City blast four past Chelsea
The Chelsea-Manchester City encounter began with no surprise – Wayne Bridge, much to everyone’s expectations, refused to shake hands with John Terry.
How it proceeded – right at the end of the first half – from then on, it was nothing short of spectacular. If you’re not on the blue side, that is.
The Blues were made to pay a heavy price for fielding their weakest link – keeper Hilario – and coupled with some bad defending, seeing them succumb 2-4 to the Eastlanders.
Not that Chelsea had any choice, now that Petr Cech is out for month after injuring himself against Inter Milan, but Carlo Ancelotti could very well be counting his losses now after a disastrous outing by the Portuguese.
The match began with Chelsea pushing forward with Nicolas Anelka and Didier Drogba leading the way, but it was Frank Lampard who opened the scoring three minutes from the break.
All hell broke loose after that. City, struggling to find their footing in the match, suddenly found themselves level with the league leaders, thanks to a bit of wizardry from Carlos Tevez and with some help from Hilario. Let’s not forget Terry and Ricardo Carvalho too.
Tevez managed to break loose from the tight markings of the two, and, faced with Hilario at the goal, planted a shot – a soft goal I should say – beyond the reach of the Portuguese into the back of the net.
Hilario’s nightmare continued into the second half; this time failing to stop a Craig Bellamy shot to give City a 2-1 lead against Chelsea.
But the drama didn’t end there. A reckless challenge by Juliano Belletti on Gareth Barry saw the Brazilian being flashed a straight red and City awarded a penalty, which was duly tucked home by, who else, Tevez.
Chelsea’s woes continued, with Michael Ballack being given a second yellow for his tackle on Tevez. Off Ballack went to accompany Belletti and count their misfortunes, leaving the Blues with just nine men.
Never mind that Bellamy got his second three minutes from the end, or that Lampard got HIS second through a penalty. Chelsea’s fate was signed, sealed and delivered.
In the end, I suppose you could say Bridge scored a psychological victory over Terry. On the other hand, now would be the perfect time for Manchester United to pounce.
Provided, of course, they don’t mess up the way Chelsea did. But for now, United have got Carling Cup on their mind.
As for Chelsea, it’s back to the drawing board. And time to clear the dirty linen. It stinks.






