Summary A spirited second-half display by the visitors earned a draw in the Saturday lunchtime London derby, John Terry levelling after an early Spurs strike.
There was added satisfaction that the point was gained despite the disadvantage of 10 men for the closing stages after Fernando Torres, who was causing the home side plenty of problems, was sent off following a second yellow card.
Tottenham took the lead after 18 minutes and looked capable of
increasing their advantage but Chelsea rallied well and could have added
to Terry's 64th-minute set-piece goal in the second period but for good saves from Tottenham keeper Hugo Lloris.
Team NewsThere were three changes to the side that began the last league game. David Luiz returned to defence and with Ramires passed fit following a hip strain suffered at Swindon, he moved forward to a wide right position in place of Andre Schurrle.
Frank Lampard returned to midfield alongside John Mikel Obi and Fernando Torres, a Capital One Cup scorer midweek, retained his place up front.
Tottenham were unchanged from their Premier League win at Cardiff.
First halfThe main excitement and incident of the
afternoon was saved for the second half, with the first period often a
cagey affair with Spurs often on top.
A quickly released pass down the middle towards Eden Hazard
threatened to become an early chance but the leaping Belgian couldn't
reach the ball with his outstretched leg. Then Lampard hooked a shot not
too far over with only a split-second to have a go after Torres caused
Spurs some problems.
At the other end Jan Vertonghen had the chance of a clear header at goal from a free-kick but planted it well wide, and David Luiz had to cover diligently and clear after Ashley Cole lost the ball out on the touchline.
In truth though, it was a messy start to the derby, the referee's
whistle frequently punctuating the action. Both sides then took turns at
a minute or two of more controlled possession and the reward, on 18
minutes, came Spurs way.
It was Christian Eriksen in the left-hand channel who made the
important advance, then turning the ball inside the box to where Roberto
Soldado touched it back to Gylfi Sigurdsson. The Icelandic midfielder
was able to guide the ball wide of Cech from inside the area to give the
home side the lead.
They would have doubled it just two minute later had Branislav Ivanovic not slid in front of Paulinho to turn a cross behind for a corner.
The tempo of the game dipped a little after that which was to
Chelsea's advantage, giving a chance to consolidate. The improvement
continued as a couple of crosses came over from the left, one just too
high for John Terry to direct a header.
With seven minutes to go before the interval, Hugo Lloris came a long
way to successfully punch clear but Chelsea kept the pressure on. A
Hazard shot from outside the box looked on its way to test the Spurs
keeper before it deflected off Vertonghen for a corner.
The Spurs central defender later tidied up after a promising Mikel ball into the box bounced off Torres as he tried to bring it under control.
Andros Townsend was booked for a dive, followed into the book by Eriksen for a shirt pull on Oscar before the end of the half, Chelsea's Brazilian having hit a shot cleanly but straight at the keeper shorty before.
There was a big warning to Chelsea that despite having a foothold in
the game in the closing minutes of the half, it was a shaky one when
Townsend slipped a pass between two defenders and Paulinho hit the post
with a shot from an angle. That was with 44 minutes on the clock and
there was time for one Chelsea chance too.
Ramires
returned the ball into the area with venom after Lloris had again
judged a punch well. Terry won an aerial contest to head cleanly but
couldn't hit the target.
Second halfIt was no surprise that Mourinho made a change at half-time. Ramires dropped back to play alongside Lampard with Mata coming on to take a position predominantly wide on the right.
On 47 minutes came the best moment of the game for the Blues so far,
Torres superbly beating two Spurs players including Vertonghen before
looking up and crossing to Oscar at the far post. On the slide, the Brazilian couldn't make a clean contact.
Torres became Chelsea's first booking soon after following a foul on
Vertonghen near the corner flag. The two remained engaged in a physical
duel for the rest of the time they were together on the pitch.
The half was fast becoming the Fernando Torres
show with another gliding run by the Spaniard leaving Dawson trailing
in his wake, but he couldn't find the finish and Lloris saved.
Mata had the ball in the net on 56 minutes after Torres had knocked down a long David Luiz
pass but was defeated by the offside flag, but it was another sign that
Chelsea were having the better of the half. We weren't having it all
our own way however and Mousa Dembele had worried the Blues by taking on
Ivanovic and crossing menacingly.
Vertonghen gathered Spurs' third yellow card for catching Ramires
late as Chelsea looked to spring a counter-attack. There was much
frustration on the Chelsea bench that the foul had denied the
opportunity but we didn't have to wait long for justice. Hazard sent the
free-kick into the area and Terry, who had been supreme in the air at
both ends, lost Dawson with his run and headed down and in with Lloris,
on this occasion, helpless.
Both sides made changes soon after, Mourinho swapping Schurrle
for Hazard with the German asked to play mostly on the left with Mata in
a more central position and Oscar right.
Dawson joined the booked players for a trip on Torres and Dembele followed soon after for one on Mata.
Between the two cautions Lloris denied Chelsea a second goal. Torres
yet again did splendidly to commit his marker and then lay the ball into
the path of Schurrle's run, but the Spurs keeper was having a good game
himself it has to be admitted, and as Schurrle tried to lift the ball
over, the Frenchman's reactions were equal to it.
The moment that had been threatening to come arrived on 81
minutes. The Spurs fans rose to their feet to demand punishment for
Torres following another aerial coming together with Vertonghen. After a
wait, referee Mike Dean produced the second yellow card that changed
the balance of the rest of the game. Replays showed Torres and his
team-mates had good cause to feel aggrieved.
Oscar was substituted by Cesar Azpilicueta as the Blues reshaped but Spurs moved onto the front foot.
Cech saved from substitute Jermain Defoe and Sigurdsson went close
with an effort from long range but anything less than a point from this
visit to the Lane would have been harsh on the Blues.
Chelsea (4-2-3-1):Cech; Ivanovic, D Luiz, Terry (c), Cole; Mikel (Mata 45), Lampard; Ramires, Oscar (Azpilicueta 81), Hazard (Schurrle 69); Torres.
Unused subs Schwarzer, Cahill, Essien, Eto'o.
Scorer Terry 64.
Booked Torres 48.
Sent off Torres 81
Tottenham (4-2-3-1):Lloris;
Walker, Dawson, Vertonghen, Naughton;Paulinho,Dembele; Townsend (Chadli
62), Eriksen (Holtby 69), Sigurdsson; Soldado (Defoe 76).
Unused subs Friedel, Chiriches, Lamela, Sandro.
Scorer Sigurdsson 18.
Booked Townsend 42, Eriksen 44, Vertonghen 63, Dawson 74, Dembele 77.
Referee Mike Dean.
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