Aston Villa 1-0 Chelsea - Delph's
moment of magic dents nine-man Blues' title hopes
Chelsea
manager Jose Mourinho was sent off
the pitch by the referee Chris Foy following the game of Chelsea vs Aston Villa
at the Villa park.Chelsea manager
dismissed for encroaching on thepitch
'I don't think this result makes any
difference to the title race' said Jose Mourinho.
The title
race is wide open again after Chelsea lost three points and most of their
composure in the dying minutes of their 1-0 defeat at
Villa Park, where José Mourinho was dismissed along with two
of his players.
Mourinho has
previous with the Merseyside referee Chris Foy, who has now sent off six
players and dispatched the manager in his past eight games involving Chelsea.
The Portuguese was incensed at being dismissed for encroaching on the pitch in
the melee that followed Ramires' late red card for a stamp on Karim El Ahmadi
because he said, with some justification, that he was not the only one. But he
will be waiting anxiously to see what Foy mentions in his report. He admitted
he had attempted to speak to the referee immediately after the game but denied
reports that he and John Terry had tried to force their way into the referee's
room.
"I want
to know what Mr Foy will write about my sending-off," the Chelsea manager
said. "Because if I was sent off for being on the pitch there were about
10 others doing the same. My assistants were on the pitch, Paul [Lambert] was
on the pitch with his assistants, and [Gabriel] Agbonlahor came from the dugout
and grabbed Ramires by the neck.
"So why
were none of the others sent off? I don't expect to be punished because I did
nothing. I did try twice to speak to Mr Foy, first on the pitch and then in the
dressing room area. I asked politely if I could have five seconds to speak with
him and he refused."
As Mourinho
is probably aware there is a convention that managers should not attempt to
speak to officials immediately after the final whistle, but should allow a
cooling-off period first. Mourinho was dismissed when tempers were fraying on
the pitch but insists he had collected himself afterwards and was merely
seeking an explanation. "Everyone was calm, no one was screaming," he
said. "This is not about a convention, just common sense."
Mourinho
took a dim view of an incident in the first half when Foy could have dismissed
Joe Bennett but let him escape with a yellow, the Chelsea manager leaping to
his feet to brandish an imaginary red card. He was probably right to feel
Willian was harshly treated in earning a second yellow for a slight tug on
Fabian Delph, scorer of the game's only goal, but could not possibly have
defended the action that brought Ramires a deserved straight red. "That
was a shocker," Lambert said. "It was a no-brainer for the referee,
it could've been a leg-breaker. If anyone says otherwise I beg to differ."
Mourinho, quite cutely, declined to discuss either incident because he did not
want to get into any more trouble.
When the
dust finally settled Chelsea were left with nine men and no more points than
they had started out with, whereas Manchester
City's performance with 10 men at Hull has put them back in control
in the title race. Mourinho has been saying all along that a nine-point lead
counts for nothing when City have three games in hand, so clearly a six-point
lead counts for even less. If City win all their remaining games, and unlike
Chelsea they now have only the league on which to concentrate, they will
eventually regain the leadership.
"I
don't think this result makes any difference to the title race because we are
not in the title race," Mourinho said, not entirely convincingly.
"All we are trying to do is win every match. Sometimes we do, sometimes we
don't, but that's our race."
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