
We bring you the action from all of tonight’s games including Chelsea’s visit to Bayer Leverkusen and Borussia Dortmund’s trip to the Emirates
Steven Bloor

We bring you the action from all of tonight’s games including Chelsea’s visit to Bayer Leverkusen and Borussia Dortmund’s trip to the Emirates
Steven Bloor

• Chelsea lose 2-1 to Bayer Leverkusen
• Manager says ‘confidence is low’ after late defeat
André Villas-Boas accepted his responsibility to coax “concentration and focus” from his beleaguered players, after Chelsea lost to a stoppage-time Bayer Leverkusen goal that left their qualification for the knockout phase of the Champions League in doubt. The Londoners must win or keep a clean sheet against Valencia at Stamford Bridge on 6

Chelsea’s campaign continues to close in around them. For a while last night the Londoners flirted with qualification into the group stage, a rare away victory in Europe and a clean sheet to ease their recent defensive jitters. In the end, pegged back and then beaten in added time, their progress into the knock-out phase suddenly appears in jeopardy.
The Germans leapfrogged the Londoners courtesy of Manuel Friedrich’s header from Gonzalo Castro’s 91st-minute corner, leaving André Villas-Boas’s side requiring a clean sheet or a victory against Valencia in next month’s finale at Stamford Bridge to qualify. That feels a tall order at present given recent travails. Either way, the opportunity to claim the section may have been passed up already. Good fortune has deserted this team of late, with this a prolongation of recent misery.
This may have felt like a daunting trip to the Rhineland, particularly given the recent slump being endured domestically, but, for Chelsea, it had also represented an opportunity. A win would at least have served to stir this team from its untimely slumbers. With that in mind, Villas-Boas had spoken of adopting a “proactive” approach, imposing the side’s attacking flair on Leverkusen, as they sought the victory that would extend their stay in the competition into the new year. Ramires and Raul Meireles were duly asked to set the tempo at the base of midfield, with a trio of players dropping off Drogba in support.
The frustration was that for long periods, the Londoners’ passing was so awry, undermining their attempts to impose themselves on the contest. Daniel Sturridge was bright and busy, rendering Michael Kadlec uncomfortable, but it took until the period immediately before half-time for Chelsea to induce some level of panic in the Bundesliga team. The pressure yielded a clear chance for Drogba, liberated by Sturridge’s pass, only for the Ivorian to blaze into the side-netting having rounded Bernd Leno. The visitors winced at the miss.
By then, Bayer’s early discipline was fading. Players were booked for dissent, the Germans’ own anxieties clear as they felt Valencia – rattling up goals at the Mestalla against the group’s whipping boys, Genk – breathing down their necks. They might have expected to have unsettled the visitors more. The visitors’ back-line felt somewhat makeshift, the loss of Ashley Cole to an ankle injury sustained in the previous evening’s training session at the stadium having exposed the soft underbelly of Chelsea’s Champions League squad.
Ryan Bertrand’s ineligibility, Yuri Zhirkov’s summer sale and Patrick van Aanholt’s loan to Wigan Athletic had left Cole as the only natural left-back available to Villas-Boas and, with Paulo Ferreira omitted from the travelling squad altogether, it fell upon José Bosingwa to deputise. The Portuguese right-sided defender did at least have previous in the position having emerged from Camp Nou, no less, with a clean sheet as Guus Hiddink’s side drew 0-0 at Barcelona in the 2009 semi-final. Yet that seemed some time ago. There is such fragility to Chelsea’s rearguard at present that any unanticipated upheaval felt unwelcome. For a while, Leverkusen had targeted the fill-in, but Castro’s slippery running only went so far. Michael Ballack glided comfortably and threatened at times, looping a header on to the bar just after the half-hour mark, but Stefan Kiessling looked isolated with the visitors’ rearguard, protected by a two-man midfield shield, appearing more willing to sit deeper than they have of late.
The same could not be said of Drogba. The forward had been feeding largely off Sturridge’s delivery all evening, the youngster buzzing effectively from flank to centre where Juan Mata was more peripheral, and was duly found by another fine diagonal pass three minutes into the second period. Drogba had Manuel Friedrich tight at his back but held off the centre-half, spinning cleverly inside to eke out a hint of space before rasping a left-footed shot into the corner beyond Leno. That amounted to only the 33-year-old’s second goal of the season, and his first for two months, but it merely maintained the momentum that had built up before the break.
That offered a platform, and a chance to pick Bayer off on the break, though the visitors were also reliant upon some measure of defensive solidity to offer reassurance. To that end David Luiz, so gung-ho at times in his short Chelsea career, was a more conservative presence here, John Terry barking at him whenever the Brazilian threatened to tear upfield unprompted with or without the ball in tow, before Alex was introduced in his compatriot’s stead late on.
Yet nerves continue to jangle. Petr Cech had suggested a return to form, blocking a close-range shot from Ballack superbly, but was left exposed as the substitute Eren Derdiyok slipped Sidney Sam into the area down the left then pealed to the back post to nod in the winger’s cross. Cech, horribly out of position with the side’s defensive shape abandoned, was powerless to