games for the club to date, is eligible for the Champions League and will start at the Parken Stadium with the visitors hopeful his period of adjustment into a new team is now over.

Ancelotti needs the forward to find his form immediately. The manager's achievement in winning the Premier League and FA Cup in his first season in charge, together with the reality that Roman Abramovich had personally pursued his appointment from Milan having missed out in the summer of 2008, had offered him some level of security in his position. Indeed, the owner's lavish £71.6m outlay on Torres and David Luiz – who is cup-tied in Europe – last month had reinforced the sense that the manager would be given time to rejuvenate his squad.

Yet a fourth-place finish and qualification for the Champions League, with its financial implications, still represents the minimum requirement expected of any Chelsea manager and, at present, inconsistent form is threatening that pursuit. Torres's attempt to settle is just another aspect betraying the fact that, both on the pitch and behind the scenes, this feels like a club in a state of flux.

While the manager's long-term future at Stamford Bridge remains the focus, Hamburg have confirmed Frank Arnesen will become their director of football in the summer when, as planned, he leaves Chelsea at the end of his contract. The Premier League club's chief scout Lee Congerton is to accompany the Dane to the Bundesliga club as technical director. Hans Gillhaus is leaving to join the Dutch team Feyenoord as its technical director and the French scout Guy Hillion is to become the sporting director at Nantes. Chelsea is to implement a radical overhaul of its scouting department.


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‘I don’t know if Abramovich would have bought Chelsea without my goal’

Jesper Gronkjaer, now at FC Copenhagen, recounts the inside story of the Russian's Stamford Bridge revolution

Jesper Gronkjaer is well aware of the legend, even if he cannot vouch entirely for its veracity. Just prior to kick-off on the final day of the domestic campaign eight years ago, the then Chelsea chief executive, Trevor Birch, addressed a hushed squad in the changing room at Stamford Bridge and confirmed the club was teetering on the brink of financial ruin. Lose to Liverpool and players would be sold, merciless cutbacks implemented across the board and ambitions radically downsized.

Yet some two hours later, with victory secured and Champions League qualification guaranteed at the visitors' expense, that same club had apparently been transformed into the plaything Roman Abramovich could not resist. Within six weeks, Chelsea would be bought, with money suddenly no object, and the landscape of the modern game would never be the same again. And all, as the myth goes, courtesy of Gronkjaer's first-half winner, daisy-cut into the far corner beyond a sprawling Jerzy Dudek: the billion-pound goal.

The lavish nature of the Abramovich era has served to embellish the mystique associated with that effort. Chelsea had needed only a draw that day so, technically, Gronkjaer's cross for Marcel Desailly's equaliser had been just as significant. The memory plays tricks too, when it comes to the goal itself, with the Dane recalling beating "three or four defenders", rather than just John Arne Riise. But the finish, conjured as he slipped to the turf, knocked the stuffing out of Gérard Houllier's team and made a debt-ridden Chelsea a more enticing proposition. "We all knew what we'd been playing for that afternoon," Gronkjaer says. "I don't know whether Abramovich would have bought Chelsea without my goal but the Champions League certainly made the club far more attractive. That is sure. Even so, no one would have believed he would come along with the amount of money he did, though."

Rumour had it that the oligarch had been weighing up whether to pour his rubles into either Chelsea or Tottenham Hotspur, who ended in mid-table that year. His decision made by a top-four finish, the summer would prompt a wave of spending the like of which had never been seen in the English game. Gronkjaer witnessed the first shots of the revolution from within the Chelsea dressing room but watched Abramovich flex his muscles in the transfer window last month, with £50m splashed out on Fernando Torres in a bid to secure the club's first European Cup, as an opponent in waiting. Now at FC Copenhagen, whom Chelsea confront on Tuesday, the 33-year-old hopes to frustrate his former club's annual pursuit of the Champions League.

The winger's four-year spell in London spanned the end of one era and the beginning of another, though his last season was played out amid upheaval in the immediate aftermath of Abramovich's takeover. The new owner purchased almost a new team in the close season of 2003, with over £113m spent on 10 new recruits – Hernán Crespo to Juan Sebastián Verón, Adrian Mutu to Claude Makelele – while those who had finished fourth the previous year looked on.

"We'd all thought it was just a normal takeover and didn't imagine he would have so much money and that everything would change," Gronkjaer says. "I remember on the second day of pre-season training, Abramovich turned up at the training ground and spoke to us all in Russian, with someone translating for him.

"It was maybe two or three weeks after the takeover and there were rumours flying around about everything: a new coach, new players, a new training ground, even a new stadium. It was a stressful period and the players already at the club had mixed feelings. Most of us were wondering if we would stay or go. He told us all to calm down, that some new players would come in and that he was going to change things a bit. It was good to escape to Malaysia for our pre-season tour but even there you couldn't escape things. New players were arriving all the time: Wayne Bridge suddenly walked in; the next day Damien Duff turned up, then Geremi, Joe Cole, Verón … it was a new team in the space of a few weeks.

"We all knew no one would spend that much for players to have them sitting on the bench but I decided to stay. I was worried about getting games – I wasn't just there for the money – but Claudio Ranieri said he wanted to keep me. We'd see Abramovich occasionally over the course of that year. He'd come into the dressing room, not saying anything – I don't know if he could speak English, or even understand it – but sitting there like one of the boys. But that was a difficult season, particularly for the manager, who was under pressure straight away. There were constant rumours about him leaving and he did very well keeping the pressure off the players. For Chelsea to finish second in the league and reach the semi-finals of the Champions League should have been a fantastic achievement but we didn't win anything."

Expectation levels had shifted. Elimination by Monaco when a first European Cup final was within reach left Ranieri a dead man walking. Sven-Goran Eriksson had been courted all too publicly by then, with attention subsequently turning to Porto's José Mourinho. The final-day victory over Leeds represented a farewell for both Ranieri and the goalscorer, Gronkjaer, with the players aware of the fate that awaited their manager. "We made a guard of honour for him to walk down that afternoon, but he knew," the Dane says. "He'd been up against it the whole season. I'd love to have won things there, too, but I'd decided to leave, back in the spring."

Brief spells at Birmingham City, Atlético Madrid and VfB Stuttgart followed before a return home to Copenhagen. The Danish club's achievement in reaching the knockout stage of the Champions League for the first time, emerging from a group that had included Barcelona (who were fortunate to escape the Parken stadium with a point), should not be underestimated. Their prospects have been hampered by the reality that their last competitive action was against Panathinaikos in December, with the Danish domestic season not due to start until next month. A training camps in La Manga, the Copa del Sol and two friendlies, the second won 5-0 against Rosenborg, represents the extent of their preparations. At best, they will be fresh.

"We have a chance," Gronkjaer says. "Chelsea have had a dip but they have missed Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba for part of the season, and they are two crucial players for them. Unfortunately for us they can still reach their top form, and they have brought in Torres. We know we're never going to be favourites but, if we can secure a good result in Copenhagen, we can give ourselves a chance.

"They will win the Champions League one day but to do that you obviously need a good team but also some luck. At the moment, Barcelona are probably a level above everyone else, so it's hard, but the signing of Torres shows Abramovich still has ambition and power. It said something. What has he spent there now? Only he can say whether it's been worth it." Gronkjaer will live with the legend that his goal convinced the billionaire to take the plunge in west London.


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FC Copenhagen fear lack of pace against Chelsea in Champions League

• Danes hope winter break will not leave them exposed
• Build-up to knockout round tie in Copenhagen at fever pitch

FC Copenhagen wrapped up their Champions League preparations with a 5-0 friendly win over Norwegian side Rosenborg ahead of the visit from Chelsea. However, questions remain over the form of the Danish champions, who have not played a competitive game since 7 December when they beat Panathinaikos to become the first Danish team to qualify for the knockout stages of Europe's leading club competition.

That result came three days after Copenhagen's last game in the Danish Superliga – which they lead by 19 points after 19 games – before the three-month winter break. In the two previous seasons, the adjustment to European football after the break has proved difficult for the Danes, who got knocked out of the Europa League by Manchester City and Marseille respectively. Copenhagen's six friendlies during the winter have all been against Scandinavian clubs.

"[Chelsea] play at a high tempo every fourth day and that is a deciding factor," the Copenhagen manager, Stale Solbakken, said. "We have known this since the draw and had hoped for a couple of better opponents but we couldn't get that. The players will be slightly worried about the pace but that will always be the case for Scandinavian teams this time of year. But if we come out of the first game all right, then we have got three weeks until the next, when we will be much further ahead and everything can happen – there we will also be able to beat Chelsea."

The central defender Solvi Ottesen is out with a back injury but otherwise Solbakken has a full squad. He is expected to start the game with the same 4-4-2 formation he played against Rosenborg, with the Brazilian striker César Santin partnering the Senegalese international Dame N'Doye up front and the former Chelsea winger Jesper Gronkjaer positioned on the left. The Costa Rican midfielder Cristian Bolaños impressed with two goals against Rosenborg and Copenhagen will hope his pace down the right side of the Danish attack can match up against Ashley Cole.

Copenhagen qualified second in their group behind Barcelona after wins away at Panathinaikos and at home against Rubin Kazan. They impressed in their two games against the Spanish champions, matching them for pace and possession for much of the second half at Camp Nou and drawing 1-1 at home.

That result was hailed as one of the greatest by a Danish team in international club competition and the build-up to the Chelsea game has reached fever pitch. Although a physically strong Chelsea side might be far from an ideal opponent from the manager's perspective, the match has some intriguing subplots. At the time of the draw rumours were rife of a Copenhagen takeover by Roman Abramovich's son Arkady, and much has been made of Gronkjaer facing the club who he propelled into the Champions League with his goal against Liverpool on the final day of the 2002-03 Premier League season.

Brian Laudrup also played for both clubs and he thinks that the Danes will exploit Chelsea's weaknesses. "Chelsea are dangerous at crosses and set pieces where they have a lot of strength but otherwise they play too slow and too individually," Laudrup told the newspaper Ekstra Bladet. "If Chelsea continue this way then FC Copenhagen have a chance."


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FC Copenhagen’s rise leads them to Champions League and Chelsea

FC Copenhagen were only formed in 1992 but have won six Danish titles in eight years

FC Copenhagen were founded only 19 years ago but they keep doing the impossible. They have won six of the past eight league titles; they have managed to get Jesper Gronkjaer fit and firing on all cylinders; and this season they are so superior domestically that they are making the Scottish Premier League look decidedly competitive. Not a bad feat.

Stale Solbakken's side are 19 points ahead of second-placed Odense in the Danish Superliga at the halfway point of the season. They are the Celtic or Rangers of Scandinavia. Or make that the Bayern Munich or Lyon of the north. They have become so rich and successful that they can buy the best emerging talents from other Danish teams, strengthening their own team while weakening those of their rivals.

Denmark, clearly, is no longer big enough for this emerging behemoth. On Tuesday FC Copenhagen take on Chelsea in the Champions League and they will do so in the knowledge that they rattled Barcelona in the group stage and that the English champions are struggling. The Danes will fancy their chances, despite not having played a competitive game for four months because of the winter break.

It is a remarkable position to be in less than two decades after the club was formed – a merger of two clubs (KB and B 1903). How have they done it? "There are two parts to our success," says the sporting director, Carsten Jensen. "First we came up with a long-term business plan, with the football club as the focal point and other businesses, such as holiday companies and fitness chains, supporting the football club. So that gave us a solid financial footing. Second, we hired Roy Hodgson as a manager in 2000 and he revolutionised the way we looked at football.

"Before Roy came in, the players had just come in to train and to have a laugh. He made us focus throughout the week. He prepared everyone thoroughly and within a year the whole attitude of the club had changed. He laid the foundations of an ethos, a philosophy, at the club and what he did still has a big influence on how we work here."

The club continued to prosper, having bought Parken Stadium (where England played and where Chelsea will play). They let it to entertainment groups (for concerts) and the Danish Football Association (for internationals) and increased their revenue. In 2006 FC Copenhagen beat Manchester United in the Champions League group stage and a seventh league title in nine years is sure to come in May.

Yet there is a slight difference in playing bottom club Aalborg in the Danish Superliga and Chelsea in the Champions League. But the fact that Chelsea paid a transfer fee – £50m on Fernando Torres – that would keep FC Copenhagen running for more than five years does not seem to perturb Jensen. "Talent-wise we obviously can't compete with the best teams in Europe," he says. "But we have looked at successful clubs around Europe, with Arsenal and Manchester United being good examples, and developed our own philosophy. We have a long-term plan and do not listen to outside influences such as media and fans and go and sack a manager after a few bad results.

"We have had three coaches in 10 years and not sacked any of them. We have a system that all our teams, from the Under-14s to the first team, play and when a coach comes in he doesn't tell us how to play, we tell him how to play.

"We have to be much better than the top teams tactically and that's where our system comes in. We started 10 years ago with Roy and we learned how to defend properly and work as a team and gradually we are learning how to go forward in different ways. When we defend we play a 4-4-2 or sometimes a 4-4-1-1 but when we attack the players take up all sorts of different positions with fluidity. But without the solidness of our defending we could not challenge the top teams in the Champions League."

FCK's current success has been underpinned by the colourful coach Solbakken, the former Norwegian international who had an unsuccessful spell at Wimbledon in 1997-98 (six league games and one goal). He stopped playing in 2001 when he suffered a cardiac arrest during training with FC Copenhagen. His heart stopped beating for around six to seven minutes and his team-mates thought he had died, but he was revived and made a full recovery.

The experience has made Solbakken a laidback person off the field but he remains extremely competitive when it comes to achieving success for his team. "He was very determined as a player, with a hint of arrogance," Gronkjaer told the Swedish magazine Offside recently. "He had a colossal will to win. He was a general, a special kind of winner. I only played with him for a few months but you could tell within minutes. He still has a lot of those characteristics and I have a lot of respect for him and his attitude towards the team. He is always asking: 'How do we move our positions forward?' He has succeeded in taking this team to a completely different level. He is a motivator of the kind I have never seen before."

One thing is clear: Solbakken does not fear anyone. After FC Copenhagen had drawn 1-1 at home against Barcelona, Solbakken nearly came to blows with Pep Guardiola, with Sergio Busquets having to step in and push the FCK coach away. Guardiola was upset over some comments the Norwegian had made in the pre-match press conference but after the incident Solbakken just said: "Guardiola's behaviour was wrong, maybe he did not realise that it was just a Norwegian making a very bad joke."

On Tuesday, the joke could be on Chelsea.


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David Pleat’s guide to the Champions League teams facing English clubs

Tottenham and Arsenal have the toughest tasks on paper but none of the four English clubs has an easy ride

Milan v Tottenham Hotspur

The seven-times winners will not be relishing the prospect of a second leg at White Hart Lane, and Tottenham will take great heart if they can progress past this one. Milan have revived their fortunes and have a clear lead in Serie A, using their experienced players to great effect, but they may struggle to match the athleticism of Spurs. Incredibly, Filippo Inzaghi is now 37 but can still sneak a goal in his infrequent appearances. More dangerous up front will be the erratic Swede Zlatan Ibrahimovic, above. The Brazilian Pato, soon to return from injury, tends to run with the ball from deeper areas but is still truly to live up to his massive potential. In the centre of the field they have nous and combativeness with Massimo Ambrosini, Andrea Pirlo, Gennaro Gattuso and the evergreen Clarence Seedorf, while Ignazio Abate will have the task of quelling Gareth Bale. Many considered this Milan side to be ageing and over the hill two seasons ago, but Tottenham will respect them; they will need to sit tight in the first leg and rely on the advantage of the atmospheric White Hart Lane in the return.

The view from Italy

Italy breathes a sigh of relief. And understands that Uefa's bowl for the Champions League last 16 draw this time can be benign. Out immediately comes Milan, coupled with Tottenham, the most beatable of the English opponents. Il Giornale

How they qualified

Milan 2nd in Group G P6 W2 D2 L2 F7 A7

Spurs 1st in Group A P6 W3 D2 L1 F18 A11

League position: Milan 1st Spurs 5th

Tournament odds: Milan 22/1 Spurs 25/1

Previous meetings: Never met in the Champions League

FC Copenhagen v Chelsea

Copenhagen are no mean opponents at home, where they held Barcelona this season and beat Manchester United when they were last in the Champions League group stage, in 2006. In getting past that stage this year they have played 10 games, coming through the qualifiers, and are well clear of passive opponents in their domestic league. One cannot ignore the advantage gained in the group stage over wealthy Rubin Kazan and the Greeks, Panathinaikos, but they have the problem of playing the game in February, when their domestic season is on hold. The hub of Chelsea's team, Frank Lampard, right, and Michael Essien, need to regain fitness and form for the new year, but one cannot look beyond Chelsea. They will relish the short trip to meet Stale Solbakken's side. The erratic former Chelsea winger Jesper Gronkjaer, above, will renew friendships, and the Senegalese forward Dame N'Doye could be a danger. The player who is attracting most attention is the experienced Czech Zdenek Pospech, but there is not a single member of the Copenhagen side who Chelsea would ever consider purchasing – a fair barometer. This game looks like a stepping-stone towards Roman Abramovich's so-far elusive and persistent European dream.

The view from Denmark

Can we play this game now? FC Copenhagen will not be able to match Chelsea's pace after the long winter break. However, it is hard to imagine that the Danish champions will be completely run over. They are too tactically sound and physically strong for that to happen. Ekstra Bladet

How they qualified Copenhagen 2nd in Group D P6 W3 D1 L2 F7 A5

Chelsea 1st in Group F P6 W5 D0 L1 F14 A4

League position: Copenhagen 1st Chelsea 4th

Tournament odds Copenhagen 200/1 Chelsea 4/1

Previous meetings: Never met in the Champions League

Marseille v Manchester United

Didier Deschamps is proving a successful leader at the Stade Vélodrome, which is an intimidating venue from which Marseille will need to take an advantage to Old Trafford. Chelsea had little difficulty getting past the French side in their group, although with an under-strength team they lost to a late goal in Marseille, and Manchester United should dispose of them comfortably. They are not to be underestimated, and United fans with long memories will remember a 1-0 defeat on their only previous visit in 1999. The French side are pacy and carry a danger down the left, side where Taye Taiwo has some power. Sir Alex Ferguson will be reunited with his former defender Gabriel Heinze, above, who is very strong in the air. Up front the striker Loïc Rémy is fancied by several European clubs but around him there is a lack of creativity to disturb the defensive rock of Rio Ferdinand and the reliable Nemanja Vidic. Ferguson is integrating and progressing younger players with his usual shrewdness and one eye on the future. Quite smoothly, Rafael, Anderson and Nani are establishing themselves as replacements for Gary Neville, Paul Scholes, and Ryan Giggs, as these three players enter the twilight of their careers.

The view from France

This is certainly a tricky assignment for OM. However, though Manchester United dominated their group they were not up to their usual standard … so, even if things didn't go well at the Vélodrome, OM would still have hope going to Old Trafford. La Provence

How they qualified Marseille 2nd in Group F P6 W4 D0 L2 F12 A3

Man Utd 1st in Group C P6 W4 D2 L0 F7 A1

League position: Marseille 5th Man Utd 1st

Tournament odds: Marseille 100/1 Man Utd 6/1

Previous meetings: Marseille wins 1 Man Utd wins 1 Draws 0

Arsenal v Barcelona

Anyone who witnessed Barcelona's mesmerising first 30 minutes at the Emirates last season, when they eliminated Arsenal in the quarter-finals, will be thirsting to see the tie of the round. How will Arsenal cope, knowing Barca never "park the bus" in first legs? Last time, Theo Walcott hinted at being a threat while the new-boy Marouane Chamakh will present a fresh challenge, attacking crosses against the uncompromising Carles Puyol and the tall Gerard Piqué. However, Arsenal will need Thomas Vermaelen to return, and the power of Abou Diaby to complement Cesc Fábregas, who will be determined to shine against Xavi and Andres Iniesta. Regardless of Lionel Messi's individual brilliance, above, it is Sergio Busquets who needs to be put under pressure as he instigates attacks from deep areas: in the first half at the Emirates last season, he dictated the tempo. Even with Robin van Persie and Fábregas on form, and both Vermaelen and Diaby recovered from injury, it looks a tie too far. However, Arsenal certainly will not lack motivation as they seek revenge for their elimination last season Everyone will wish Arsene Wenger and his team well.

The view from Spain

For the first time, Cesc will be able to play against Barcelona at Camp Nou. This tie comes too soon but will be brilliant. The first 45 minutes from Barcelona at the Emirates were a work of art ... this is a sensational match-up. El Mundo Deportivo

How they qualified Arsenal 2nd in Group H P6 W4 D0 L2 F18 A7

Barcelona 1st in Group D P6 W4 D2 L0 F14 A3

League position: Arsenal 2nd Barcelona 1st

Tournament odds: Arsenal 25/1 Barcelona 5/2

Previous meetings: Arsenal wins 0 Barcelona wins 3 Draws 2


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