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Saturday, April 25, 2009

Chelsea Football Ticket News 01 - 26/4/2009

Chelsea Boss Guus Hiddink: England Is The Place To Be

The Dutchman, on loan from Russia, is delighted to be in England...

EPL: Guus Hiddink, Chelsea v Everton (PA)
EPL: Guus Hiddink, Chelsea v Everton (PA)

Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink has clearly been impressed with English football during his short time at Stamford Bridge, with the global reach of the Premier League particularly impressing him, as well as the competitive nature of the play.

He also went as far as to recommend England to any young, ambitious coaches who wanted to carve a reputation for themselves in the game.

"If you see the reaction after our games against Liverpool and after our game against Arsenal, not just here in England but worldwide - from South America, Australia, Asia - people know this is the place to be. Any manager who is young should be here," Hiddink told the clib's official website.

"It is the place to be. It is well-organised. Of course there are always incidents in any country but people respect each other here.

"Personally I am well-received in all the clubs I go to and there is respect and class in the Premier League. People love the football wherever their place is in society."

Chelsea travel across London to face West Ham United at Upton Park tomorrow, and Hiddink, although acknowledging it will be tough, has not yet given up completely on the Blues' bid for the league title.

"I said it is not off, but the big clubs are not wasting many points and it is very difficult, but I don't exclude it," he stated.

"We want to fight on three roads and it might cost you if your squad is not fully equipped. Sometimes you might pay a price too high if you fight on three roads."

Zack Wilson, Goal.com

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Blues are finally bust after display worse than Alistair Darling

By Matthew Norman

After the astonishing boom of goals at Anfield the previous evening, the bust swiftly followed at Stamford Bridge as the rate of interest in the title race fell to virtually zero. This precursor to next month's FA Cup Final was half as uplifting and electrifying as Alistair Darling's delivery of his Budget, and there was no surprise about that.

Along with birth, death and taxes, one of the certainties of human existence is that intense pleasure must always be followed by pain. Drink too much and you suffer a hangover. Eat too well and you end up on that wonder drug with side effects too gruesome to be dwelt on here. Have sex and 14 years later you're staring across the breakfast table at a surly adolescent.

All in all, then, it was inevitable that the 4-4 feast served up by Liverpool and Arsenal would be balanced by scoreless famine when Chelsea and Everton renewed the London-Scouse rivalry 24 hours later.

When Guus Hiddink insisted, before this wretched game, that Chelsea still had a shot at winning the Premier League, he was speaking with precisely the same fake optimism Darling brought to his prediction that the economy will shortly begin to recover. He knew he was talking ritualistic nonsense but what else could he say?

Judging by the apathy that suffused them for the first 75 minutes, the Chelsea players were also well aware that their coach was talking cobblers about challenging Manchester United.

And even if it wasn't obvious to them before the match, it had become abundantly so within 10 minutes of the kick-off when it fell to a natural-born Evertonian to remove any lingering doubt about the title. Once Wayne Rooney had given United the early lead against Portsmouth, the evening's pointlessness was fully established and two teams with nothing but the avoidance of injury to concern them duly reflected the irrelevance.

Everton under the splendid David Moyes are neither elegant nor aesthetically pleasing but they are spirited and well drilled. These yeoman qualities were more than enough to frustrate Chelsea, whose lack of a playmaker with the vision to unlock defences has seldom been so apparent.

The other thing Chelsea sorely need is to concede the first goal. These days, their finest performances invariably come when they are invigorated by the shock of falling behind. In this, if nothing else, they were unlucky last night, because Everton striker Jo was wildly profligate when twice given a clear run on Petr Cech's goal.

Had the Brazilian taken either of those sitters, no doubt Chelsea would have been roused from their slumbers and gone on to win. Instead, with nothing to motivate them, they huffed and puffed in a first half of such dullness that Didier Drogba's mandatory pretend injury (a minute of agonised writhing, languid hobble off for treatment, return to the pitch within 11 seconds miraculously cured; the usual sequence) came as light relief.

The second half maintained the tedium, until with a quarter-hour remaining full-strength Chelsea decided that they might as well try to beat under-strength Everton. The tempo was raised, and a few decent chances were made, until in added time Drogba produced the game's only memorable moment, when he spun beautifully off his marker and quivered the bar with a half-volley. But the game didn't deserve a winner, let alone a glorious one, and it would have meant nothing to either side.

This feckless performance won't worry Hiddink a jot. His mind will be firmly focused on more momentous challenges, such as the rematch with Everton at Wembley at the end of May, and the small matter of the imminent Champions League semi-final against Barcelona.

What perhaps will worry him, when he gets round to watching the tape of last night's scintillating 4-0 demolition of Sevilla, is Barca's form. They are playing the football of the gods right now, so heaven help Chelsea if they perform at the Nou Camp as they did at Stamford Bridge last night. Something tells me that they will be back to their combative best in Spain, and will at the very least have the spark of falling behind to ignite the fire. If this pallid fixture was the calm (and it had the tranquillity of a controlled coma), the oncoming storm will be something to savour.

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Chelsea Football Ticket News 01 - 24/4/2009

Chat with Chelsea defender Alex


Chelsea's Alex will be chatting at 16.00CET on FridayChelsea's Alex will be chatting at 16.00CET on Friday (©Getty Images)

Chelsea FC's Brazilian defender Alex will be in the Talk Football chatroom at 16.00CET on Friday to answer your queries about his team's UEFA Champions League run.

Tickets to win
You may want to ask the 26-year-old about Chelsea's quarter-final victory against Liverpool FC and his side's continental campaign thus far, or look ahead to the Blues' last-four encounter with FC Barcelona. Remember that you can win tickets to a UEFA Champions League game courtesy of Ford by participating in this webchat. Three prizes of two UEFA Champions League match tickets go to the users who post the best comments, questions and queries on the Talk Football website during every round of matches.

©uefa.com 1998-2009. All rights reserved.

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Chelsea Football Ticket News 01 - 23/4/2009

Illegal Cup final tickets worry

FA Cup Final tickets are being offered for sale on the internet before they are issued to football clubs, the BBC has learned.The FA said the practice is illegal and that its lawyers would be investigating websites claiming to sell seats for the Chelsea-Everton match on 30 May.
One website is asking £1,040 for seats in the Chelsea section.
The website owners say they are not breaking any rules because their business is based in Spain.
The FA is also planning to launch a major anti-touting campaign later on Thursday.
Reselling of football tickets is banned in England because of fears of trouble between rival supporters who are normally seated separately from one another.

We're concerned our fans are possibly considering buying tickets online - which the websites just don't have Everton spokesman Ian Ross But the websites, who cannot be named for legal reasons, claim to be selling tickets to whoever is willing to pay hugely inflated prices.
One site is asking for £713 for seats behind the Everton goal. The price goes up to £845 for a view from what it refers to as "longside".
Chelsea fans are being charged £546 for a seat behind the goal with up to £975 for a seat in what it calls club level.
Peter Trenter of Chelsea Supporters Group said: "It's a common problem. Unofficial sites selling tickets at extortionate prices."
But there is surprise that fans are being offered tickets, when seating arrangements and ticket allocation for the two sides have still to be finalised.
The clubs are due to meet with FA officials on Thursday to discuss seating plans for this year's final.
"The tickets haven't even been printed yet. It's physically impossible for them to have them," said Everton spokesman Ian Ross.
One website told the BBC that it wasn't breaking the law because it was based in Spain.
"It probably is illegal in England but we're in Spain so that's how we get around it," said a spokesman.
The FA said the fact that the company was based abroad was irrelevant.
"It doesn't matter if they are in Spain. It is illegal in England. That's all that matters," said an FA spokesman.
The Premier League has also been trying to clamp down on internet ticket touts. It has in the past written to owners of websites to warn them to stop trading or risk prosecution.
In the last six weeks it has closed down 30 websites selling Premier League tickets illegally.
But fans say the only reason they turn to the ticket touts is because the FA is failing to make enough legitimate tickets available.
Tickets sold
Even though Wembley has a 90,000 capacity, only 52,000 tickets went directly to fans last year. Portsmouth and Cardiff both received 26,000 tickets each.
A further 20,000 tickets were passed onto what's called the "football family." They include the regional FAs and referees. Sponsors and charity partners also got a share.
In total, 17,000 tickets went to Club Wembley - the 10-year season ticket allocation which were sold to help cover the cost of building the ground.
"The websites are there because of the way the FA allocate tickets," said Kenny Sweeney of the Mid Cheshire Everton Supporters Club.
"Everton and Man Utd had 64,000 tickets for the semi-final - 24,000 went to other people. That's wrong."
Because FA Cup Final tickets are likened to gold dust among fans, both Chelsea and Everton are expecting a huge demand when they go on sale.
Everton has appealed to supporters to only purchase tickets through the club.
"I think there'll be unprecedented demand from Everton fans. We're concerned our fans are possibly considering buying tickets online - which the websites just don't have," said Mr Ross.

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