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Played
December 6, 2011 2:45 PM EST
Stamford Bridge — London
Referee: G. Rocchi
Attendance: 41109
December 6, 2011 2:45 PM EST
Stamford Bridge — London
Referee: G. Rocchi
Attendance: 41109
To Be Announced Shortly
Didier Drogba
Chelsea
Chelsea
To Be Announced Shortly
Víctor Ruiz
Valencia
Valencia
Chelsea 3-0 Valencia: Inspirational Didier Drogba scores twice to send impressive Blues through as Group E winners
The 33-year-old rolled back the years with the club's fastest-ever goal in the Champions League after just three minutes and added a third after Ramires punished poor defending
By George Ankers
Getty Images
Didier Drogba rolled back the years with two goals as Chelsea eased the pressure on manager Andre Villas-Boas with a 3-0 victory over Valencia that sees the club qualify from Group E of the Champions League in top spot.
Drogba opened the scoring from close range after just three minutes to set Chelsea on its way, before Ramires capitalized on a moment of laziness from Victor Ruiz for the second midway through the first half.
Having been set free by a glorious through-ball from Juan Mata with 15 minutes remaining, the Ivorian made no mistake to wrap up a significant victory for the Blues, one that, coupled with Genk's draw with Bayer Leverkusen, saw them win Group E.
Villas-Boas surprised many by omitting Frank Lampard from the starting XI, preferring Raul Meireles in midfield, while, as expected, Drogba got the nod up front ahead of Fernando Torres, in a team with just one change from the 3-0 win over Newcastle.
Chelsea carved out the first chance of the night, Daniel Sturridge battling to get past Jordi Alba on the right flank and passing to Drogba, who held the ball up before teeing up Meireles. The Portuguese let fly from distance but his shot was saved by Diego Alves.
But just a moment later, the Blues found a vital early breakthrough. Juan Mata picked the ball up on the left of the penalty area and slipped it to Drogba, who took a step forward and lashed it towards the net, with Alves getting a hand to it but not enough to divert it from the goal.
The Spaniards nearly replied instantly, with Tino Costa’s pass into Alba, who came in with a fine run from the left and rattled the crossbar with his shot.
David Albelda then tested Petr Cech with a magnificent strike from 25 yards out, curling deliciously towards the top corner before the Czech goalkeeper intervened.
After 20 minutes the Blues extended their advantage, with the irrepressible Drogba blazing forward before playing Ramires through. The Brazilian bore down on goal and took advantage of Ruiz’s hesitancy to take the ball round the center back and bury a simple finish.
They could have pulled further in front when Mata released Sturridge down the right flank but, rather than pick out Meireles, who was free in the area, the England man tried to take on Alves himself, his shot saved comfortably.
The rest of the half went largely to plan for Chelsea, sitting back and allowing Valencia the majority of possession but defending doggedly in deep positions and waiting for opportunities on the counter.
Valencia resumed its travails after the break, bringing on Aritz Aduriz after 10 minutes to partner Roberto Soldado up front as the club changed formation in the hopes of breaching the hosts’ stubborn defense.
Valencia found it difficult to create chances, coming closest when Antonio Barragan‘s attempted cross teetered over the top of the net and Cech was forced to tip it over the top to be safe.
As the game moved past the hour, Sofiane Feghouli caused a scare when he seized upon a rare gap in the Blues backline and struck towards goal, but Cech dove low to his left to parry it away.
With Villas-Boas beginning to make changes with a view to shutting the game down, Drogba was found in an increasingly rare forward foray for Chelsea. The Ivorian displayed fantastic strength to power past Ruiz and closed in on the Valencia net, but his shot was scuffed wide.
Yet he made up for his mistake two minutes later. Drogba was set free with a perfect through-ball from Mata behind him and, with both center backs taken out of the equation, passed the ball into the net in a cool finish.
The third goal visibly took the wind out of Valencia's sails and not even a brief pitch invasion could distract Chelsea from holding on for an important victory.
Drogba opened the scoring from close range after just three minutes to set Chelsea on its way, before Ramires capitalized on a moment of laziness from Victor Ruiz for the second midway through the first half.
Having been set free by a glorious through-ball from Juan Mata with 15 minutes remaining, the Ivorian made no mistake to wrap up a significant victory for the Blues, one that, coupled with Genk's draw with Bayer Leverkusen, saw them win Group E.
Villas-Boas surprised many by omitting Frank Lampard from the starting XI, preferring Raul Meireles in midfield, while, as expected, Drogba got the nod up front ahead of Fernando Torres, in a team with just one change from the 3-0 win over Newcastle.
Chelsea carved out the first chance of the night, Daniel Sturridge battling to get past Jordi Alba on the right flank and passing to Drogba, who held the ball up before teeing up Meireles. The Portuguese let fly from distance but his shot was saved by Diego Alves.
But just a moment later, the Blues found a vital early breakthrough. Juan Mata picked the ball up on the left of the penalty area and slipped it to Drogba, who took a step forward and lashed it towards the net, with Alves getting a hand to it but not enough to divert it from the goal.
The Spaniards nearly replied instantly, with Tino Costa’s pass into Alba, who came in with a fine run from the left and rattled the crossbar with his shot.
David Albelda then tested Petr Cech with a magnificent strike from 25 yards out, curling deliciously towards the top corner before the Czech goalkeeper intervened.
After 20 minutes the Blues extended their advantage, with the irrepressible Drogba blazing forward before playing Ramires through. The Brazilian bore down on goal and took advantage of Ruiz’s hesitancy to take the ball round the center back and bury a simple finish.
They could have pulled further in front when Mata released Sturridge down the right flank but, rather than pick out Meireles, who was free in the area, the England man tried to take on Alves himself, his shot saved comfortably.
The rest of the half went largely to plan for Chelsea, sitting back and allowing Valencia the majority of possession but defending doggedly in deep positions and waiting for opportunities on the counter.
Valencia resumed its travails after the break, bringing on Aritz Aduriz after 10 minutes to partner Roberto Soldado up front as the club changed formation in the hopes of breaching the hosts’ stubborn defense.
Valencia found it difficult to create chances, coming closest when Antonio Barragan‘s attempted cross teetered over the top of the net and Cech was forced to tip it over the top to be safe.
As the game moved past the hour, Sofiane Feghouli caused a scare when he seized upon a rare gap in the Blues backline and struck towards goal, but Cech dove low to his left to parry it away.
With Villas-Boas beginning to make changes with a view to shutting the game down, Drogba was found in an increasingly rare forward foray for Chelsea. The Ivorian displayed fantastic strength to power past Ruiz and closed in on the Valencia net, but his shot was scuffed wide.
Yet he made up for his mistake two minutes later. Drogba was set free with a perfect through-ball from Mata behind him and, with both center backs taken out of the equation, passed the ball into the net in a cool finish.
The third goal visibly took the wind out of Valencia's sails and not even a brief pitch invasion could distract Chelsea from holding on for an important victory.
Goal
Own Goal
Penalty
Penalty Missed
Yellow Card
Assist
Penalty Save
Penalty Shootout Goal
Penalty Shootout Miss
Yellow Card / Red Card
Red Card
Substitution IN
Substitution OUT
Injury
Goal.com Rating
Goal.com Man of the Match
Goal.com Flop of the Match
Top & Flop Global Ranking
Fans' Man of the Match
Fans' Flop of the Match
Match News
Top Scorers
| Player | Goals | Penalties | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Lionel Messi
Striker Barcelona |
14 | 4 |
|
|
Mario Gomez
Striker FC Bayern München |
13 | 0 |
|
|
Cristiano Ronaldo
Striker Real Madrid |
10 | 2 |
|
|
Karim Benzema
Striker Real Madrid |
7 | 0 |
|
|
Didier Drogba
Striker Chelsea |
6 | 0 |

