Didier Drogba’s fine form means problems as well as praise for Chelsea

André Villas-Boas and Chelsea’s trickiest task is to rebuild while trying to get the best from the old brigade

André Villas-Boas may be loth to admit it but even eye-catching victories and progress into the Champions League knockout phase generate problems these days. The Portuguese will break away from revelling at having “slapped” down Chelsea’s critics to concentrate on his task of revitalising this club in the weeks ahead. Yet, in the long term, the trickiest obstacle hindering the overhaul of this team may actually prove to be the continued excellence of the old brigade.

The dismissal of Valencia on Tuesday night felt reassuringly familiar. The London side were back at their resilient best, allowing Spanish opponents the ball before hitting hard on the break. Guus Hiddink’s Chelsea might have hoped to have secured a similar result when confronting Barcelona in the 2009 semi-final second leg of this competition but Villas-Boas’s charges, with no dubious refereeing decisions to undermine them, were better rewarded for their efforts. There was strength stiffening the spine of the team and, at its head, a battering ram of a forward who would not be denied.

Didier Drogba, like his fellow forwards Nicolas Anelka and Salomon Kalou, had appeared to be playing out the final days of his Chelsea career with his contract due to expire at the end of this campaign. The club have been in talks over an extension, but the 12 months they have been offering fall short of the two years the Ivorian wants. A lucrative free transfer move to the Middle East has been mooted, offering the 33-year-old one last colossal payday. Yet, if Drogba can reproduce performances as reminiscent of his pomp as that against Valencia on a regular basis over the months to come, then pressure will mount for his services to be retained.

The forward has already contributed 36 goals in 69 Champions League games and believes he should be a part of his club’s future. “I hope I’ve got at least a couple of years left in me,” he said. “I started [playing professionally] late. I was 25 when I played my first Champions League games. Really I don’t know [how long I can carry on playing]. I feel happy, I feel good on the pitch, I really enjoy my football and when we are winning like this I’m really delighted. I don’t calculate. All I want to say is that my future is not so important. When the time comes, we will speak about my future. But at the moment there is no need to.”

Joe Cole and Michael Ballack used to say similar things way back in Carlo Ancelotti’s first season at the club, with the experienced pair eventually leaving under freedom of contract rules in the summer of 2010. But Drogba, whose attitude this term cannot be questioned, still has the ability to make the very idea that he could walk away for nothing in June unthinkable. There had been a hint of a return to his rampaging best in the fixtures leading up to the final group game. The defences of Bayer Leverkusen and Newcastle had been breached, with the brace against the Spanish – with each goal so smartly taken – leaving him a tally of four in as many matches.

There was strength, power and presence to his display on Tuesday, with Adil Rami and Victor Ruiz shrinking in his shadow. Markers bounced off him as he stampeded all over Valencia’s feeble resistance.

The player does not believe he is fully fit, with the perfectionist in him demanding further improvement. “The knock on the head [against Norwich City], the red card [at Queen's Park Rangers], the surgery on my arm [to remove pins applied before the World Cup finals] all didn’t help to get my fitness,” Drogba said. “Now I’m having more games and it’s going to come back. I hope quick, but it is going to come back. I’ve lost a lot of goals and this is something I hope my fitness will help me to improve. When I get to 100% fit there are a few mistakes I will try to rectify.”

Villas-Boas’s dilemma, if he considers it one, is that offering Drogba more than a year may feel rather regressive when everything the Portuguese is hoping to implement at Stamford Bridge is aimed at the long term. Kalou and Anelka will leave, the latter next month with the Chinese club Shanghai Shenhua hoping to see off the new Major League Soccer franchise in Montreal to secure his signature, but the enigma of Fernando Torres’s form still has still to be addressed. Romelu Lukaku may be raw but he, too, will need greater involvement over the next two years. Drogba may actually block the path to progression.

With that in mind, one blazing performance against Valencia is unlikely to dictate the club’s policy over further contract negotiations. Yet should he consistently deliver such explosive displays, along the lines of those mustered en route to the Double two years ago when he scored 37 times, then that stance may shift. The manner of Tuesday’s qualification was a reminder that, while Chelsea continue to adapt to the style Villas-Boas so craves, they can still flourish playing the way they know best. An approach in which Drogba is key.

Didier DrogbaChelseaAndré Villas-BoasDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk

Alex set to play at Birmingham after Chelsea postpone surgery

• No risk involved if centre-half plays, says Carlo Ancelotti
• Injured John Terry could feature at Newcastle next weekend

Chelsea have postponed the surgery needed by Alex to ensure the centre-half is available for selection for this afternoon’s potentially awkward match at Birmingham City as they seek to steer a passage through their defensive crisis.

Alex requires an arthroscopic procedure on his right knee, badly swollen after the recent loss to Liverpool, which will sideline the 28-year-old for up to eight weeks. The champions had intended the centre-half to undergo surgery this week but Alex, having trained and sat on the bench with Brazil for their game with Argentina in Qatar on Wednesday, has declared himself fit to feature at St Andrew’s, where his presence is much needed against the likes of Nikola Zigic given the continued absence of John Terry.

Alex said he would play “to help the team”, though he admitted he will not be fully fit and envisages returning to Brazil for surgery on Thursday. “There is no risk putting him in,” said Carlo Ancelotti, the manager. “He’ll have the surgery next week, after this game, though if he feels good and the knee is still OK, we can still postpone it. It wouldn’t cause any more damage to do that. He trained for two days with the Brazilian team, then sat on the bench for the game, and the knee was OK. I had the same problem 20 years ago and postponed my surgery for two months. Sometimes I had pain, and swelling, but I was still able to play.”

There was relatively optimistic news, too, on Terry, who visited Dr Jean-Pierre Meersseman, a Belgian chiropractor at Milan since 1988 with whom Ancelotti has worked in the past, in midweek and will do again after the weekend. Physiotherapy is ongoing to relax the piriformis muscle, which is irritating Terry’s sciatic nerve, on a daily basis with Chelsea optimistic their captain will not, as feared, be absent for months. They apparently retain some hope that he could feature at Newcastle next weekend.

“There was good news from the visit to Italy and they’ve identified they have to relax that muscle so that the nerve is not touched,” said Ancelotti. “It depends day by day. He’s disappointed, but he’s also optimistic and in a good frame of mind. Every day he’s coming in earlier for treatment, which is good.” Asked whether he would attempt to add to his defensive options in the January transfer window, said: “It depends what happens with Alex and, in the next days, with Terry. Obviously, if both players are not able to play for a long time, we will have to think about this. But only if that is the case.”

While there is relief at Alex’s return – Paulo Ferreira and Branislav Ivanovic’s makeshift pairing had been badly exposed by Sunderland last Sunday – there remains some level of surprise at the implications of Michael Emenalo’s appointment as assistant first-team coach to succeed the sacked Ray Wilkins. The Nigerian had been working as head opposition scout and will effectively continue in that role while he updates his coaching qualifications. Ancelotti was keen to point out that, despite Emenalo’s promotion, there would be no change to the day-to-day workings of his backroom staff.

The Italian made it clear that this was the club’s appointment and suggested Emenalo may not be used as a conventional coach when he has qualified. “The club made this decision after the decision on Ray, but nothing has changed for me,” he said. “Emenalo has been our opposition scout and has been supporting me since I’ve been here. He’s not been involved in the training and won’t be now because [another of the assistant first-team coaches] Paul Clement does that. I’m not here to explain how I feel at this moment. I’m a professional. I will continue to work and want to stay focused on my team.

“Emenalo has fantastic experience because he has seen a lot of games of the opposition, so he’s tactically strong and has good knowledge. He will continue to do the same. I will maintain the same relationship with him as I did before Ray left. But I am not thinking about this. We don’t want to bury our heads in the sand. This is an important game and we can either move on from the [Sunderland] defeat or we can stay in a difficult moment. It all depends on us.”

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Joe Cole still has a future at Chelsea, insists Ray Wilkins

• Dip in form just temporary, says assistant manager
• Belletti, Ballack, Carvalho all out for Stoke match

Chelsea remain committed to extending Joe Cole’s stay at the club beyond the expiration of his current deal next summer, though the negotiations over a new contract remain at an impasse.

Talks between club and player have stalled over the midfielder’s wage demands as he seeks to raise his salary from £80,000-a-week and into the bracket of higher earners at Stamford Bridge. Cole’s inability to retain a regular place in Carlo Ancelotti’s starting line-up has undermined his negotiating position, with the England coach Fabio Capello having admitted last week that he did not appear to be “the same player” since returning from serious knee ligament damage in September.

The 28-year-old is expected to feature in Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final against Stoke City, with Chelsea’s assistant manager Ray Wilkins insistent that Cole has just suffered a temporary dip in form and could even yet force his way back into Capello’s plans ahead of the World Cup finals. “We are desperate to keep Joe,” said Wilkins. “I know the club are and we as a management group feel the same. He is a very valuable asset to us. Joe himself is upbeat about his future here. He loves Chelsea and wants to stay. It is a contractual situation that he and the club, I am sure, will sort out. We sincerely hope he will be here next season.

“I would not have thought his form has been affected by the contract situation. I just think he has had a long lay-off, something like 10 months, and it is never easy to come back. Your form does drop, and Joe has just had that dip. He has got to get a little bit more consistency back and then there will not be a problem with him. But, as Fabio said, he has not been too impressed with Joe’s form over the last couple of months. That’s why he wasn’t involved against Egypt but, if he performs to the ability we know Joe has, then Fabio will take him.”

Chelsea’s options will be limited against Stoke with Juliano Belletti and Michael Ballack suspended, Ricardo Carvalho troubled by a slight hamstring problem and a number of other first-team players injured. One of their walking wounded, José Bosingwa, requires further surgery to repair knee ligament damage sustained against Aston Villa in October and will miss the rest of the season, together with Portugal’s participation at the World Cup finals in South Africa.

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