Chelsea’s Frank Lampard may miss Manchester United showdown

• Scans confirm Chelsea midfielder has calf muscle tear
• Lampard to miss FA Cup tie against Queens Park Rangers

Frank Lampard is a major doubt for Chelsea’s home Premier League game against Manchester United early next month after scans confirmed the midfielder sustained a small tear to a calf muscle during Saturday’s goalless draw at Norwich. The 33-year-old was taken off in some discomfort after 36 minutes at Carrow Road amid fears that the damage was severe. Although the swelling has receded and the medical tests have offered a more positive outlook, Lampard will miss Saturday’s FA Cup fourth-round tie against Queens Park Rangers and the trip to Swansea City next Tuesday. The United game, on 5 February, may also come too soon for the Londoners’ joint leading league scorer this term, leaving André Villas-Boas to contemplate his midfield options for the fixture. Lampard is to join up with the rest of the Chelsea squad who are currently on a warm-weather training camp in Mallorca and will undergo further treatment on the calf there.

Alex, the transfer-listed Brazil defender who was close to moving to QPR last week, is now expected to join the former Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti at Paris St Germain with talks on-going between the clubs. The 29-year-old had been reluctant to move to Loftus Road despite being marginalised at Stamford Bridge, but has expressed a willingness to move to the French club, a rising powerhouse in European football backed by Qatari Sports Investments.

Frank LampardChelsea
guardian.co.uk

Home truths distress André Villas-Boas as Chelsea concede goals galore

• Chelsea have already conceded 16 league goals at home
• ‘Squad not good enough to win league,’ says manager

André Villas-Boas looked sure to make an impression in England, but the current sequence of surprises have left Chelsea reeling far more than their rivals. With this defeat by Aston Villa his side have now conceded 16 goals at home in the Premier League. In that regard the only clubs with a worse record in the top flight are Blackburn Rovers and Bolton Wanderers, who stand 19th and 20th respectively. “Our squad is not good enough to win the league,” said the manager. “Not this year, not with this distance of points.”

Manchester City were 11 clear of them before the trip to Sunderland. “You can say we might have lost it in December,” said Villas-Boas. Statistics keep glowering at him. Three defeats at Stamford Bridge to date is already the worst return there in the league since the 2003-04 campaign in its entirety. The present side still has nine more home fixtures to brave.

In the circumstances Villas-Boas should be relieved that Chelsea can pull rank in one crucial respect. Unlike the Manchester teams, his side will be in the knockout phase of the Champions League, where they face Napoli.

If the weekend display were to be repeated, that tie would not look like a privilege. On Saturday the centre-backs John Terry and David Luiz were vulnerable, but they did not enjoy much cover. When Villas-Boas took off Oriol Romeu and sent on Frank Lampard, the intention was to add to the firepower, but, in practice, Villa simply enjoyed more scope. On another day, the Chelsea manager might have been complimented for his enterprising outlook but on this occasion his side was error-prone already before it took further risks.

Chelsea sabotaged themselves, with Lampard presenting the ball to the outstanding Stephen Ireland, who set up the substitute Darren Bent for Villa’s clincher in the 86th minute. “Stevie has set a magnificent benchmark in this game,” said the manager, Alex McLeish, with a compliment that doubles as a warning that consistency is now demanded of the midfielder.

McLeish’s team had gone ahead after 83 minutes when Ciaran Clark sent Stilian Petrov through the broad and deserted highway of Chelsea’s central defence. Ireland had brought Villa level at 1-1 in the 28th minute by linking with Charles N’Zogbia before scoring at the second attempt after the initial effort had rebounded to him off Terry’s arm.

It had briefly seemed that Chelsea could wrap themselves up in their own concerns when Didier Drogba opened the scoring with a penalty in the 23rd minute after Richard Dunne had brought him down. The scorer himself acted as if the occasion belonged wholly to him. There was a bow to the fans in the Shed and Drogba may have understood that his 150th goal for the club had made another mark in its history since he is now level with Roy Bentley and Peter Osgood.

The all-time record at Chelsea is Bobby Tambling’s tally of 202. Drogba, 34 in March, is most unlikely to get to that total even if a new contract is agreed, but he will be missed while on duty with Ivory Coast at the Africa Cup of Nations. That, in turn, will make people brood once more about Fernando Torres. The Spaniard came on in this match and immediately lashed a terrific shot against the bar when the score was 1-1.

No wonder people have a habit of mumbling about fate where the striker’s time at Chelsea is concerned. There seems to be no fundamental reason why he should not score regularly, but the breakthrough is always a fraction out of reach.

Villas-Boas also stepped away from controversy. Does he want to keep Lampard, who turns 34 on 20 June? “For sure, because he is one of the best players in the world.” Continuity is not quite enough at the moment since Chelsea have gone three weeks without a victory following a defeat of Manchester City that raised such hopes. The manager still sounded dubious about seeking any eyecatching signings in this transfer window. “It gets very frenetic,” Villas-Boas said, “and we’ll have to see if we need it or not. It must be a sensible decision regarding what we need to win in the future as well.” Even so, there was no denying the limitations. “We don’t have that winning consistency to take us past the December fixtures fighting for the title,” the manager noted.

A trace of bathos was detected when Villas-Boas went on to say he believed Chelsea could “come through” the next game, at Wolves, and have the “right frame of mind” for the FA Cup tie with Portsmouth at home. He now esteems that knockout trophy and, of course, the Champions League, but these have been chastening days.

Conversely, McLeish had an uplifting afternoon at Stamford Bridge and was bullish when insisting that Bent would not be sold this month. The manager and his club deserved to savour a weekend that saw them in command.

ChelseaAston VillaPremier LeaguePremier League 2011-12Kevin McCarraguardian.co.uk

Petr Cech back in training for Chelsea as David Luiz also makes return

• First-choice goalkeeper has made rapid recovery
• New signing Raul Meireles may play against Sunderland

Petr Cech returned to full training on Tuesday as André Villas-Boas prepared his Chelsea squad for the trip to Sunderland on Saturday. New signing Raul Meireles was also involved, as was David Luiz.

Meireles, a £12m signing last week from Liverpool, had been troubled by a collarbone problem and Luiz has been missing this season due to a thigh injury. Chelsea’s thin goalkeeping cover for the experienced Cech makes his potential availability welcome as the club hope to build on a start that has yielded seven points from their first three matches.

Cech had been ruled out for up to a month after damaging knee ligaments in a training-ground collision in August, but the 29-year-old has made a rapid recovery and Chelsea will monitor his progress this week.

Since Cech’s absence following the goalless draw at Stoke City on the opening day of the campaign, his understudy Hilário has failed to keep a clean sheet and conceded five, with his error allowing Norwich City to equalise during Chelsea’s 3-1 win at Stamford Bridge.

Meireles trained with Chelsea on Tuesday morning after returning from international duty with Portugal when he played the full 90 minutes, and could make his debut at the Stadium of Light. Luiz is also available, training after returning from international duty, during which he was an unused substitute in Brazil’s 1-0 win over Ghana at Craven Cottage on Monday night.

Gaël Kakuta, who signed for Bolton Wanderers on loan from Chelsea, has said he had to leave the club in order to play regular first-team football. The 20-year-old made the decision following advice from Daniel Sturridge, who also spent time at Bolton on loan last season.

Kakuta said: “When you’re young you have to be patient because you have big players at Chelsea that have lots of international and club experience. There were about seven or eight players in front of me with experience and that is the reason I came here. We will see what the coach [Villas-Boas] will do, whether he will keep everyone or move some players.

“But I need to play as I am 20 years old. I need to get some experience and not play just 20 minutes a week. Bolton is a great club. I chose to come here because I think it is the right place for me to come to improve. I was supposed to go to Fulham [where he played on loan last season] and at the last minute Chelsea told me Bolton were interested.

“I asked Daniel how Bolton was and he said the people here were great and I would enjoy it a lot. He said the coach [Owen Coyle] gave him a lot of confidence. If he trusts me and gives me confidence I will be able to do my best.”

ChelseaJamie Jacksonguardian.co.uk