The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chelsea back in top four after Brighton draw

-

LONDON: Chelsea moved into the Premier League’s top four after a 0-0 draw against Brighton on Tuesday, but the result was completely overshadow­ed by the club’s role in derailing the controvers­ial European Super League.

Just before kick-off at Stamford Bridge, it was widely reported that Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich had decided to withdraw from the controvers­ial breakaway plan.

While there was no official confirmati­on from the club, the Blues are understood to be preparing documents to formally quit the tournament.

Manchester City became the first team to officially pull out, with Manchester United, Liverpool, Arsenal and Tottenham also confirming their exits.

Barcelona, Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, Juventus, AC Milan and Inter Milan are the only remaining members of a Super League that crumbled before a match was ever played.

Against that dramatic backdrop, Chelsea produced a flat performanc­e, although the draw saw Thomas Tuchel’s side move into fourth place above West Ham on goal difference.

“We talk of nothing else but Super League before the match. I was affected so I think the players were affected,” Tuchel said.

“The situation was not clear. I was informed like you were informed. You have to accept the distractio­n.

“We tried to create an atmosphere to win the game but could not. We looked mentally tired.”

Chelsea visit West Ham on Saturday in a crucial clash in the race to qualify for next season’s Champions League.

Just hours before kickoff, it seems Chelsea would not have to worry about qualifying for Europe thanks to their invitation to the closed-door Super League.

But after resounding condemnati­on from across the political and sporting spectrum, Chelsea are set to walk away.

Abramovich and chairman Bruce Buck reportedly feared staying in the Super League would seriously damage Chelsea’s reputation, therefore underminin­g their antisemiti­sm campaignin­g and community work.

While Stamford Bridge remained empty due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, around 1,000 fans had staged an angry protest before news of the Super League meltdown broke.

The cheers when Chelsea’s imminent exit became public knowledge were as loud as any that greeted goals from the Blues when they fans were last allowed into the stadium.

Chelsea supporter Dan Silver said: “I’m absolutely delighted that common sense has prevailed. The fans being at Stamford Bridge had an impact I believe.

“This is by far the best decision for the future of the beautiful game. No one should ever underestim­ate football fans again.”

Another unnamed supporter shouted: “The fans have won.”

Chelsea were believed to have initially agreed to sign up after fearing they would be left behind financiall­y.

But they have backtracke­d following furious criticism that culminated in the protest on their own doorstep.

Chelsea fans had unfurled banners reading: “RIP Football 1863 - 2021”, “Created by the poor, stolen by the rich”, “We want our cold nights in Stoke” and “Roman do the right thing”

 ?? - AFP photo ?? Chelsea’s French striker Olivier Giroud (2R) heads at goal but fails to score during the match against Brighton and Hove Albion at Stamford Bridge.
- AFP photo Chelsea’s French striker Olivier Giroud (2R) heads at goal but fails to score during the match against Brighton and Hove Albion at Stamford Bridge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia