André Villas-Boas hits out at FA over John Terry’s loss of captaincy

• ‘John will continue to be our captain’ says Chelsea manager
• Villas-Boas: ‘It’s really an FA decision. I don’t agree with it’

Chelsea manager André Villas-Boas insists John Terry will remain the club’s captain despite being stripped of the national armband. The defender, who will miss Sunday’s crucial clash with Manchester United due to a knee injury, retains the full support of his club and the Portuguese said he does not support the FA’s decision.

He said: “It’s really an FA decision. I have nothing to say about it,” Villas-Boas said today. “I don’t agree with it. The statement from the FA was pretty clear on what was their decision-making.

“John will continue to be our captain. It [the trial] doesn’t compromise on my decision-making. It obviously compromises on the FA’s decision-making.”

Villas-Boas confirmed that Terry would miss Sunday and “probably” the Everton match next Saturday having been unable to train this week, meaning Gary Cahill may make his debut.

Frank Lampard could return from the calf injury that has kept him out of the last two games but Ashley Cole is suspended while Ramires (knee) and Mikel John Obi (hamstring) are still out.

Provisional squad: Cech, Bosingwa, Ivanovic, David Luiz, Cahill, Chalobah, Hutchinson, Bertrand, Romeu, Essien, Lampard, Mata, Malouda, Meireles, Torres, Sturridge, Lukaku, Turnbull.

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André Villas-Boas hails ‘fantastic’ relationship with Frank Lampard

• Chelsea manager stresses selection will remain on form
• ‘Frank is a player who is not available at any price’

André Villas-Boas has described his relationship with Frank Lampard as “fantastic”, though he has stressed that team selection at Chelsea will continue to be based upon form rather than reputation.

Lampard, one of the players deemed “untouchable” by the former manager José Mourinho and a veteran of 535 games at the club, found himself on the bench for the key fixtures against Valencia, Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur last month. That led to some frustration from the 33-year-old, who claimed not to have spoken to Villas-Boas about the issue.

Yet, with LA Galaxy monitoring the player’s potential availability in the summer, Villas-Boas has insisted the England midfielder remains a key part of his plans “for the long term” even if no one will be considered an automatic selection for the team. “Our relationship is fantastic,” said Villas-Boas. “Frank is a player who is not available at any price.

“He is not ‘in and out in rotation’. There is no such thing here. We decide on an XI which is strong for a particular game, and that can help us in the strategy to win that game. Frank has been decisive in the last couple of games [against Wolverhampton Wanderers and Portsmouth] with the timing of his arrival in the box to solve problems for the team. Has he spoken to me about it? We speak every day. We see each other every day.”

Lampard’s goal in the FA Cup third-round defeat of Portsmouth on Sunday was his 10th of the campaign, suggesting he remains a threat from midfield, though the player has always said that his best form is generated by a regular run in the side. While he will hope to begin Saturday’s visit of Sunderland to Stamford Bridge, he has made four starts in the past seven Premier League matches, with his omission in the bigger games through December notable.

“Every player wants to find that consistency and playing time,” Villas-Boas said. “You read what [Florent] Malouda said recently about that, too. It’s normal everybody wants to be involved. Frank, with the player he is and the history he represents, wants to be involved all the time, but every player is competing for a place. I’ve said the same all season, even when Frank had more playing time and others didn’t. Everyone is fighting to be in it, and a player of Frank’s level has a shorter distance to travel to be in the team than others.

“He did previously start at [Manchester] United and against Liverpool and Arsenal, and Valencia away. His talent is not in doubt. But we decide what will be best for the team. Players have different characteristics and your strategy depends on how you want to play the game. Other players might be better placed in certain games, or players might be in better form than others. We try different options at times, but Frank is the [joint] sixth most-used starter at Chelsea in the league this season, so he’s involved all the time.”

Villas-Boas is charged with revitalising Chelsea’s playing squad, a task that has been necessitated by an ageing staff with many up and down the spine of the first-team having featured since Mourinho’s time at the club. Lampard remains one of the team’s modern-day talismans, granting his omission for certain matches greater resonance among supporters. “But what the fans demand is instant success, and success in terms of trophies,” Villas-Boas said. “Liverpool have been wanting to get back to winning the Premier League for some time, and they don’t have Ian Rush, [Kenny] Dalglish and [Alan] Hansen

No Manchester United bid for Frank Lampard, says Sir Alex Ferguson

• ‘There is no foundation in that,’ insists United manager
• Ferguson also plays down expectations of other signings

Sir Alex Ferguson has dismissed suggestions that Manchester United will attempt to sign Chelsea’s Frank Lampard this January.

With United losing a number of key midfielders to injury, it had been speculated that they could bid for Lampard – who is said to be unsettled at Chelsea, where he is no longer assured of a first-team place under André Villas-Boas. Ferguson, however, rejected the idea out of hand.

“Do you really think Chelsea would sell to United in January?” he is quoted as saying on Manchester United’s club website. “There’s no foundation in that. Chelsea want to do something in the second half of the season so they want to keep their best players.”

Ferguson also moved to play down expectations of other signings in the present transfer window. “What can you get in January?” he said. “The players we’d like, we can’t get. If the alternative is to sign a second-rate player, we don’t want to do that.

“Our injuries have led to fans wanting us to sign someone but I don’t want to sign a player who won’t get a game when everyone’s fit because he’s not good enough.”

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