Nicolas Anelka and Chelsea begin talks over contract extension to 2013

• Club and striker confident of swift agreement
• Talks over Joe Cole’s new deal remain deadlocked

Chelsea have opened talks with Nicolas Anelka’s representative over extending the France striker’s stay at Stamford Bridge. The 30-year-old’s current contract expires at the end of next season, with discussions now under way to keep him at the club until 2013.

Anelka’s adviser, Doug Pingisi, was in London last week for preliminary discussions with both club and player confident negotiations will be concluded swiftly. The Frenchman moved to Chelsea from Bolton Wanderers for £15m and has been one of their most consistent performers over the last two campaigns, scoring 19 league goals last season.

His form, which has led to eight league goals to date this term though none since January, has impressed Carlo Ancelotti. “Anelka is a top player and this club needs to have a lot of top players,” the Italian said recently. “I’m confident he’ll stay with us. The club will try to find the right solution for both Chelsea and for him.”

The speed at which negotiations are expected to be favourably concluded contrasts markedly with the currently deadlocked talks with Joe Cole. The England midfielder, an unused substitute in Sunday’s 2-0 FA Cup quarter-final win over Stoke City, is seeking to increase his wages from £80,000 a week to nearer those of the higher earners at the west London club with compromise yet to be reached.

Both Chelsea and Cole – who was absent for seven months up to September after suffering a serious knee injury – remain hopeful that a deal can still be struck that will extend the player’s seven-year stay beyond the end of the season, when his current deal is due to expire. “Joe’s had a very traumatic time with his knee, and you get highs and lows,” said the assistant manager Ray Wilkins when asked about the midfielder’s recent dip in form. “But he’ll play plenty of games for Chelsea.”

Ashley Cole is expected to return to Cobham after the weekend after a spell undertaking rehabilitation on his fractured ankle in the south of France. The England full-back’s progress has been steady since he underwent surgery on the joint broken in a challenge with Landon Donovan at Everton last month, and he remains confident that he will prove his fitness well ahead of the summer’s World Cup finals.

ChelseaPremier LeagueDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk

Shaun Wright-Phillips and Chelsea face questions over unlicensed agent

• Claims that unlicensed go-between helped set up 2005 deal
• FA investigating, with fines or even points deduction possible

The Football Association is considering whether Shaun Wright-Phillips and Chelsea could face charges for dealing with an unlicensed agent, Mitchell Thomas, when Wright-Phillips moved to Stamford Bridge from Manchester City in July 2005. The investigation by the FA follows the outcome of a case brought by the Law Society against a solicitor, Timothy Drukker, who signed off the paperwork in the Wright‑Phillips deal but paid Thomas part of the £1.2m fee which Chelsea paid him.

If the FA does find that Thomas, the former Tottenham Hotspur and Luton Town defender, was involved in negotiating the deal, they could bring charges against Wright-Phillips and Chelsea. Penalties range from warnings to fines and even points deductions.

The Wright-Phillips transfer is the 17th deal, previously unidentified, handed over to the FA by Quest, the investigators the Premier League hired to conduct the so-called “bungs inquiry” into transfers by its clubs between 1

Abuse makes John Terry stronger, says Frank Lampard

• Chelsea captain explains armband celebration
• Terry: ‘I was just giving the Stoke fans a bit of banter’

Frank Lampard says John Terry will emerge stronger from the abuse to which he has been subjected from opposing teams’ supporters over the last few weeks. The deposed England captain was targeted by Stoke City fans at Stamford Bridge yesterday following the allegations over his private life which had prompted Fabio Capello to strip him of the England armband.

Terry responded with a fine performance, capped by an assist and the headed goal which sealed Chelsea’s 2-0 FA Cup success, with his manic celebrations – pointing at the armband and staring fixedly at the visiting support – a response to the abuse he had been receiving.

“We all get that, to an extent,” said Lampard. “I’ve had that at times, and John got it against Stoke. Sometimes the abuse does overstep the mark, but strong players just react in positive ways. That’s what John did. We’ll play and move on – that’s the best answer we can give, really. These things happen.”

“I was just giving the Stoke fans a bit of banter, that was all,” said Terry of his celebration. “They were giving me a bit of stick and I was just giving a bit back. That is what football is about. They are entitled to do what they do and so am I on the pitch as long as they take it in the right manner. I am sure they did. You just get on with it as a player.

“One way to get through it is to play well, and to score was the icing on the cake. Chelsea have been very supportive and I would like to thank everyone for that, but the main thing was we came back from a disappointing result and performance last week.”

Recovering from that 4-2 defeat to Manchester City was critical, with Chelsea having now surrendered the lead in the Premier League to Manchester United, albeit with the London club still having a game in hand. Carlo Ancelotti’s team retain hope of silverware on three fronts – they must overcome a 2-1 first-leg deficit against Internazionale in the Champions League next week – though the players have acknowledged that they must muster consistent form over the final three months of the season to gain tangible reward.

“Everyone has results like that City match, they can happen,” added Lampard. “Maybe it can serve as a kick in the right direction and we can react positively. I think we did that in the week up to the Stoke game. Hopefully, it can make us more aware and make sure we get back on it, especially at home, for the rest of the season. We’ve got it in us to go on a consistent run. Every team has faltered at times this season, but this is a time to kick on in the league. It’s very important now that the team pushes on and goes on a consistent run. All we can do is concentrate on winning games.”

John TerryChelseaDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk