Frank Lampard says there is nothing wrong with Chelsea’s old boys

• Frank Lampard says Chelsea have moved on from last season
• ‘Older you get, more you appreciate what you have got’

Frank Lampard has hit back at critics who claim Chelsea’s squad are past it – and declared there is more to come from the Premier League champions.

Carlo Ancelotti’s men have started the new campaign the way they finished the last one with three successive victories, including 6-0 routs of both West Bromwich Albion and Wigan Athletic, while they are yet to concede a goal.

Much has been made of the age of the Blues’ senior men, such as Lampard, 32, John Terry, 29, and Didier Drogba, who will be 33 in March.

However, the England midfielder Lampard – who is currently sidelined by a hernia problem which forced him out of tonight’s opening Euro 2012 qualifier against Bulgaria at Wembley – rejects any suggestions the Chelsea players are over the hill.

Speaking to the October edition of the club’s official magazine, Lampard declared: “It is a load of rubbish when I hear talk about there only being one or two years left in our spine. This has been going on for a year or so.

“Sometimes that is mind games from other managers or press talk and we proved them wrong last year.

“We have got players here who are experienced and you can’t buy experience in football – look at Didier, he is a specimen and he will overpower any 24- or 25-year-old.

“People have been waxing lyrical about Paul Scholes, and rightly so, because if you take him out of the United team now, they will want to replace him and they probably won’t be able to.”

Lampard may have a trophy cabinet full of honours, but the former West Ham trainee maintains his hunger for more success. “Every year I set my goals again, I don’t lose any ambition or drive,” Lampard said. “I would love to win the Champions League one day, but I would love to win more Premier League titles as well, so it’s quite easy to self-motivate.

“I think also that, the older you get, the more you appreciate what you have got as a footballer. I think it’s one of my strong points that I always want to do more because you don’t play forever. If I can keep my level up to the way I am playing now I believe I can go on playing for many more years.”

With 14 goals from the opening three Premier League matches, things are certainly going to plan for Chelsea, who saw experienced midfielders Joe Cole and Michael Ballack leave on free transfers during the summer. “I think our game feels more natural now – you can see that from the way we finished last season and started this one,” Lampard said.

“Don’t get me wrong, we had difficult moments last season when it wasn’t flowing, but it became more natural to us and after winning the Double and celebrating that, I think we came back here in the summer wanting to step up again to another level.”

Lampard paid tribute to Ancelotti, who delivered the club an historic Double in his first season. “The manager is very involved – his method, his training, his personality and his calmness is something the players have related to more and more over the last year or so and that’s making us stronger as a unit,” the midfielder said.

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John Terry reveals injury has affected him since World Cup

• Hamstring injury forced John Terry to miss England qualifier
• Chelsea captain has been ordered to rest for 10 days

John Terry has revealed the hamstring injury which has forced him to miss the start of England’s European Championship qualifying campaign dates back to the World Cup.

The Chelsea captain was ruled out of this Friday’s match against Bulgaria at Wembley as well as the trip to Switzerland four days later after being ordered to rest for 10 days.

The defender told Chelsea TV: “I have had a bit of a problem since the World Cup and I was hoping after the World Cup that I would have two weeks off and it would completely go away. But that wasn’t the case and, coming back working hard, it came back on.”

Terry has played every game for club and country this season but claims the injury was behind his half-time substitution in England’s recent friendly win over Hungary.

“I played the last England game but I had to come off at half-time because of it,” he said. “I have not made it public but I have been struggling with it and maybe I just need 10 days’ rest to fully get over it because it could impact on my season.”

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Chelsea 2-0 Stoke City | Premier League match report

Florent Malouda stopped short of sparking one of the deepest crises of French football history at the World Cup finals. He left that to his Chelsea team-mate Nicolas Anelka. The midfielder’s tournament, nonetheless, qualified as tumultuous, what with his bust-up with the coach Raymond Domenech, hearing his commitment questioned and being dropped twice from the starting line-up.

A summer that had promised so much for Malouda, after his 15 goals and prominent role in Chelsea’s Double season, was reduced to bitter frustration and Carlo Ancelotti said the player had been “angry” when he returned for pre-season training. Chelsea’s Italian manager had meant to say Malouda looked “hungry”, but he quickly decided that both words fitted the bill.

Malouda has begun the season like a man determined to show his worth, and his rampaging performance against a Stoke City team still without a point was embellished by a fourth goal in three games. “Malouda is one of our best players right now,” Ancelotti said. “He wanted to improve on his poor performances at the World Cup and I think he is doing very well. It is a good motivation to come back and be excited to play with Chelsea.”

Anelka said that Malouda is one of the “livelier lads” in the dressing-room, and that he enjoyed the role as the team’s unofficial DJ. Malouda’s reggae belts out every day, according to Anelka, while his dance moves lift the mood. It is principally his development over the past year or so, however, that has served to establish the Frenchman as one of the squad’s leaders.

“This is his fourth season at the club so he’s got used to it and he has more confidence on the pitch,” Anelka said. “It’s difficult to come from the French league and, straight away, play for Chelsea. It’s tough in England, everything is quicker. But now he knows the English league. He is one of the best. He has everything.”

Chelsea might have inflicted another humiliating scoreline on their opponents had Frank Lampard not missed his third penalty in a row for club and country. Ashley Cole, Didier Drogba and Salomon Kalou spurned chances. Cole also hit the crossbar with a sumptuous volley.

But Chelsea’s power and intensity was such that the result never felt in doubt, despite Stoke’s sporadic threat. Jon Walters went close in the first-half, Matthew Etherington had a shot cleared by Drogba and Glenn Whelan hit the bar from 25 yards.

Tony Pulis, the Stoke manager, was hopeful of making four new signings before the closure of the transfer window while he is also trying to keep the reserve goalkeeper, Asmir Begovic, out of Chelsea’s clutches. The London club have had a bid of £4.5m rejected. Pulis saluted the work ethic and positive attitude of his players; on this evidence, the results will turn for him.

Chelsea’s goals stemmed from their bullying aggression. Alex and John Terry swarmed over Kenwyne Jones in the 32nd minute to win possession on half-way, Terry playing in Malouda while Drogba knocked Dean Whitehead off the ball before hitting it towards Anelka, who was brought down by Thomas Sorensen for the game’s second penalty. Drogba scored but he later said Lampard, who had been substituted, will continue to be the first-choice penalty taker.

“We are playing good football,” Ancelotti said, “but we can show not just good football. It was a physical match and we were ready for that. We are a physical team, we have a lot of power. We have to be ready to play different kinds of football.”

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