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Chelsea - The Masters of Anti-football

Article by Lee Beevor

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During the season past, a certain stigma has grown to be associated with the style of football employed by Chelsea. Perpetrated primarily by Arsenal and Liverpool supporters, it has been said that Chelsea achieves success by playing “anti-football”. The term relates to an ultra defensive strategy, with emphasis placed upon avoiding defeat at any cost. This they say invariably ensures a boring game for the spectators, albeit often with a fortunate positive result for Jose Mourinho’s dastardly team of pirates.

I find the whole affair extremely funny. Yes, Chelsea is an efficient side and yes, Mourinho often employs tactics to nullify the strengths of an opponent. However, he invariably endeavours to win and only employs a rigid defensive formation for the most testing of fixtures. For example, away from home to our title rivals, he starts with the premise that the outcome of the match will be ultimately determined by a moment of brilliance or an individual error. Against this backdrop, we will sit and wait for the home team to probe away, breaking quickly when they lose possession. With Matic and Luiz employed in front of the back four, their tackling and passing ability lends itself perfectly to this approach. They feed the likes of Hazard, Schurrle, Oscar and Salah quickly, who in turn burst through or past their often out of position opponents.

Quite why this strategy is suddenly deemed anti-football is beyond me. Every team that visits Stamford Bridge uses a variation of exactly the same plan, albeit usually a solitary forward is deployed. Those that attempt to attack are inevitably soundly thrashed, such as Tottenham and Arsenal, so why do it? Those that come with a more circumspect approach are by contrast, often rewarded. This was particularly this year, when the absence of a decent striker left many goal-scoring chances unconverted. Chelsea themselves used this tactic in, by my reckoning, just five of their thirty eight Premier League matches; at Old Trafford, the Emirates, White Hart Lane, the Etihad and Anfield. The reward was three draws and two victories.

Furthermore, this is not a brand new master plan drawn up by the Special One to conquer the world. Teams have been trying for decades to achieve the same sort results in exactly the same way. However, for some strange reason, these were classified as glorious triumphs against the odds! Question Liverpool fans about their awful football under Benitez and all they remember is Istanbul. For those a little older, the European campaigns of the time of Alan Hansen were based on defensive solidarity. When on their travels, rolling the ball back and forth across the back four was commonplace, with no attempt whatsoever made to attack. This type of pedestrian plan led eventually to the change in regulations relating to the back pass.

Turning to our North London neighbours, Arsenal, the self-proclaimed paragons of virtue in all football matters. Prior to their FA Cup victory against Hull, their previous trophy came way back in 2005 in the same competition. I know this is a very long time ago, so no doubt the game itself has been long forgotten, but fortunately I am here to remind you! On this occasion, a particularly strong Manchester United was the opponent, leading Wenger to opt for a 4-5-1 formation. By extra time, the Gunners had given up all pretences of trying to earn an outright victory, preferring to play for penalties. However, anti-football was not invented in 2005, as older supporters who can recall when Arsenal’s ground was not named after a sponsor will attest. In those days, “One-nil to the Arsenal” rang around Highbury, acclaiming George Graham’s duffers grinding out another three points (or was it two then?) in the dullest manner imaginable.

I’ve singled out these two clubs as their fans are by far the quickest to levy such accusations at Chelsea, despite the dross they’ve endured on their own terraces. The strange thing is many of our greatest memories as fans come when our side is the underdog, defeating a more gifted team on their own patch. The buzz of escaping a mauling, with last ditch blocks and goal line clearances a-plenty, is a wonderful feeling. Quite why this is suddenly given such a negative connotation is beyond me. Granted Mourinho’s millionaires are hardly minnows, but faced with a rampant Manchester City at the Etihad, it would have been madness to blindly attack. After many others were soundly thrashed, Chelsea did what no other was able to do and won, deservedly so. You can call it anti-football if you wish, but I found it beautiful!

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10 comments:

  1. Congratualtions - your article was marginally more interesting than "parking two buses".

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  2. I actually have nothing against a team playing defensively, especially when away to the 'better' teams. However, just to refesh your memory, it was your 'special one' who had a dig at Spurs for 'parking the bus' in a draw at Stamford Bridge during his first spell at Chelsea. Those who live by the sword...?

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  3. Oh, and how about the dig about '19th century football' towards West Ham this past season? Has Chelsea done an Apple, and patented ultra defensive football so that any other team using these tactics will come under strong criticism from your 'special one'? Your club will demand two billion from the likes of West Ham and Spurs next, for copying the 'look and feel' of Chelsea. Or maybe, just maybe, that your 'special one' is a hypocrite of the first order?

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  4. I'm not particularly bothered with the way Chelsea play - if it brings success and their fans are happy with it then so be it. Yet with all those tricky, attacking players they have who cost £25-£30mil+, I just think its a bit of a shame. Surely such an expensively assembled squad should be offering something more?

    But its the hypocrisy of the manager that tickles me most, not the way they play.

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  5. How about losing out in the champions league semi final to Atheletico Madrid? Is that not anti football? Chelsea couldn't score after the first goal cos they had 6 defenders. Evidently, the so called "special one" envy Liverpool attacking power especially Suarez, that's why he take a dig at Suarez for getting the PFA and FWA best player award.

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  6. Just look at the two games that were played by chelsea and manu this season and last! Last season it was end to end exciting stuff, this season it was a dull and boring game. Enough said!!

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  7. All fans will have sympathy for the Premier League era of Wimbledon, who hit it long and somehow survived despite such small crowds until 2000.

    However, if Chelsea are to spend close to 3 quarters of a billion pounds, claim that they belong in the exalted company of Barca, Bayern & Real, yet play like the impoverished Dons, then something definitely has escaped translation.

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  8. Congrats. You've earned your pay I guess. The question is how many people have you convinced?

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  9. Well if you are really happy with watching boring football then why the need to pen an article about it? Or perhaps you dont really enjoy it and are trying to put a positive slant on it by denigrating Liverpool and Arsenal, 2 sides that do play very nice watchable football

    Chelsea can carry on all they want with the really really boring football they play, after all if that what it takes to win trophies then,... oh wait... nothing won

    All those billions, the supposed best manager in the world and what did you win
    That dreadful football Liverpool played under Benitez was not any way negative as the Chelsea football under Mourinho and yet with pretty much the same players Benitez managed to win something at Chelsea
    Like Mourinho, stop talking about others and concentrate on yourselves, who knows, if you improve your footbball maybe your fans will bring their own banners and not need the club to provide little flags to wave about

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