Didier Drogba says Chelsea’s divided squad must back André Villas-Boas

• Striker concedes that Chelsea have had a ‘difficult moment’
• But manager is strong and players ‘must stick together’

Didier Drogba has conceded that Chelsea are suffering from a degree of internal disharmony but has backed André Villas-Boas to unify his team before Tuesday’s crucial match against Valencia. To guarantee progression to the knockout stages of the Champions League Villas-Boas needs his Chelsea players to put their concerns about his methods to one side and draw 0-0 or win at Stamford Bridge.

“You have to remember it’s the manager’s first season in the Premier League, it’s not easy for him and it isn’t easy for the players or the club,” said Drogba after scoring the opening goal in Chelsea’s slightly flattering 3-0 win at Newcastle United on Saturday. “But everything is coming together for the manager. He can deal with any pressure. You don’t rise to his level in coaching if you are not strong.”

Another of Chelsea’s senior players, Frank Lampard, was angry at being substituted at St James’ Park while Villas-Boas has accepted transfer requests from Nicolas Anelka and Alex. The French striker could join the Montreal Impact, a new Major League Soccer franchise, in January. Drogba said that the rest of the squad must stick together as Manchester City follow Valencia to Stamford Bridge next Monday.

“Yes we’ve been in a difficult moment but you have to stick together and make sure that, when we are on the pitch, we are all pulling in the same direction. That’s what we are doing right now and it’s great to see. Against Newcastle we looked more like the Chelsea of old, doing the simple things well. You create your own luck sometimes but that only comes from the whole team being in a really positive state of mind. We’ll have more bad moments but, if we stay together, good things will come along.”

Aware that this will almost certainly be his final season at Stamford Bridge, Drogba appears keen to depart on a high. “We face Valencia with confidence,” he said. “It’s these type of games you just love as a player. When I was a kid I used to watch huge matches like this, dreaming that I would one day play in them.

“It’s going to be very exciting. Yes, the pressure is on us, we normally don’t have too many problems in the group stages but this is why people love football. It’s going to be tough, certainly a different situation from what we’re used to, but in a way it will be just like some of the huge Champions League games we’ve had in recent years, the matches we played against Liverpool in the semi-finals, matches with so much tension around when it gets to kick-off. We’ve had challenges before and this is a new one. I’m ready to attack it.”

Anelka and Alex have effectively been placed in quarantine by Villas-Boas, who has adopted the arguably high-risk strategy of ordering them to train separately from the rest of the squad. “We’ve decided to assign different training times for Anelka and Alex,” said Villas-Boas. “Anelka and Alex are top professionals, this is just a decision we’ve made.”

Anelka has been a victim of Daniel Sturridge’s exciting attacking emergence and he acknowledged a parting of the ways was inevitable. “I’ve known for a little while where I’ll be on 2 January,” said Anelka. “The club, which is going through a difficult time, has decided to work with Chelsea’s players of the future and, as I am a good professional, I’ve accepted this.”

A Champions League exit may not be met with similar grace in the Stamford Bridge boardroom and Villas-Boas accepts he is approaching a possible watershed moment. “We’ve had a bad run of results recently that we want to invert and we have a major game on Tuesday,” he said. “We have to be up to our best. It will require a major physicial effort but, if we go past Valencia, we will set the right emotional stimulus.”

ChelseaDidier DrogbaAndré Villas-BoasValenciaChampions League 2011-12Champions LeagueLouise Taylorguardian.co.uk

Former Chelsea captain Dennis Wise rejoins board of CPO

• The 44-year-old was originally on CPO board in mid-1990s
• CPO rejected club’s attempt to buy Stamford Bridge freehold

Dennis Wise has agreed to rejoin the board of Chelsea Pitch Owners (CPO). The former Blues captain was announced as one of two new directors of the supporter-led company which owns the freehold of Stamford Bridge.

The 44-year-old CPO vice-president accepted an invitation from the three existing board members to return to the role he held when the company was formed in the mid-1990s.

The CPO chairman Steve Frankham said: “Dennis is delighted to rejoin as a director. As a hugely popular former skipper of the Blues, he has a passion for Chelsea, and in particular for the fans, and sees this as an opportunity to reconnect with his football ‘family’.”

Wise’s reappointment came less than a month after the Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich failed to convince CPO shareholders to sell him the Stamford Bridge freehold at an extraordinary general meeting of the company. Abramovich’s offer had been seen as a precursor to a move to a new 60,000-seater stadium but his proposal received 61.6% of the vote when 75% was required.

Frankham, who succeeded Richard King as CPO chairman in the wake of the stormy EGM, announced that the company’s annual general meeting would take place on 20 January, a month later than planned. He said: “Unfortunately, I am not available on the dates we had considered for the AGM in December and the directors think it is important that I am there to chair the meeting.”

Chelsea would require only 50% support for any proposal to buy back the freehold at an AGM but Frankham is not expecting them to return with a revised offer – or indeed their previous one – before January’s meeting.

Frankham said: “We do not anticipate firm proposals from the club being received in the next few weeks regarding the freehold, but CPO shareholders will be informed once any proposals have been received and reviewed.”

ChelseaBusinessguardian.co.uk

Chelsea 3-1 Everton | Premier League match report

André Villas-Boas does not come across as a man who would welcome any undue fuss for a birthday. He turns 34 on Monday, but his present may well come in the week ahead. Chelsea meet the Belgian champions, Genk, on Wednesday, and then on a derby weekend are looking to close ground on at least one of the Manchester clubs as United and City lock horns while Chelsea drop in on Loftus Road.

Chelsea may not be in full swing yet, but they are in a very handy position. It must be comforting for Villas-Boas to be able to mould his team – this selection did the business without the suspended Fernando Torres and the rested David Luiz and allowed for another cameo for Oriol Romeu – while maintaining a 100% success rate at home.

With a home record as powerful as Chelsea’s in recent years, as well as all the heartstrings that are attached to the place, it is little wonder that the most traditional of fans are resistant to the idea of moving from Stamford Bridge. Following the club’s noises about tying up loose ends in terms of housekeeping, fans outside the ground were leafleted. “If we lose this battle, the club can relocate ANYWHERE without any consultation with supporters,” wrote the Say No CPO (Chelsea Pitch Owners) group, campaigning against the sale of the Stamford Bridge pitch.

Inside, a little banner swirled over the heads of the crowd beneath Roman Abramovich’s box: “This is our home.” It was not exactly mutiny, but it was something, even if it must have made the Everton supporters wonder.

Decrying ambitions to upgrade their stadium paid for by their millionaire benefactor? They could only wish to have that to complain about.

On the pitch Everton have their concerns, too, but they did journey south with an excellent record at Stamford Bridge to embolden them. A run of five consecutive draws here gave them reason for confidence, and they duly began without inhibitions. They defended stoutly, and broke in numbers. In the 11th minute Louis Saha broke down the left and forced Petr Cech into a fumbling save, the first sign that perhaps Chelsea were in for another uncomfortable encounter against David Moyes’s team. But appearances can deceptive.

Ten minutes later Chelsea were grateful to Mikel John Obi for an exemplary defensive intervention to interrupt a flowing move that ended with Marouane Fellaini marauding into the box.

Early on Chelsea struggled to get a foothold, with Juan Mata switching flanks to try to make something happen, and Didier Drogba leading the line but without the power of his prime, potshots coming from distance from the unusual suspects such as José Bosingwa, Ashley Cole and Ramires. No danger.

No panic, either. There had been pre-match talk about how determined they were to pick up where they left off before the international break – having scored nine goals against Swansea and Bolton – but Chelsea could not easily click into rhythm.

All of a sudden, two slick passes changed everything. Frank Lampard switched possession to Cole, whose cross hung beautifully to allow Daniel Sturridge to arrive to nod Chelsea ahead from close range. His fourth goal of the season was greeted appreciatively in the Shed, who chanted “Sturridge for England”.

In first-half stoppage time Lampard was the architect of Chelsea’s second, with a perfectly flighted free-kick into the heart of the penalty area. John Terry bulldozed in front of Tim Howard to direct his header into the net.

Chelsea were brighter after half-time. Just after the hour mark they took the idea that Everton were a bogey team, screwed it up, and tossed it into a goal-sized bin in front of the Matthew Harding stand. Mata steered in a cross from the left, and Ramires timed his run to take advantage of poor defending for another close-range finish. Unfortunately for the in-form Brazilian, he took a knock on the knee in the process of scoring, and hobbled off shortly afterwards.

Everton still found it in them to respond, when substitute Apostolos Vellios slid in a consolation with his first touch seconds after coming on. They left here thoroughly defeated for a change, with a sequence of three straight defeats to mull over on the trip home.

Premier League 2011-12ChelseaEvertonPremier LeagueAmy Lawrenceguardian.co.uk