Chelsea will wait for Fernando Torres to find form – André Villas-Boas

• Manager says ’sure we can turn round’ striker’s confidence
• Frank Lampard’s agent has contacted club about new deal

André Villas-Boas has said he is prepared to wait another year for Fernando Torres to rediscover his form if required, as the first anniversary of the 27-year-old’s so far unsuccessful £50m transfer from Liverpool approaches.

At the end of January Torres enters the second year of his Chelsea career. The striker has only three goals in 25 Premier League appearances. But despite this and the Spaniard not having started for the club since 1 November in the 1-1 draw at Genk in the Champions League, Villas-Boas insisted that if Torres continued to underperform until January 2013 he would still retain faith in the Spaniard.

Asked if Chelsea could afford another year of indifferent form the Portuguese said: “I think so. This is a talent that is never in doubt but it is related to motivation [confidence]. So we have to be very patient and I’m sure we can turn this around. The player who wears the No9 lives for goals. Strikers are the most selfish people in the world and they are rightly so because they put the ball in the net.

“We have to continue to push. That’s one of the prerogatives of the manager, to get the best out of everyone.”

Didier Drogba, who is the first-choice striker in Villas-Boas’s preferred 4-3-3 formation, is due to play for Ivory Coast in the Africa Cup of Nations in late January and early February. This may allow Torres a run of games to re-establish form and confidence, and the manager said he is performing well in training.

“I think he is ready mentally,” Villas-Boas said. “Everybody wants to be involved more time. Fernando is pushing for a place with Didier – he is on a good run at the moment. We always count on our players and are sure that when Fernando is involved he will respond. He will come back. I am confident of that.”

Villas-Boas also confirmed that Torres is not for sale following reports that Chelsea would listen to offers. “It’s not true, I’m sorry. He is not available at any price. Now, or in the summer.”

The manager also said Frank Lampard’s agent has contacted the club regarding the possibility of a new deal for the 33-year-old. The midfielder has 18 months left on his current deal and Lampard said this week that he wished to remain until this finishes when he will be 35. But despite no longer being an automatic choice, Lampard believes he can continue at Chelsea beyond 2013.

Asked about the possibility of an extension, Villas-Boas said that the player’s representative had been in touch with Ron Gourlay, the Chelsea chief executive. “Ron Gourlay told me that [the agent] Steve Kutner contacted him recently,” he said. “I’m not sure of the situation. And I think we haven’t decided yet what to do.”

Regarding Lampard, who earns around £160,000 a week, Villas-Boas insisted that there will be no special allowance made for him despite his status as one of the senior players. He said: “Frank is not the only one. People are making great efforts to get into the Chelsea squad, and Frank is one of the top five used players. Everyone wants to be involved in every game but sometimes it is not possible. I treat everybody equally. It’s pretty clear everybody wants to play in every single game. You will find it from Frank but you will find it from [Florent] Malouda, [Salomon] Kalou and Paulo [Ferreira].

“There is no hiding that Lamps represents the best in the history of the club. He and JT [John Terry], are near to 600 or 550 appearances. These are players of a massive magnitude for the club and represent Chelsea’s success, but in our opinion every player must be treated equally and we try to be as fair and coherent as possible.

“Sometimes we make decisions that cannot please everybody, because it’s a 24-man squad. That is the reality of football and there are no explanations.”

Chelsea also confirmed that Oriol Romeu can be bought back by Barcelona only should the west London club wish.

Fernando TorresChelseaAndré Villas-BoasFrank LampardJamie Jacksonguardian.co.uk

Fernando Torres not for sale at any price, says André Villas-Boas

• Chelsea manager rules out January departure for striker
• ‘It is a question of time when we see him back, sooner or later’

The Chelsea manager, André Villas-Boas, has quashed speculation linking Fernando Torres with a move away from the club.

Reports had suggested Chelsea were willing to offload the striker, who has struggled for form since his £50m move from Liverpool, but Villas-Boas on Thursday ruled out the sale of the Spaniard.

“It’s not true, I’m sorry,” he said. “He is not available at any price, for sure.”

Torres has made only six Premier League starts for Chelsea this season, with the in-form Didier Drogba first choice once more at Stamford Bridge. Villas-Boas, though, expects Torres to return to the first XI at some point.

“Everybody wants to be involved more,” he said. “Fernando is pushing for a place with Didier who is on a good run at the moment and we are sure when Fernando is called up he will respond with the quality he has. It is a question of time when we see him back, sooner or later I don’t know, but we have to make the best decision for the team.

“[Nicolas] Anelka, of course, will not be involved any more but we have [Daniel] Sturridge competing and [Romelu] Lukaku and Fernando competing when Didier will be away [at the Africa Cup of Nations] and hopefully we can make the best decision.”

Villas-Boas also said that there is no problem in his relationship with Frank Lampard. The midfielder has been dropped to the bench in recent weeks and after his goalscoring substitute appearance against Manchester City revealed his discontent with the situation.

“Frank is not the only one,” Villas-Boas said. “People are making great efforts to get into the Chelsea squad and Frank is one of the top five used players. Everyone wants to be involved in every game but sometimes it is not possible.

“I treat everybody equally. It’s pretty clear everybody wants to play in every single game. You will find it from Frank but you will find it from [Florent] Malouda, [Salomon] Kalou and Paulo [Ferreira] the same. Everybody wants to play and pushes to be involved.

“There is no hiding that Lamps represents the best in history of the club. He and JT are near to 600 or 550 appearances. These are players of a massive magnitude for the club and represent Chelsea’s success, but in our opinion every player must be treated equally and we try to be as fair and coherent as possible.

“Sometimes we make decisions that cannot please everybody, because it’s a 24-man squad. That is the reality of football and there are no explanations.”

Fernando TorresChelseaAndré Villas-BoasTransfer windowJohn Ashdownguardian.co.uk

Newcastle manager Alan Pardew says referee admitted David Luiz mistake

• Chelsea defender shown yellow card in 3-0 win
• Pardew says Mike Dean admitted his mistake

The Newcastle United manager, Alan Pardew, has said that the referee Mike Dean has admitted he should have sent off the Chelsea defender David Luiz during the Premier League match at St James’ Park on Saturday.

The Brazilian was shown a yellow card for a fourth-minute challenge on Demba Ba, in a match that Chelsea’s won 3-0.

Pardew said after the game the official had told him, at half-time, that he did not show a red card because Ba did not have the ball under control.

Speaking on Sky Sports on Sunday, Pardew said Dean’s opinion of the incident had changed after seeing it again.

Pardew said: “I have got no problem with the referee yesterday, he made a mistake. Actually, he has since after the game seen it again and said to me, ‘I made a mistake, he should have been sent off’.

“At half-time yesterday, his opinion was different, but his opinion would have been altered if his assistant referee had done his job, in my opinion. When I saw the referee at half-time, I said, ‘Why did you not send him off?’ He said to me, ‘He didn’t have control of the ball.’

“Well, how can you have control of the ball when the guy is knocking you over? There is no way the goalie is getting to the ball, but the bigger problem I have got is with the linesman on this occasion, because I was looking at the linesman. The linesman can see that – he didn’t flag, he didn’t go mad, he didn’t do anything, so Mike Dean is making that decision from 40 yards away.

“If the linesman is waving his flag and suggesting, ‘You know what, this is an incident here,’ and they have got their little mics…

“It would have altered the game, down to 10 men, Chelsea, the pressure they were under. I wouldn’t have lost my centre-half [Fabricio Collocini] to injury because we were forcing the game. I had people charging around trying to get back a situation when we would have been in control of the game. Not only do I lose the game, but I have lost two players through injury. I’m still angry.”

Newcastle had the benefit of a controversial decision at Manchester United last weekend, when they were awarded a penalty for a Rio Ferdinand challenge on Hatem Ben Arfa after the referee, Mike Jones, had originally awarded a corner. That game finished 1-1.

Pardew said: “The problem we have got in this country is that it’s something like the budget, I am told, £8m for the referees, everything – assistants, assessors, the whole budget. Now when you think about how much money is thrown at this game, that can’t be right.

“The training for the referees is about £30,000, believe it or not. We have got assistant referees who are not full-time, so we are going to have this problem unless we say assistant referees are professional. The referee has then got a unit that’s trained, that trains together, that works together, that knows each other, who can deal with those situations because they are dealing with them when they are training in the week. Unless we do something like that, it isn’t going to improve.”

Alan PardewNewcastle UnitedChelseaguardian.co.uk