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Thursday, October 27, 2011

QPR Report Thursday: The Ongoing John Terry Saga...Interesting Q&A With Ex-QPR Chairman Chris Wright

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- See Additional Photos from Bushman's QPR of 1911-12
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
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- CHRIS WRIGHT SPEAKS! - Very Interesting QPRNET Q&A With Ex-Chairman, Chris Wright


- The Ongoing John Terry "Saga" - Updated Compilation of Articles: What's Happening...Who's Saying What...QPR Players


- Next: Spurs-QPR


- Flashback: Who Was at QPR Five Years Ago (On and Off The Field)

- Flashback Video: QPR Results "On This Day" - Crushing Burnley and Defeating Arsenal


- VIDEO: QPR's Greatest Goals (A QPR-Produced Compilation from three years ago, so recent goals absent. Plus of course, some of the greatest goals were not in a front of a TV Camera.)

- Five Years Ago Today: AKUTRS Published "An Apology to Chairman Gianni Paladini"


- Audio: QPR's Terry Mancini Talking re QPR, Arsenal and Ireland

- QPR Fan Podcast "Open All Rs"



- Next Stop for "The Four Year Plan" - Amsterdam



- Helping Old Players: Something QPR could do well to emulate)



- Football's Fight Against Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia, etc Week (Fortnight)

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

QPR Report Wednesday Snippets

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- John Terry Allegations: Media Articles/Reactions
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- VIDEO: QPR's Greatest Goals (A QPR-Produced Compilation from three years ago, so recent goals absent. Plus of course, some of the greatest goals were not in a front of a TV Camera.)

- Five Years Ago Today: AKUTRS Published "An Apology to Chairman Gianni Paladini"

- Next: Tottenham Hotspurs - The QPR-Spurs Connection

- Audio: QPR's Terry Mancini Talking re QPR, Arsenal and Ireland

- QPR Fan Podcast "Open All Rs"

- "On This Day..." Don Masson Joined QPR...QPR Played Manchester United for First time In Division One



- Next Stop for "The Four Year Plan" - Amsterdam



QPR OFFICIAL SITE - CLUB STATEMENT

Posted on: Tue 25 Oct 2011

The Club is aware of an alleged racist incident in Sunday's Barclays Premier League fixture between QPR and Chelsea at Loftus Road.

The Football Association are now expected to conduct enquiries into the alleged incident.

QPR Chairman, Tony Fernandes, commented: "Queens Park Rangers Football Club does not condone racism in any way, shape or form.

"As a Club, we will provide our players with our unequivocal support when alleged incidents like this occur.

"The Club has, and will continue to support Kick It Out's One Game, One Community initiative, football's equality and inclusion campaign.

"However, we are keen to draw a line under this alleged incident and focus on our forthcoming fixtures, starting with Sunday's London derby at Spurs."

The Club will be making no further comment at this stage. QPR

- This of course, in its essence is really a Chelsea/John Terry story rather than a QPR Story: Media Articles/Reactions


From Sunday's People

Warnock gets tough with QPR bad boys


Oct 23 2011 by Tom Hopkinson, The People

NEIL WARNOCK will hit his rag-tag mob of QPR stars in the pocket if they step out of line after implementing a stringent new set of fines at the club.

The Rangers manager told his dressing room last week that they would be punished for misdemeanours which include being late for training and players who get needlessly booked now face big penalties as well.

Warnock, whose side host west London rivals Chelsea today, has introduced the measures in a bid to keep his gaggle of waifs and strays in line.

QPR fans were shocked to see Moroccan Adel Taarabt leaving Craven Cottage during the 6-0 defeat by Fulham and Shaun Wright-Phillips has found himself in hot water with his manager over yellow cards in his last two games.

Last week new captain Joey Barton appeared to question Taarabt’s work-rate and attitude, and Warnock is facing an increasingly difficult task to keep unity in the Loftus Road dressing room. People


- Video of a young Ian Holloway and Flashback Six Years: Q & A With QPR Manager Ian Holloway (Just after "The Boardroom Coup")

- Helping Old Players: Something QPR could do well to emulate Chelsea (and I believe, other clubs)

- Year Flashback: QPR Officially Deny "No Lippi!"

- Three Year Flashback: Briatore Involvement with the Team

- On This Day, Three Years Ago: Briatore Axes Dowie


- Sven Erickson after a year

- A Drunk Czech Ref



- 11 Year Flashback: Gerry Francis Talking about QPR Finances

- Almost Three Year Flashback: Club-Fan Meet

- Flashback: Recalling "ReBuild QPR"

- Manchester City's Balotelli Starts a Fire!

- Three Years Ago Today: An Open Letter from Amit Bhatia

- Football's Fight Against Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia, etc Week (Fortnight)

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

QPR Report Tuesday Updates and Flashbacks: Six QPR Birthdays...Ferdinand "Vs" Terrry

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- 44 Years Ago Today: QPR's Brilliant League CUp Triumph against Gordon Banks' Leicester City
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- Six QPR Birthdays Today: Bobby Keetch (RIP), Don Rogers, Adam Bolder, Steve Hodge, Rob Hulse and Shaun Wright Phillips

- Next: Tottenham Hotspurs - The QPR-Spurs Connection



- Next Stop for "The Four Year Plan" - Amsterdam


- Video of a young Ian Holloway and Flashback Six Years: Q & A With QPR Manager Ian Holloway (Just after "The Boardroom Coup")

- Helping Old Players: Something QPR could do well to emulate Chelsea (and I believe, other clubs)

- Year Flashback: QPR Officially Deny "No Lippi!"

- Three Year Flashback: Briatore Involvement with the Team

- On This Day, Three Years Ago: Briatore Axes Dowie


- Sven Erickson after a year

- A Drunk Czech Ref


Independent - Exclusive: Ferdinand wants FA to probe Terry racism claims
By Glenn Moore, Football Editor


The prospect of the England captain being accused of racism hangs over the game today with Anton Ferdinand expected to ask Queen's Park Rangers to petition the Football Association to investigate allegations that John Terry abused him during Chelsea's defeat at Loftus Road on Sunday. Ferdinand will make a final decision this morning after speaking to manager Neil Warnock, but The Independent understands that his inclination is to take the matter further.

Ferdinand and Terry clashed during the match, and afterwards the England captain was accused by television viewers, via Twitter and the internet, of using foul and racist language towards Ferdinand. He put out a statement denying the accusation and stating he and Ferdinand had spoken after the match and "there was no problem between us". However, it clearly was not closed as far as Ferdinand was concerned.

What did happen after the match was a tunnel bust-up between players from both sides, which is claimed to have involved Terry and QPR goalkeeper, Paddy Kenny, who was furious after the Chelsea captain allegedly insulted him on the pitch with a jibe of a very personal nature.

The issue between Terry and Ferdinand is given added edge by the fact Terry this year regained the England captaincy from Anton's brother Rio Ferdinand.

Terry had added in his statement: "I would never say such a thing, and I'm saddened that people would think so. I am the proud captain of one of the most internationally diverse teams in the Premier League and I absolutely believe that there is no place for racism in sport, indeed in any walk of life."

Racism allegations are notoriously hard to prove, as Manchester United's Patrice Evra is finding out with regard to the allegation he made against Liverpool's Luis Suarez. In 2007, an FA charge against Emre, the Turkish midfielder then with Newcastle, was found not proven following allegations he had racially abused Everton players. It later emerged the verdict followed a discrepancy as to whether he used the word "negro" or "N-Word".

This is the second time Terry has had to defend himself against an accusation of making racist remarks after it was claimed he had abused Tottenham's Ledley King in November 2006. Terry, who played junior football with King, denied the claim and no evidence was found to support it.

Terry was one of seven Chelsea players booked and, like Ashley Cole, fortunate not to be dismissed along with Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba. The sixth yellow triggered an automatic £25,000 fine under FA regulations and there may be further punishment for Andre Villa-Boas for the FA is reviewing his post-match comments about referee Chris Foy. The Chelsea manager insisted his players did not lose their discipline but accused Foy of being "card-happy" and losing control of his emotions. "I have a problem with referees supplying discipline," said Villas-Boas.

The manager added: "I really cannot understand the difference of the judgement of the referee. Not only the major decisions, but the fouls, the throw-ins. I cannot understand it. Apart from the fourth official, the other three were led by the emotions of the crowd and couldn't deal with a game like this."

Whether Villas-Boas could impose a disciplinary crackdown on his team, even if he wanted to, is unclear. In an interview with Uefa Technician magazine he admits that, "because of my age and my lack of a professional playing background I could never be dictatorial. I therefore let the players have a certain amount of input into the decisions regarding the way we play and the way the team is run".

Shaun Derry, the QPR midfielder, who had a running battle with Frank Lampard during the game, said: "These top, top players aren't used to losing and they aren't used to losing to teams of our stature. Perhaps it hurt them because they showed that even the best players can lose their heads. Most of the yellow cards were for Chelsea players and I felt we kept our heads. That was part of our gameplan."

Derry admitted that the sight of their opponents complaining to the referee gave QPR heart. "We knew we were doing our job right. These big players have a knack of persuading refs to make different decisions but the ref was very strong. I thought he reffed it superbly."

The fall-out from the match managed to overshadow the importance of the result to QPR as they enter a tough run of fixtures. "When you are coming up against Chelsea, Tottenham and Man City you are looking for bonus points," added Derry. Independent


GUARDIAN/Dominic Fifield

John Terry to learn fate after alleged racial slur of Anton Ferdinand

• Ferdinand to meet QPR manager, Neil Warnock, about claim
• FA reviewing André Villas-Boas's post-match comments


Anton Ferdinand will decide on Tuesday whether to report the Chelsea captain John Terry to the Football Association over an alleged racist slur, after speaking face to face with the manager at Queens Park Rangers, Neil Warnock.

Video footage circulated on the internet of an incident towards the end of QPR's 1-0 victory in which it has been suggested Terry calls the home defender a "fucking black cunt" as he retreats into his own half of the pitch. Terry denies it and issued a statement on Sunday evening in which he claimed viewers had "leapt to the wrong conclusions about the context of what I was seen to be saying to Anton Ferdinand".

Terry said he had been responding to accusations from the opposing centre-half that he had used racist language. "I thought Anton was accusing me of using a racist slur against him," he said. "I responded aggressively, saying I never used that term." The key part of the footage, where the England captain said he shouted "Oi, Anton, I never said …", is obscured by Ashley Cole walking across the camera shot.

The furore over the incident, and a fractious fixture which saw Chelsea reduced to nine men before the interval, is understood to have spilled into the tunnel after the final whistle, with angry altercations involving players from both sides. Terry and the home goalkeeper, Paddy Kenny, continued arguments that had sparked on the pitch, and other players are believed to have become involved in what is a narrow corridor outside the dressing rooms.

Terry said he had spoken to Ferdinand once tempers had calmed "and there was no problem between us", saying the incident had been "a misunderstanding". Yet the notion that the pair departed amicably has been rejected by sources at QPR. The club have declined to comment publicly on the issue and Ferdinand – normally a keen twitterer – has maintained silence.

The Rangers players were given the day off on Monday after their victory but will report back to their Harlington training centre on Tuesday morning. The club made preliminary contact with him by texton Monday, with the defender – brother of the former England captain, Rio Ferdinand – and one of his representatives to meet Warnock after training to discuss whether the club will ask the FA to investigate. It is understood the player and the club were minded to pursue the matter, though the 26-year-old asked to sleep on the matter before making a final decision.

Should a complaint be made and if Terry is found guilty, any charge would inevitably have serious repercussions for the 30-year-old's position as England captain. The FA declined to comment but does technically have it within its power to investigate, even if no formal complaint is made. Terry was due to make a personal appearance at the opening of a pet shop in Surbiton on Monday but withdrew late from the event, leaving around 100 supporters disappointed.

Meanwhile, the FA is reviewing the post-match conduct of the Chelsea manager, André Villas-Boas, after he confronted the referee, Chris Foy, in the tunnel. Onlookers described the Portuguese's language as "industrial", with Villas-Boas subsequently admitting he had been "very aggressive" with the referee as he complained at perceived inconsistencies in the official's display.

The Chelsea manager claimed Foy had "lost it" and was "card happy" towards his team, comments that could prompt the FA to impose either a fine or touchline suspension. It remains to be seen whether Foy's match report includes mention either of the players' altercations in the tunnel or Villas-Boas's reaction after the final whistle.

The referee sent off Didier Drogba, who apologised to his team-mates in the changing room post-match, for a two-footed lunge at Adel Taarabt, as well as José Bosingwa for a professional foul on Shaun Wright-Phillips, and booked a further seven visiting players. "I thought he reffed it superbly," said the QPR midfielder Shaun Derry. "These big players have a knack of persuading refs to make different decisions but the ref was very strong. The sendings off were the right decisions, and most of the yellow cards were for Chelsea players, and I felt we kept our heads.

"We wanted to unnerve them and put them under pressure in the right areas, and that plan came off. What do you do? Do you stand off these players and let them dictate, or do you get amongst them and mix it with them? I don't think we were vicious in any way or over-aggressive in anything we did. But these top players aren't used to losing to teams of our stature. Perhaps it hurt them because they showed that even the best players can lose their heads."
Guardian


Chelsea Official Site - PAT NEVIN: STRENGTH FROM ADVERSITY
Posted on: Tue 25 Oct 2011

As Chelsea fans of a certain age can testify, the club has had bad days at Loftus Road before. Sunday had columnist and former Blues star Pat Nevin recalling one but also encouraged by what he saw this weekend from players and manager…
So what were the negatives against QPR on Sunday? Well we got beaten 1-0, had two men sent off, everybody else gotbooked, the opportunity to get right back in between Man United and Man City was lost and even the manager might be up before the beaks because he gave an honest appraisal of how he felt the referee had done on the day. I should be on a bit of a downer but strangely enough I am not and maybe a few other Chelsea fans feel the same way for a variety of reasons.
First of all, with nine men on the pitch there is little or no argument that Chelsea were the better side, how cool is that? The spirit in the team was fabulous if maybe a tad over exuberant at times, but that is not surprising when you are putting in so much effort and nothing seems to be going your way. Luck and decisions deserted us but even at nine against 11 we looked a class above the Rs.

Actually let's deal with that now and get it out of the way. In the modern game, Didier Drogba or anyone else will always get sent off for a two-footed tackle. Never mind that it wasn't malicious (neither was Fernando Torres's a few weeks back) and that he got the ball and hardly connected with the player, that is the way Mr Foy and his colleagues have been told to interpret that situation, so you just have to deal with it.

The Bosingwa one is harder to call. Being totally unbiased I must tell you that under the laws of the game the referee has the right to send our full-back off in that situation. There were no defenders between SWP and the goal and there was just a little bit of shirt tugging. It was however also within his gift to say that it was some distance out, there was barging from both parties and it did appear a rather minor infringement of the rules so a yellow would suffice.

The referee was pretty harsh on us, but that happens. It was the other decisions from the referee, the possible penalty claims and the niggling constant unwillingness to give Chelsea the benefit of the doubt that got up most of our noses
Then there was the penalty decision which referees will give on home grounds every day of the week when players are blatantly, if gently, bumped and the opponent falls as if he has just suffered a massive cardiac arrest. It was naïve from David Luiz once again and it just underlines what I feel; that the brilliant, inventive, quick, powerful and talented player is not really a natural centre back, but a midfielder, preferably the deepest lying one.Even if it is in a Carling Cup game, can we please see him playing there one day, just to see?
Anyway that is my only minor question aimed at our manager AVB, because at the weekend once again he played an absolute blinder for the club. His tactical changes as we lost players in the first half were first and foremost text book in their application. There was no panic, but also no prevarication which could have killed the game there and then.

After the break I think we witnessed a tactical master class in how to play with nine men. Fifa will make a video of that and show it in their coaching classes for years to come.

It was interesting to see the difference at the game I was covering for the BBC. When Manchester United went down to 10 at home against Manchester City it turned into a complete and utter shambles for Fergie's men.
It was strange to sit there at Old Trafford and watch the fans look on in disbelief at how incredibly wrong it went tactically. They didn't make it clear at the time, but afterwards when the anger had subsided a bit towards their defenders, thoughts turned to the manager's contribution. Could the unthinkable have happened, could Sir Alex actually be as much at fault as any of his team by getting the tactics of playing with 10 men so badly wrong?


The red jury is still out on that one, but for us AVB got it right at every stage under more extreme circumstances and also while playing away from home.
Oddly enough a similar feeling of positivity after defeat affected me once after playing for Chelsea against QPR at Loftus Road back at Easter in 1986. If you think everything went wrong this weekend well that day 25 years ago was far worse. We had been doing well all season and then suddenly for a variety of reasons as the season drew to a close, the wheels came off completely. We crashed at home 0-4 to West Ham and then lost 6-0 to QPR two days later.

Everything that could go wrong, did go wrong but weirdly I walked out of the ground uplifted that day. Anyone who was there would instantly know why, the Chelsea fans were incredible, in fact in my life I do not think I have been more moved by a set of fans than I was that day.

The blue hordes (pictured top) knew we were having a weird nightmare, but they still managed to sing manically in support of the team not only after four goals were shipped, but after the fifth, the sixth and even after the final whistle. They knew we needing lifting and that there were important games to come and as a group they sensed it was the right thing to do.
It was astounding and as we sat in the dressing room afterwards we knew we would never let that happen to them again. Although the season petered out, an incredible bond had been formed between us and the spirit stayed with the team and the fans.
In short, a defeat doesn't always have to be followed by recriminations and abuse; now and again it can have far more positive than negative ramifications. I think this week was one of those occasions. Right now I can't wait until we get QPR down at the Bridge, with a full squad and maybe if it is not too much trouble, a different referee.

To have a chance of winning a copy of the Chelsea Uncut book signed by a player in this week's quiz, could you tell me who played in goal for Chelsea the day I mentioned earlier when the Blues lost 6-0 to QPR? Answers as ever to pat.nevin@chelsefc.com and the daughter who has finally tidied her room up after three whole years of nagging from me, will randomly choose the lucky winner. Chelsea



- 11 Year Flashback: Gerry Francis Talking about QPR Finances

- Almost Three Year Flashback: Club-Fan Meet

- Flashback: Recalling "ReBuild QPR"

- Manchester City's Balotelli Starts a Fire!

- Three Years Ago Today: An Open Letter from Amit Bhatia

- Football's Fight Against Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia, etc Week (Fortnight)

Monday, October 24, 2011

Chelsea's Defeat Gives QPR Their First Premiership Home Win in Over 15 Years! Reports & Comments

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--- SERIES OF GREAT PHOTOS from QPR-CHELSEA
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________


- Next Stop for "The Four Year Plan" - Amsterdam


- Four QPR Birthdays Today: Bobby Keetch (RIP), Don Rogers, Adam Bolder & Steve Hodge

- On This Day, Three Years Ago: Briatore Axes Dowie

- VIDEO from 27 Years Ago Today: QPR 6 Bratislava 2 ...!

- QPR's League Position (almost) Five Years Ago


QPR 1 CHELSEA 0
QPR Official Site Photos

1 Man City 9 26 25
2 Man Utd 9 14 20
3 Chelsea 9 10 19
4 Newcastle 9 6 19
5 Tottenham 8 2 16
6 Liverpool 9 2 15
7 Arsenal 9 -3 13
8 Norwich 9 -1 12
9 Stoke 9 -4 12
10 QPR 9 -7 12
11 Aston Villa 9 0 11
12 West Brom 9 -2 11
13 Everton 8 -2 10
14 Sunderland 9 2 9
15 Swansea 9 -5 9
16 Wolves 9 -6 8
17 Fulham 9 -1 7
18 Bolton 9 -12 6
19 Wigan 9 -9 5
20 Blackburn 9 -10 5 BBC

QPR Official Site

BBC - QPR 1 - 0 Chelsea
By Becky Ashton
BBC Sport
Cech got a hand to Helguson's penalty but could not keep it out
Chelsea had two players sent off and lost out to a Heidar Helguson penalty in a heated west London derby.

Helguson won the spot-kick after he was pushed by David Luiz and then beat Petr Cech, who got a touch on the effort.

Jose Bosingwa was sent off for bringing down Shaun Wright-Phillips when through on goal and Didier Drogba was then dismissed for a lunge on Adel Taarabt.

Nicolas Anelka wasted a headed chance late on as the visitors pushed for an equaliser but Rangers held on.

The Chelsea players appeared to take little notice of their manager Andre Villas-Boas who warned before the match of the "emotional challenge" they faced, with the tight stadium at Loftus Road and the added intensity of the derby.

In the end a lack of discipline proved costly with seven bookings and two red cards.

His counterpart Neil Warnock got his tactics spot on as the home side prevented Chelsea from getting into any sort of groove in the first half.

DID YOU KNOW?
Continue reading the main story
The win was QPR's first at home since 4 April
And their first against Chelsea since 1995
Shaun Derry was making his 600th senior appearance
Frank Lampard was making his 500th Premier League appearance.
Chelsea struggled to keep possession as QPR harried and chased at every opportunity, giving their opponents no time on the ball.

The home side grew in confidence and took the lead after only nine minutes, from their first foray into the penalty area.

Luiz struggled with the movement of Helguson in the box, as he collected a long ball and the Brazilian barged him over, leaving referee Chris Foy little option but to point to the spot.

Taarabt thought he should take the resulting spot-kick but Helguson won the battle and beat Cech from the penalty spot, although the keeper did get a touch he could only palm the ball into the roof of the net.

Rangers continued to push as the visitors struggled against the power of their opposition.


Cannot play media. You do not have the correct version of the flash player. Download the correct version
Villas-Boas critical of referee
The challenge was made even harder for Chelsea on 29 minutes when Bosingwa was shown a straight red card.

The Portuguese defender was battling with his former Chelsea team-mate Wright-Phillips, who was through on goal, before he went down under the pressure.

Foy was quick to produce the red card for denying the goalscoring opportunity although the decision seemed harsh.

Chelsea were then reduced to 10-men on 41 minutes when Drogba was instantly dismissed for a reckless tackle.

There was no question over the red card this time, as Drogba went in two-footed on midfielder Taarabt.

Half-time could not come quickly enough for Villas-Boas to try to reorganise his side.

Whatever he said seemed to work as Chelsea started the brighter in the second period, Frank Lampard seeing a header deflected wide before Branislav Ivanovic forced a good save from Paddy Kenny.


Cannot play media. You do not have the correct version of the flash player. Download the correct version
Warnock backs refereeing decisions
The Blues felt they had two good appeals for a penalty as they continued to press for an equaliser.

Lampard was brought down by Fitz Hall inside the box, while Luiz appeared to be held by Helguson - referee Foy waved away the protests.

With only 10 minutes to go they had their best chance to equalise.

Ivanovic swung in an excellent ball on to the head of Anelka but his effort was straight at an alert Kenny.

Three minutes later and the visitors went close again when Luiz hit an overhead kick, but Lampard, placed in front of the goal, deflected the ball over the bar.

Luiz, Raul Meireles, Ashley Cole and John Terry were all booked in the closing stages as things threatened to boil over.

Live text and stats


Sunday, 23 October 2011
Premier League
Home Team Score Away Team Time
QPR 1-0 Chelsea FT
(HT 1-0)
Helguson (pen) 10
Hide team line-ups and match stats
QPR
01 Kenny
03 Hill
05 Hall
18 Young
35 Ferdinand
04 Derry yellow card (Mackie 81)
07 Taarabt (Smith 61)
11 Faurlin
17 Barton yellow card
32 Wright-Phillips
22 Helguson
Substitutes
26 Murphy, 02 Orr, 14 Buzsaky, 42 Puncheon, 10 Bothroyd, 12 Mackie, 21 Smith
Chelsea
01 Cech
03 Cole yellow card
04 David Luiz yellow card
17 Bosingwa red card
26 Terry yellow card
08 Lampard yellow card
12 Mikel yellow card
16 Meireles yellow card (Malouda 72)
10 Mata (Anelka 45+1)
11 Drogba red card
23 Sturridge (Ivanovic 36 yellow card)
Substitutes
22 Turnbull, 02 Ivanovic, 06 Romeu, 15 Malouda, 20 McEachran, 21 Kalou, 39 Anelka
Ref: Foy
Att: 18,050
QPRCHELSEA
Possession BBC


Dave McIntyre/West London Sport
QPRJoy for Warnock after QPR triumph



Overjoyed manager Neil Warnock declared QPR’s derby triumph over west London neighbours Chelsea an historic victory for the club.

Heidar Helguson’s early penalty gave Rangers their first home win since their return to the Premier League and their first against Chelsea since 1995 – the year before the R’s were relegated from the top flight.

It signalled a remarkable turnaround for a club which 18 months ago was beset by problems on and off the pitch and in danger of relegation to League One.

“This is a very important day for this club.”

“I am so happy. It has to be the best win of my career in terms of what it means to the fans,” said Warnock.

“I’ve been involved in a few derbies and I have to say the place was absolutely rocking. The atmosphere was just incredible.

“They’ll talk about this win in 30 or 40 years and rightly so, because this is a very important day for this club.


Helguson netted QPR's winner

“Eighteen months ago I said to [vice-chairman] Amit Bhatia that it would be nice if one day we were beating Chelsea, and here we are.”

And Warnock dismissed criticism of referee Chris Foy by Chelsea boss Andre Villas-Boas, who accused the official of treating the Blues unfairly.

Villas-Boas was angry that after having Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba sent off in the first half Chelsea had two appeals for a penalty ignored in the second.

Warnock insisted: “I don’t think he [Villas-Boas] has much to complain about at all really.

“The first sending-off was justified, the second – that challenge by Drogba – was worth three sendings off, and the penalty was definitely a penalty.” West London Sport


Dave McIntyre/West London Sport
QPR beat Chelsea in dramatic derby


Nine-man Chelsea were sent tumbling to a dramatic defeat in the west London derby, with Heidar Helguson’s early penalty giving QPR a momentous victory – their first home win since returning to the Premier League.

In the first league clash between these neighbours since Rangers were relegated from the top flight in 1996, the home side – massive underdogs to cause an upset – delivered the win their supporters so badly wanted and had waited so long for.

They rode their luck in order to do so, making the most of Jose Bosingwa and Didier Drogba being sent off in the first half.

Ultimately, however, Rangers got their reward for managing to unsettle their opponents, who simply paid the price for losing their discipline in the pressure cooker that was a packed Loftus Road.

Helguson netted from the spot after being nudged over in the box by David Luiz, and worse followed for Andre Villas-Boas’ team in a frenetic first period.

Bosingwa was dismissed for a professional foul on 32 minutes after bringing down Shaun Wright-Phillips, and Drogba was red-carded following a reckless two-footed challenge on Adel Taarabt nine minutes later.


Lampard was one of seven Chelsea players booked

The result fully justified Neil Warnock’s decisions to again give Helguson the nod over Jay Bothroyd up front and to restore Taarabt, who was left out against Blackburn last weekend.

And the R’s boss made another important judgement call when he replaced Taarabt with the experienced Tommy Smith just after the hour mark, when Rangers were being stretched despite Chelsea having only nine players.

Taarabt’s contribution while he was on was significant. His excellent pass which led to Bosingwa’s afternoon ending prematurely came as Rangers were battling to hang onto the lead Helguson had given them.

Luiz felt aggrieved after being adjudged to have fouled the Icelander, as did Taarabt after being told he would not be taking the resulting spot-kick, which keeper Petr Cech got a hand to but was unable to keep out of the net.

Coming after only nine minutes, the goal was massive boost for Rangers – as was referee Chris Foy’s decision to give Bosingwa his marching orders.

Bosingwa was the last man back as he tried to prevent Wright-Phillips latching onto Taarabt’s perfect through-ball and when the former Chelsea man hit the floor, Foy took decisive action.

A goal and a man down, and with the home fans revelling in their team’s tireless determination to unsettle their glamorous neighbours, the growing frustration of Chelsea’s players was evident.

And Drogba let his agitation get the better of him, hurling himself at the impressive Taarabt to leave his team another player short.

Even the ever-composed Frank Lampard, making his 500th Premier League appearance, lost his cool after a late challenge by Shaun Derry early in the second half and was booked.


Anelka should have equalised late on

Chelsea, to their credit, did look a threat after the interval despite their numerical disadvantage; underlining their ability and perhaps the task Rangers would have been up against without the sendings off.

But while they pressed for an equaliser, they were inevitably open to counter attacks and Luke Young missed a great chance to put Rangers further ahead when he shot wide after being teed up by Taarabt.

Chelsea continued to drive forward and appealed in vain for a penalty after Lampard went down under Fitz Hall’s challenge while attempting to meet Ashley Cole’s low cross, and when Luiz felt he was held back by Helguson.

At the other end, Joey Barton fired narrowly wide and later sent in a perfect ball from the right for Helguson, who failed to hit the target at the far post.

But the biggest culprit in front of goal was Nicolas Anelka, who missed a golden opportunity to level when he headed Branislav Ivanovic’s cross straight at keeper Paddy Kenny. West London Sport


FULHAM CHRONICLE/Jacob Murtagh
QPR boss blasts Taarabt after Chelsea win


NEIL Warnock slammed Adel Taarabt after the QPR forward reacted angrily to being substituted in this afternoon's victory over Chelsea.

The Moroccan stormed off down the tunnel after he was replaced by Tommy Smith on the hour mark.

And boss Warnock says he's disappointed with Taarabt's behaviour.

He said: “I had a chat with him afterwards because it's not about Adel, it's about the team.

“He was disappointed to come off, but like I said to him beforehand it would've been easy for me to play Jamie Mackie today and leave him on the bench. It's a team game.

“He's a little kid and takes his toys home. Chronicle


- ADDITIONAL MATCH REPORTS/COMMENTS


- 11 Year Flashback: Gerry Francis Talking about QPR Finances

- Almost Three Year Flashback: Club-Fan Meet

- Flashback: Recalling "ReBuild QPR"

- Manchester City's Balotelli Starts a Fire!

- Three Years Ago Today: An Open Letter from Amit Bhatia

- Football's Fight Against Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia, etc Week (Fortnight)


Picture by Haqpr1963

Sunday, October 23, 2011

QPR Report Sunday: Chelsea!...Warnock on Stadium Move..."The Four Year Plan" Update..Faurlin on Last Season's "Trial"

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Picture by Haqpr1963
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________


- Next Stop for "The Four Year Plan" - Amsterdam



- 11 Year Flashback: Gerry Francis Talking about QPR Finances

- Birthday for Ex-QPR Trevor Challis

- Almost Three Year Flashback: Club-Fan Meet

- Flashback: Recalling "ReBuild QPR"

- Manchester City's Balotelli Starts a Fire!


- Three Years Ago Today: An Open Letter from Amit Bhatia

- Football's Fight Against Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia, etc Week (Fortnight)

- QPR & Chelsea: Stats/ Shared Players


CLINT HILL BACK AT LOFTUS ROAD

QPR OFFICIAL SITE - HILL RETURNS TO W12


R's defender Clint Hill has been recalled from his loan spell at Nottingham Forest.

With Danny Gabbidon and Matthew Connolly both currently sidelined owing to injury, Neil Warnock has taken the option to recall the experienced defender from his spell at The City Ground.
Hill made five appearances for The Reds during his brief period at the Club.
The Liverpudlian is expected to go straight into the R's squad for the visit of Chelsea to Loftus Road this weekend. QPR


SKYSPORTS - Warnock backs stadium move
QPR boss confident of increasing fanbase


SKYSPORTS - Queens Park Rangers manager Neil Warnock believes that the club has enough fans to make the move to a new stadium a success.

QPR's Malaysian owner, Tony Fernandes, has said that he plans to have his team play in a new stadium that will have a bigger capacity than their current 20,000-seater home, Loftus Road.

However, there have been doubts whether the London side would be able to fill their prospective new ground with enough supporters, but Warnock is positive that they will be able to do so.

"I think we would be able to fill a bigger stadium," he said. "When I was at Huddersfield, we got something like 4,000 average at the old Leeds Road and then we moved to the McAlpine, a fantastic new complex at that time, and we had 12,500 from day one so it trebled."

Tony's not daft
QPR welcome Chelsea to Loftus Road in the Premier League on Sunday afternoon, with the home side currently 14th in the table with nine points from eight matches.

Warnock is relishing the London derby but tempers suggestions that Fernandes should invest in QPR like Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich has done at Chelsea.

"The only thing is that Loftus Road for games like we have tomorrow against Chelsea, it's a fantastic place to be stood on the bench and it's a great atmosphere - I would miss that personally," he explained.

"Roman is a little bit different to most people. Financially he dwarfs everything.

"Tony is not daft. He hasn't got where he has today without knowing what he's doing.

"I think he wants to do well, without necessarily spending billions. He'd like to do it an organised way and get the facilities and the staff in to take the club forward and obviously if you can get stability in the Premier League it doesn't take many years to fund itself."

Buzz
"You know what you're going to get with Chelsea and you just have to hope they have an off day," added the 62-year-old.

"They're such a good team. We just have to get the atmosphere and enjoy it, give them a good game if we can.

"Playing against top teams, getting points is a bonus. I can sense on the training ground they are up for it, though.

"There's that sense of buzz because it's Chelsea and the first derby we've had for many years. Some of the kids that support QPR now have never seen any Chelsea players in the flesh. It's a great day for them." Skysports


Guardian/Jamie Jackson - Neighbours on the move: Chelsea and QPR and the battle for new grounds

West London rivals want to move from their old stadiums, but suitable sites are at a premium


Queens Park Rangers and Chelsea – long-standing west London rivals – collide again on Sunday at Loftus Road for the first time in the league for 15 years. But there is now added dimension to the clubs' mutual antipathy – with each in a race to grab one of the few available sites for a new stadium in the Hammersmith and Fulham borough they share.

Greater monetary yield, as ever in the Premier League, is the catalyst for the clubs' expansion plans. Chelsea gaze with envy at Arsenal's financial transformation since moving to the 60,000-seat Emirates in 2006 and at the 75,000 plus who can now watch Manchester United at Old Trafford. QPR note how Sunderland and Stoke City's new builds allowed them to reap more funds from their fan base.

Tony Fernandes, QPR's new owner, wants a move away from Loftus Road but not out of what he calls "a fantastic area". If the Malaysian businessman, who bought the club in the summer, can raise the cash and secure the land, the next step is relatively simple. Neil Warnock, the manager, says: "We're already talking about a new stadium. Tony is one of those owners who, with the other shareholders, just want to get there yesterday."

Chelsea are aware of his ambitions and want to move fast. Yet for their oligarch proprietor, Roman Abramovich, the scenario is complex. The club insists that no definitive decision has been made to move. If they do, plots have been identified, with an area next to Battersea power station the current favourite, and sites at Earl's Court and White City other options. Earl's Court is the club's preference, on the north site, as it is the closest to Stamford Bridge, and would allow fans to continue their current pre- and post-match rituals. If Capco, which owns Earl's Court, is willing to reopen talks with Chelsea then the club would gladly accept the chance.

Abramovich's first challenge, though, is to buy back the freehold on Stamford Bridge so that the land can be developed to raise funds. To do this he needs to convince the Chelsea Pitch Owners that there is no wish to relocate any further away than a three-mile radius. Chelsea insist they want to stay close to their roots. If they are to move then the deadline for one of the sites is 2020, they say. This, Chelsea contends, is due to the belief that they will all be taken by then.

An extraordinary meeting of the CPO, whose members have owned the land since 1993, will be held on Thursday, with the politicking fully under way. Abramovich's offer to the 12,000 shareholders who own the 15,000 shares is to buy them at the sum they originally cost, a total of £10m, £8.5m of which was a loan from the club, which will be written off by the Russian. He is arguing, not unfairly, that the original purchase was never about profit, but safeguarding Chelsea's future.

While Abramovich wants to leave Stamford Bridge with its capacity of 42,000 for a new home that can house 55,000 to 60,000, Warnock believes that QPR could regularly attract at least 30,000. "When I was at Huddersfield [1993-95], we got something like 4,000 average at the old Leeds Road and then at the McAlpine we had 12,500 day one so it trebled."

Those opposed to Abramovich's offer are not against moving but want a new destination legally signed off first. Richard King, the CPO chairman, is careful to balance each side's concerns. "As directors of CPO," he says, "we had an obligation to ensure shareholders could discuss the club's proposal and then vote on it. It's for shareholders to decide, not us."

He is clear that Chelsea need to relocate. "I have been watching Chelsea for years. It's like a second home. On the other hand, I understand that because of its location the stadium can't be extended. With Financial Fair Play rules to come, we need a bigger stadium to compete. Finishing below Spurs, because they have a bigger stadium and therefore a stronger squad than us, is too awful to contemplate."

The Say No CPO organisation is upset that neither the CPO nor the club informed them that negotiations had occurred without the shareholders being told before the situation became public. "CPO had to deal with the proposal in confidence at the behest of the club," the Pitch Owners said. "Its directors have sought to clarify and settle a proposal which reflects what the club will offer and to allow the shareholders of CPO to decide, on a 75% vote if in favour, whether or not to accept it."

What Chelsea supporters would also certainly not like is if QPR became the noisy neighbours who take up the prime spot in their local manor. Guardian



Faurlin recalls a testing time


Alejandro Faurlin felt like he was on trial for murder during the controversial tribunal which nearly wrecked the club's promotion bid.

Having dominated the npower Championship for most of last season, QPR appeared to be coasting towards their dream of gaining promotion to the top flight of English football for the first time in 15 years.

Those dreams were put in danger of being shattered in March, however, when the Football Association brought charges against the club for allegedly breaching regulations over the transfer of Faurlin in the summer of 2009.

Two months of legal wrangling followed in which Faurlin, and several club representatives, were hauled before the

FA to explain the circumstances that surrounded the Argentinian's transfer from Institute FC two years ago.

Much to the relief of QPR fans, the FA allowed the club's promotion to stand and Faurlin, along with the rest of the Rangers squad, have since gone on to make a decent start to their life in the top flight.

The 25-year-old today spoke of his relief at the decision, but admitted the ordeal of going through the tribunal was tough.

"Imagine that week - on Thursday I had been in Wembley to declare (in front of the panel). I felt like I had murdered someone, " Faurlin said.

"I was made to swear: 'I shall speak the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth'.

"It was very tough and hard, not just for me but for people around me - the club and the group.

"We worked really hard last season and were always top from the beginning to the end. We worked hard for every single point, so imagine if you let down your team. It wasn't all me, it was my contract and QPR, but my name was there and you really feel it.

"We were really, really happy everything finished in the right way otherwise I would have felt very bad in that moment."

The one thing that helped the midfielder through the ordeal, was the support of the staff at QPR to whom he is eternally grateful.

"The support was super, the fans, the group, the manager, the staff, everyone. They all made me feel good, so I was really pleased and now I want to say thank you to them," he added.

Faurlin has been an ever-present in the Rangers

midfield despite the acquisition of the likes of Joey Barton and Shaun Wright-Phillips since Tony Fernandes bought the club.

The club face the biggest test since Fernandes bought the club tomorrow when they take on Chelsea at Loftus Road in the west London derby.

Under new boss Andre Villas-Boas, the Blues have kept up with league leaders Manchester City and rivals Manchester United, and they make the short trip across London in superb form having racked up 13 goals in their last three matches.

Rangers, in contrast, drew 1-1 with bottom side Blackburn last weekend and two weeks previously they were hammered 6-0 by fellow strugglers Fulham.

Despite this, Faurlin insists QPR can come out on top in tomorrow afternoon's game.

"We have had a few tough games, and probably a lot of people dont expect much from us. But I can tell you that we are really excited about this," he said.

"We are motivated and every single player wants to play against the biggest sides in the league. We are really looking forward to it. We have support from the owner and the fans, so we will look to get a positive result. "

Unlike many other Argentines, Faurlin has adapted well to life in England, and the physical nature of the Barclays Premier League.

He does admit to not being a big fan of the weather in London, but has otherwise become easily accustomed to life in Britain.

"I watch Deal or no Deal every day and X-Factor with my son as he goes to sleep," he says, with a smile.

"I quite like fish and chips and apple pie with custard. I love that one." Report





A CHELSEA PERSPECTIVE


Many thanks to Maudesfishnchips for conducting another great interview. And many thanks to Chelsea fan, Martin Rowe of CFCNet for providing us with this interview and offering us with his perspective.


Many thanks to Martin Rowe, associate editor of CFCnet.co.uk. enjoy


How long have you supported Chelsea?

Well, I’m in my mid 40’s now so I guess that’s nearly half a century of supporting Chelsea! Put it this way, I’ve stood in the Shed and seen us get relegated. That was a long time ago but it’s seared into my memory as if it was yesterday.

There is only one team in west London and they play in hoops, why Chelsea!?

Not sure what you mean by that question.

Who's Chelsea’s biggest Rival (or Rivals)?

Traditionally it’s been Fulham and Spurs, but more recently it’s been teams like Barcelona and Man Utd. To be honest, the team we love to beat these days is Liverpool. 20 years and counting to win the league is a long time and we’re happy to play our part in extending this. Listening to Scousers talk you’d have thought they’d invented football but what people don’t realise is that Chelsea won their first European trophy before Liverpool and we were the first UK team to be invited to play in the newly formed European Cup in the 50’s.

Are you happy with your team and how things are to date? – What are your opinions on your manager AVB? His spending/selling this summer?

We’re happy with the style of football AVB is trying to instil at the Bridge and the dynamic pass-and-move nature of the team is winning people over. The board of Chelsea are also fully committed to him so at the moment everything seems to be going well. The big test will be when the difficult periods arrive – as they will – and whether the board will continue to back him. We’re all a bit tired with the constant chopping and changing of managers and would prefer some stability.

What do you think of your current Owner? WHY is he involved? What do you expect from him?

Roman’s been magnificent, absolutely first class. Yes, he’s been a bit trigger happy at times and interfered with managers like Mourinho etc, but overall 3 Premierships, 3 FA Cups and 2 Carling Cups tell their own story. We’ve had a wild time.

How do you think Chelsea treats its fans? Appreciates them? Listens to them? Screws them?

How long have you got? When Peter Kenyon ran the Fans Forum a lot of changes were made at the instigation of the fans and the relationship between the Club and many fans groups was pretty good. However, over time, the Club has become increasingly reluctant to engage with us and is starting to flex its muscles in a dictatorial fashion. Trust is beginning to break down if I’m perfectly honest.

Who are you Dangermen/Most valued/most overrated/most underrated players?

This is a hotly debated topic that could leave me open to widespread abuse when I next visit the Bridge! Everybody’s opinion is different so if you’d ask 1,000 fans you’d get 1,000 answers. However, I think you’d be stretched to find a fan who thinks Salomon Kalou should be a first team regular. Malouda’s form is also too erratic. Overall, though, we have a fantastic squad. Underrated? The media focus on Torres is obscene yet he is looking deadly at the moment – when lady luck turns his way he could have a blistering season.

Are you happy with your youth set up? Is your club doing enough to bring young/local talent through the ranks?

We have a great youth set-up and are doing everything we can to bring young players through. The facilities at Cobham are exceptional and the whole set-up is geared towards sustained long term success. The only criticism is Michael Emanelo’s appointment as technical director. I’m not sure what he brings to the table although Frank Arnesen hardly set the world on fire and he had a stellar reputation before he arrived.

Who would you say was the greatest Chelsea player that you yourself personally saw? And past player? (You can name more than one if it's that close!)

Ruud Gullit was the best player I have ever seen in a Chelsea shirt. He was a one man team and his presence at Chelsea was one of the building blocks of our rise since the early 90’s. He had awesome skill, power, athleticism, intelligence and leadership. Whilst many people would vote for Franco Zola (good as he was), as a complete football player Gullit gets my vote.

What is your prediction for Chelsea this season?

Top 2. Hopefully first. It depends on whether we can get the team to click on a consistent basis. Man Utd have already beaten us but they were slightly lucky in that match and the return fixture should be interesting. Man City are also rivals but they have a self-destruct button lurking in the background.

Are you aware of any player or manager links between our two clubs past and present?

Gavin Peacock played for you after captaining us in the mid 90’s. He was a great player and if his shot had gone in rather than clip the bar in the ’94 FA Cup Final, he could have been an all-time legend. He’s a very genuine fellow, I have a lot of respect for him and I believe he is now in the US studying to be a preacher.

What is your view and the general Chelsea view of QPR (If we even feature in your consciousness) or of Neil Warnock and our owners?

I once read in a Chelsea fanzine that QPR was like an annoying little brother, half your age, who just irritates the hell out of you. That’s fairly accurate. As for Warnock, Ken Bates invited him to become manager of Chelsea in 1991 and he turned us down because he didn’t want to leave the North. That excuse looks a bit thin now!

Who (if any) is your most memorable/favourite QPR Player over the years?

I am old enough to remember your great 1970’s side and Gerry Francis was a truly inspirational player.

Did you attend home or away, any matches between our two clubs when we were last in the premiership? Any memorable matches between our two clubs that stand out for you? And the reasons why?

One of my favourite games in my whole life was in 1990 (I think) when you were 2-0 up and we equalised before Joe Allon scored an overhead kick in the dying minutes. The whole away end went ballistic. I’ve never forgotten that game, it’s one of my top ten games of all time, and believe me, I’ve seen many, many hundreds (if not thousands).

Your score prediction for QPR v Chelsea?

3-1 to Chelsea. We’re a good team, believe me.

What, realistically, do you think Chelsea are capable of achieving in the next five years?

The sky’s the limit. We’d obviously like to go one step further in Europe.

What are your and the general view of Chelsea supporters regarding the proposed new stadium? And the suggested site in white city if this was of interest to Abramovich ? The QPR support would not welcome such a move, would you ?

We’re very angry about the situation. Whilst most fans agree that we probably need to move, the Club aren’t giving us any guarantees where they want to move to. Now, given that 12,000 of us own the Stamford Bridge pitch, turnstiles and brand name Chelsea FC, we’re pissed off that the Club want us to hand these rights over for no guarantee. They must think we came down in the last shower. The vote on 27th October is monumental in the history of our Club.
White City? We’d prefer to move nearer Stamford Bridge, Earl’s Court being a particular favourite.


Martin Rowe
CFCnet

Saturday, October 22, 2011

QPR Report Saturday: Chelsea...Warnock's Perspective...Ferdinand's Beliefs...Shaun Wright Phillips

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-
- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- Three Years Ago Today: An Open Letter from Amit Bhatia

- Birthday for Mark Falco...And On This Day: Brentford Crush QPR!

- Football's Fight Against Racism, Anti-Semitism, Homophobia, etc Week (Fortnight)

- Clubs Vote to Kill "Smaller Club" Feeder System

- QPR & Chelsea: Stats/ Shared Players


Independent - Neil Warnock: Bostock tale shows perils of big clubs hoovering up young talent

What I Learnt This Week

Saturday, 22 October 2011


Remember this lad, pictured right? It's John Bostock.

I gave him his debut at Crystal Palace four years ago. Only 15 and still at school he became Palace's youngest ever player. We had high hopes that he would go on to become a key player for Palace, but he only played four games before he was persuaded to join Tottenham.

Simon Jordan, Palace's owner at the time, was very unhappy, and his mood didn't improve when the tribunal told Spurs they only had to pay us £700,000 for the boy – there were add-ons, but no guarantees they would be triggered. Running a good academy is expensive and Bostock had been in ours since he was eight. Simon was so angry he considered scrapping Palace's academy, reasoning that if all the good players were to be poached on the cheap, what was the point?

I mention this because Simon and I recalled the affair this week after the Football League clubs voted to accept the Elite Player Performance Plan – the Premier League-driven reform of youth development. Part of the deal was the imposition of a fixed tariff for the transfer of players like Bostock. In his case we would have received less than £100,000.

That is peanuts and nowhere near sufficient compensation. An academy costs £500,000 to £1m to run at present (the new academies are going to be even more expensive) and there's no way it is going to produce five or 10 players of Bostock's standard each year to pay for it. I think the proposals are going to have severe consequences for the best academies in the Football League, like the one at Palace. Clubs are going to have to seriously think about whether it is worth continuing with them because it is obvious that the big clubs will just open their wallets and hoover up all the best talent.

Clubs should be allowed to put their younger lads on contracts. Otherwise their only hope is to persuade a boy that he would be better off staying with them, and getting matches, instead of disappearing into the background at a big club. It is not easy, because money talks, but look at what has happened to Bostock since he left Palace. He's been on loan to Brentford and Hull without establishing himself at either and is now back at Spurs without a squad number. He'll be 20 in January, but in four years he has started just 18 league games and he hasn't played a senior match for 11 months.

I feel sorry for the lad, but if he had stayed at Palace he could have played close to 100 Championship matches by now which would have set him up for the rest of his career. As it is, no one seems to have done well. Tottenham probably feel they haven't got value for money, Palace lost a player on the cheap – and it doesn't look as if they are going to get any of the add-ons – and the boy, who's the most important person in all this, isn't playing football.

2. Chuffed it's Chelsea but I wish Torres was playing

Tomorrow Chelsea come to Loftus Road. What a prospect! I bet many QPR fans can't believe we are playing them less than 18 months after surviving relegation to League One. This is the sort of match you relish; it is why we want to be in the Premier League. It may not be the most high-profile derby of the day but unlike the Manchester clubs we share the same borough – indeed, as the mayoress said at our promotion reception, Hammersmith & Fulham is the only borough in the country with three Premier teams.

The Manchester clubs have had all the attention but under the radar Chelsea have already shown they are more than capable of giving them a run for their money. I was going to go and watch them the other night in the Champions League, but I didn't think I'd learn much with them playing half the side they would field against us. It was the right decision because the game ended up like a testimonial. Chelsea were so dominant they could have scored 15.

Someone said how lucky we are Fernando Torres is suspended tomorrow. It depends which way you look at it. If I'm totally honest I'd prefer Torres to be playing than Didier Drogba.

It is the start of three testing games for us with Tottenham away next week followed by Manchester City at home. I really want the lads to enjoy these games, it's what we fought for when winning promotion so it is daft to be fearful. When I was asked on TV last week what I was looking to get out of these three games I said: "I can't see us getting more than seven points!"

3. Me and the players will warm up watching derby

I expect a lot of you wonder what a Premier League manager does in the hours leading up to kick-off. I can tell you where I'll be at 1.30pm tomorrow. I'll be in my office in front of the TV watching the Manchester derby. I'll be able to watch the first half before turning my attention back to our game which is a 4pm kick-off. The same applies to the players; they'll be watching Manchester United v Manchester City in the dressing room. I don't think it is a bad thing to have something like that to take their mind off our game.

Every viewer will be hoping City go there and give United a game because you know for a fact United will have a go at City. Roberto Mancini's bound to play Nigel de Jong and Gareth Barry, but I hope he includes the likes of Sergio Aguero, Mario Balotelli and David Silva. Hopefully, it'll be like the United-Chelsea match, where both teams slugged it out.

4. From unsung heroes to Euro stars

Two unsung heroes enjoyed great victories in the Europa League last week. We're becoming a bit blasé about Stoke winning big games, but it really says something about their depth when Tony Pulis is able to make seven changes and watch his team win so comfortably.

The result of the week was Birmingham City's at Bruges. To win after going behind so early was fabulous. All credit to Chris Hughton. I'm sure he thought he could do without the competition when the season started, but now the whole club must be looking forward to a run in Europe.

5. Kids are animal magic as we pull the otter one

For his half-term homework, William had to take some animal photographs. We figured most of the class would head for Richmond Park to take pictures of the deer, so to be different we went to an otter farm. They are really interesting animals – as long as you don't get them in your own pond.

Amy's just started having riding lessons and Sharon went along. She couldn't believe how confident Amy was, but kids seem to be like that these days. However, the next morning we were watching TV and there was a programme about paramedics. A young girl had fallen off her horse and needed an air ambulance. It wasn't the best programme to watch, having seen her ride the day before, but every day of their lives kids have challenges. You can't wrap them in cotton wool.

6. Harry's lack of agility touches a nerve

We have a yoga teacher come to the training ground on a regular basis. It helps keep the players supple, though when I've watched sessions I've often thought, "There's no way I could get into that position."

Confirmation I've been right not to join in came this week when Harry Redknapp joined the class at Spurs. He couldn't get himself into a pose so the instructor tried to give him a hand and he felt his back go. Harry said he couldn't walk for two days and had sciatica for the next three nights.

You'd think he'd know better, wouldn't you? What will he do next – play loud headbanging music in his office before a game to get himself motivated? We're a bit too old in the tooth for that, Harry.

7 'Indy' columnists can talk a good game

I shared the sofa on Match of the Day 2 last week with Lee Dixon. Lee is one of the up-and-coming pundits and he's obviously picked up some tips from the other columnists on the fine newspaper he writes for. He talks a lot of sense in his tactical analysis and comes up with constructive criticism.

I'd been promising to go on the show for a few weeks and thought I'd better get on and do it as they are moving to Salford in three weeks and I didn't fancy that – no disrespect but it's a long way from home. Still, it's close to Old Trafford, though it does seem like a lot of expense moving half the BBC to Manchester just to get Sir Alex Ferguson in the studio! Independent


SKY - Warnock plays down fall-out talk
Hoops boss brushes of reports of Barton-Taarabt spat

Barton questioned Taarabt's work ethic in a recent interview, and Warnock responded by saying his skipper was "a little bit out of order".

Taarabt was dropped to the bench for last Saturday's 1-1 draw with Blackburn following his behaviour during the previous game at Fulham.

The mercurial Moroccan was brought off at half-time with QPR trailing 3-0 and left before the final whistle as Fulham completed a 6-0 rout.

Barton, who joined the club this summer after a dispute with Newcastle owner Mike Ashley, said that on arriving at Loftus Road he was told Taarabt was a genius but was yet to see it.
Commonplace

Warnock claims he is in the dark about rumours the pair have clashed but insists that even if they have, disagreements between club colleagues are commonplace in football.

"I don't know whether they fell out, to be honest," he said.

"I have only read what's been in the papers, I've not heard anything about it around the training ground.

"This sort of thing happens at every club. I could tell you every club where there's a few who can light the touch paper and we are no different to them." Sky



The Guardian/Dominic Fifield - Big interview

QPR's Shaun Wright-Phillips using yoga to bounce back against Chelsea


England winger who kicked his heels at Chelsea views match against old club as chance to prove he belongs in the big time

Shaun Wright-Phillips celebrates his birthday next week and, as he edges into his 30s, the ambitions he still hopes to fulfil become ever quirkier. An aspiration to assist Queens Park Rangers to a first top-flight home win since Mark Hateley led their line and Ray Wilkins patrolled midfield is understandable enough. As is the desire for that victory to come at the expense of his former club Chelsea in Sunday's derby. Unsurprising, too, is a craving to return to Fabio Capello's England squad in time for next summer's European Championship.

Yet there is another pressing target to be achieved by the end of the calendar year, one that has the winger pressed for time with an appointment booked across town. "I've never been able to touch my toes," he says. "Seriously, never. In a game I'm, like, 'Rubber Man' or something but, off the pitch, I'm the least flexible person you could imagine. It's down to short hamstrings apparently. Anyway, I've started yoga and have told the lady taking the classes she has to get me touching my toes by Christmas. That's my task." A second session of downward-facing dog and pyramid poses awaits with a more supple life ahead, all of which feels apt given Wright-Phillips is currently bouncing back.

A deadline-day return to London with QPR has served to rejuvenate after too long kicking his heels on the fringes at Manchester City. The England winger had previously gone a year without starting a Premier League game, a victim of aggressive squad building at Eastlands and the departure of Mark Hughes, the manager who had taken him back to City after three years in and out of the team at Chelsea.

Sunday's eagerly anticipated meeting with former employers will provide his sixth league start in succession, an involvement he has not enjoyed since the last few weeks of Hughes's tenure. Indeed, under Roberto Mancini, the winger made only two top-flight starts last term. To see him busily scuttling at full-backs these days, spitting shots at goal with glee, is to witness a player making up for lost time.

His team's aspirations may have changed, from targeting league titles to focusing on survival, but not since he was breaking on to the scene in his first spell at City has Wright-Phillips felt so integral. Neil Warnock, a manager relishing one last fling at the big time, recruited a quintet of top-flight performers in transfer deadline week, and each had his own reason to wish to make an impression. "He brought in hungry, experienced players, and we all had something to prove," said the England midfielder. "But my own hunger was purely about the enjoyment of playing. Being out of a team changes you as a person. You don't realise it but, away from the game, you can be snappy with your family or friends if you're not playing. It hurts not to be involved, but I guess you have to accept it. It's part and parcel of being at a big club."

Wright-Phillips could be deemed a high-profile victim of the modern day squad building phenomenon. The Premier League has attracted a handful of billionaire owners and the midfielder has worked under two of them, Roman Abramovich and Sheikh Mansour. Yet, while he has admittedly earned handsomely each time, he only ever thrived in fits and starts when surrounded by the best talent money could buy. Stockpiling players of such calibre forces seasoned internationals to the margins. The Russian oligarch would visit the dressing room post-match, congratulating or commiserating his £21m signing – "He was always relaxed and would try to get to know you one-to-one so that you felt comfortable going to him if ever you needed something" – during a three-year spell that yielded all three major domestic honours, yet Wright-Phillips' impact still always felt rather peripheral. The one thing Abramovich could not provide him with was a guaranteed first-team place.

At City, where the midfielder made his name long before Arab money transformed expectations, his second coming was effectively eclipsed by the Abu Dhabi takeover. Suddenly, £8.5m purchases felt like small change, the type of fee forked out on a squad player to flesh out the numbers. There was to be no place in the match-day squad for the FA Cup final last May, just as there had not been with Avram Grant's Chelsea at the European Cup final in Moscow in 2008. Even so, the winger reflects on both spells among the nouveaux riches with pride. "I remind myself that I got there in the first place, to Chelsea and City," he says. "For someone who was playing Sunday League football on a concrete surface in south London not that long ago, to find myself in a position where I was fighting for a first-team place at clubs that big represented a huge leap. I'll never forget that, even if it was frustrating at times.

"With City, it's different. That's the club where it began for me, one that I've been close to since I was 17, so to see the transformation the place has gone through to have them sitting on top of the table just makes me happy: for the fans, for the players who were there just before the takeover, and for those who are now enjoying it. To see them achieving everything City's supporters had ever wanted is wonderful. I don't have any remorse or regret over the situation I found myself in there. It's not about me. It's about the club moving in the right direction. Over the 10 years I spent there, that's all they ever wanted: to be challenging. Now they are. To have been partly involved in making that possible makes me proud.

"And looking back at Chelsea, I feel the same. It was always going to be hard breaking into that team, and I knew it would be like that. But I played a part, I helped win trophies, and the whole thing was a brilliant experience. Why would there be any regrets? I worked under José Mourinho, a manager who taught me new things and stressed I should believe in myself. It could be difficult out of the side, but when someone like him tells you: 'I signed you, so I've got confidence in you,' the feeling you get is unbelievable. He made everyone feel involved and part of things, even if you were out of the first team. That is a huge talent. When I look back, I played 27 games in each of my three seasons at the club, a good amount in a team that was winning and pretty much dominating at the time. And, all the time, I was learning."


He will confront friends turned foes at Loftus Road. His immediate task is to unsettle Ashley Cole – "Different class, a full-back who plays like a wing-back and is a nightmare to be up against" – but he must also summon something unpredictable to surprise his rivals' manager. André Villas-Boas was on the scouting staff under Mourinho and made a lasting impression on Wright-Phillips. "You recognise when an opposition scout's good at what he does. With him, the information he gave you was always accurate. He'd provide in-depth analysis of every player on the opposing side: how they play; where they were strong; how you could get at them; inside leg measurement … you name it, he knew it. He studied the game in minute detail, so it's no surprise to see what he's achieved since. I guess he's got people doing all that for him now, and they'll have their reports on me. I'll just have to try and do the opposite to what they might expect."

In a sense, Wright-Phillips has done that even by venturing to Rangers. There had been a flurry of interest from more established Premier League clubs on the eve of the transfer deadline. Bolton were long-standing admirers. David Moyes telephoned as the cut-off ticked closer to persuade him to move to Everton. Yet, even when he arrived at breakfast at the team hotel before the match at Wolves to find his team-mates had replaced his seat with a highchair, there has been no regretting the choice he made. "QPR just felt like the right fit," he adds. "Sure, it was nice to feel wanted. Attackers thrive on confidence, and all the interest was a reminder that people hadn't forgotten me, but this was a chance to make a mark again. For now it's all about staying in this division before looking to push on. We've only offered flashes of what we can achieve so far, and maybe our form hasn't been there consistently. But it's coming. We're improving.

"The set-up is solid. We've got an owner [Tony Fernandes] who is ambitious, someone who likes to interact with everyone who's supportive of what he's trying to do, meeting the fans in the pub, chatting on Twitter, talking to the players. We're all on the same wavelength. We've got a manager [Warnock] who is loving being in this division. He's a different generation to a Mourinho or a Mancini, but his methods aren't any less effective. He does things his way and he knows how to win games. He had faith in me, and I want to repay that. I've still got lots I want to achieve, and lots to give QPR. The Chelsea game is the biggest derby we'll have this season. I guess that means it'll be the perfect place to start.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/oct/21/shaun-wright-phillips-qpr-chelsea


TELEGRAPH - Jason Burt
Anton Ferdinand keeps faith in his career at Queens Park Rangers and hopes to start prayer group
It took four hours this week for Anton Ferdinand to acquire his latest tattoo — his fourth — and he turns his left forearm to reveal the intricate artwork. “It’s an angel fighting away evil,” he says proudly. “I’m a Christian, I have faith in the Lord and that’s what it represents


“My mum goes to church every weekend and I had to go when I was younger but I didn’t appreciate it. I appreciate it now.

"It’s one of the best things that has ever happened to me although the hardest thing is having faith in something you can’t see, but I have overcome that.

"I can talk about my journey and things that have happened to me. That’s why my mind is the way it is at the moment.”

That journey, in football terms, took Ferdinand from Sunderland to Queens Park Rangers , who face Chelsea on Sunday, on transfer deadline day and he reveals that he hopes to start a prayer group before Loftus Road home matches.

“At Sunderland we had a group who prayed. There was me, Kieran Richardson, Stephane Sessegnon, Asamoah Gyan, John Mensah, Nedum Onuoha. Hopefully I will start building that here.”

Ferdinand’s faith is, indeed, central to him. He has a ‘mentor’, Michael Springer, who first approached him when he was at West Ham United, and who is close to another Christian, Chris Powell, now the Charlton Athletic manager, and who has been a powerful influence. When Ferdinand was out of the Sunderland team he was told that it was “no coincidence” that the results were not good.

“The year that I was having problems [injury and form], the club won maybe two, three games without me on the pitch,” the central defender states. “It got said to me that ‘the team won’t win until you return’.”

That was probably uttered as much as motivation for Ferdinand, who felt Sunderland manager Steve Bruce did not want him, as any belief in divine intervention but faith means much to him. “You interviewed me six years ago,” he recalls. “My outlook on life is very different. I’m more of a man now.”

When I did interview Ferdinand last time — talking about everything from his interest in music to show jumping as well as football — he was polite and deferential and only 20.

But he admits that he has not achieved what he could have done. He has, harshly he says, been labelled for off-field incidents and pre-conceptions with Alan Curbishley’s ‘Baby Bentley’ tag — about a group of West Ham players accused of being more interested in cars than winning matches — hurting as well as being inaccurate.

“A lot of people put it out there that I was ‘flash’ but that has never been me, I remember my background,” Ferdinand says, recalling his upbringing on a tough Peckham estate. “My mum and dad installed the right principles in me.”

Still Ferdinand, 26, concedes that his career — halfway through now — is yet to peak. “Everyone spoke about my potential and I know that I have not fulfilled it,” he admits. “This is another opportunity to show people that it wasn’t just potential.”

QPR is family. It was hard to leave Sunderland, and there is emotion in Ferdinand’s voice as he talks about the “big decision in my heart” to leave, when he realised he was not going to be offered a new contract and bids were being accepted, after three years in the North East.

But he knew it was the right decision — not least because “the name Ferdinand resonates around QPR because of ‘Sir Les’ — “everyone calls him that, I do even though he’s my cousin.”

The former England and QPR striker Les Ferdinand played in a team who, in 1993, were the highest placed in London. Anton dimly remembers being five, maybe six and clambering up to “The Loft” to watch Les play (1987-95 with 80 goals in just 163 games) having acquired ‘free’ tickets from his brother Rio who was then training with QPR before joining West Ham.

“This is the best team QPR have had since then and there’s no reason why we cannot emulate them,” he declares.

“Ray Wilkins, Trevor Sinclair, Ian Holloway, Danny Maddix. We have players in our team now that means we can maybe even do better. When I went to Loftus Road before I signed I was walking down the tunnel and turned to my right and saw an ‘old school’ photograph of Les. I’ve a lot of ties to this club.” It does feel like family.

Ferdinand turns to the tattoos again. There are three more — and two of them relate to his family. “The one up here,” he says touching the top of his bicep, “is for my granddad Jack who passed away. He liked to play cards. I’ve got a Jack of Hearts to represent him. It’s protected by an angel. On the inside of my arm, I have one for my mum and dad, thanking them for their guidance and love.”

There’s another tattoo — the oldest. It reads, ‘I believe to achieve’. “It’s a saying that I have had since I was a kid,” Ferdinand recalls. “It’s my saying in life.”

That childhood is vividly recalled and returning to London has put him closer to his roots. He knows the importance of being a role model. “But to be a role model you have to make sure you have done your job first,” Ferdinand says.

“My dad couldn’t come and tell me ‘you shouldn’t smoke weed’ if he was smoking weed.” For Ferdinand it is a case of practising what is preached.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/queens-park-rangers/8842184/Anton-Ferdinand-keeps-faith-in-his-career-at-Queens-Park-Rangers-and-hopes-to-start-prayer-group.html



A CHELSEA PERSPECTIVE


Picture by Haqpr1963

Many thanks to Maudesfishnchips for conducting another great interview. And many thanks to Chelsea fan, Martin Rowe of CFCNet for providing us with this interview and offering us with his perspective.


Many thanks to Martin Rowe, associate editor of CFCnet.co.uk. enjoy


How long have you supported Chelsea?

Well, I’m in my mid 40’s now so I guess that’s nearly half a century of supporting Chelsea! Put it this way, I’ve stood in the Shed and seen us get relegated. That was a long time ago but it’s seared into my memory as if it was yesterday.

There is only one team in west London and they play in hoops, why Chelsea!?

Not sure what you mean by that question.

Who's Chelsea’s biggest Rival (or Rivals)?

Traditionally it’s been Fulham and Spurs, but more recently it’s been teams like Barcelona and Man Utd. To be honest, the team we love to beat these days is Liverpool. 20 years and counting to win the league is a long time and we’re happy to play our part in extending this. Listening to Scousers talk you’d have thought they’d invented football but what people don’t realise is that Chelsea won their first European trophy before Liverpool and we were the first UK team to be invited to play in the newly formed European Cup in the 50’s.

Are you happy with your team and how things are to date? – What are your opinions on your manager AVB? His spending/selling this summer?

We’re happy with the style of football AVB is trying to instil at the Bridge and the dynamic pass-and-move nature of the team is winning people over. The board of Chelsea are also fully committed to him so at the moment everything seems to be going well. The big test will be when the difficult periods arrive – as they will – and whether the board will continue to back him. We’re all a bit tired with the constant chopping and changing of managers and would prefer some stability.

What do you think of your current Owner? WHY is he involved? What do you expect from him?

Roman’s been magnificent, absolutely first class. Yes, he’s been a bit trigger happy at times and interfered with managers like Mourinho etc, but overall 3 Premierships, 3 FA Cups and 2 Carling Cups tell their own story. We’ve had a wild time.

How do you think Chelsea treats its fans? Appreciates them? Listens to them? Screws them?

How long have you got? When Peter Kenyon ran the Fans Forum a lot of changes were made at the instigation of the fans and the relationship between the Club and many fans groups was pretty good. However, over time, the Club has become increasingly reluctant to engage with us and is starting to flex its muscles in a dictatorial fashion. Trust is beginning to break down if I’m perfectly honest.

Who are you Dangermen/Most valued/most overrated/most underrated players?

This is a hotly debated topic that could leave me open to widespread abuse when I next visit the Bridge! Everybody’s opinion is different so if you’d ask 1,000 fans you’d get 1,000 answers. However, I think you’d be stretched to find a fan who thinks Salomon Kalou should be a first team regular. Malouda’s form is also too erratic. Overall, though, we have a fantastic squad. Underrated? The media focus on Torres is obscene yet he is looking deadly at the moment – when lady luck turns his way he could have a blistering season.

Are you happy with your youth set up? Is your club doing enough to bring young/local talent through the ranks?

We have a great youth set-up and are doing everything we can to bring young players through. The facilities at Cobham are exceptional and the whole set-up is geared towards sustained long term success. The only criticism is Michael Emanelo’s appointment as technical director. I’m not sure what he brings to the table although Frank Arnesen hardly set the world on fire and he had a stellar reputation before he arrived.

Who would you say was the greatest Chelsea player that you yourself personally saw? And past player? (You can name more than one if it's that close!)

Ruud Gullit was the best player I have ever seen in a Chelsea shirt. He was a one man team and his presence at Chelsea was one of the building blocks of our rise since the early 90’s. He had awesome skill, power, athleticism, intelligence and leadership. Whilst many people would vote for Franco Zola (good as he was), as a complete football player Gullit gets my vote.

What is your prediction for Chelsea this season?

Top 2. Hopefully first. It depends on whether we can get the team to click on a consistent basis. Man Utd have already beaten us but they were slightly lucky in that match and the return fixture should be interesting. Man City are also rivals but they have a self-destruct button lurking in the background.

Are you aware of any player or manager links between our two clubs past and present?

Gavin Peacock played for you after captaining us in the mid 90’s. He was a great player and if his shot had gone in rather than clip the bar in the ’94 FA Cup Final, he could have been an all-time legend. He’s a very genuine fellow, I have a lot of respect for him and I believe he is now in the US studying to be a preacher.

What is your view and the general Chelsea view of QPR (If we even feature in your consciousness) or of Neil Warnock and our owners?

I once read in a Chelsea fanzine that QPR was like an annoying little brother, half your age, who just irritates the hell out of you. That’s fairly accurate. As for Warnock, Ken Bates invited him to become manager of Chelsea in 1991 and he turned us down because he didn’t want to leave the North. That excuse looks a bit thin now!

Who (if any) is your most memorable/favourite QPR Player over the years?

I am old enough to remember your great 1970’s side and Gerry Francis was a truly inspirational player.

Did you attend home or away, any matches between our two clubs when we were last in the premiership? Any memorable matches between our two clubs that stand out for you? And the reasons why?

One of my favourite games in my whole life was in 1990 (I think) when you were 2-0 up and we equalised before Joe Allon scored an overhead kick in the dying minutes. The whole away end went ballistic. I’ve never forgotten that game, it’s one of my top ten games of all time, and believe me, I’ve seen many, many hundreds (if not thousands).

Your score prediction for QPR v Chelsea?

3-1 to Chelsea. We’re a good team, believe me.

What, realistically, do you think Chelsea are capable of achieving in the next five years?

The sky’s the limit. We’d obviously like to go one step further in Europe.

What are your and the general view of Chelsea supporters regarding the proposed new stadium? And the suggested site in white city if this was of interest to Abramovich ? The QPR support would not welcome such a move, would you ?

We’re very angry about the situation. Whilst most fans agree that we probably need to move, the Club aren’t giving us any guarantees where they want to move to. Now, given that 12,000 of us own the Stamford Bridge pitch, turnstiles and brand name Chelsea FC, we’re pissed off that the Club want us to hand these rights over for no guarantee. They must think we came down in the last shower. The vote on 27th October is monumental in the history of our Club.
White City? We’d prefer to move nearer Stamford Bridge, Earl’s Court being a particular favourite.


Martin Rowe
CFCnet


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