Football Weekly … Extra: Manchester teams in average games shock

Compared to their recent high standards, Manchesters United and City were humbled this week – which suits James and the Football Weekly … Extra team well, considering all the humble pie they’ve been choking on in recent weeks.

Barry Glendenning, Sean Ingle and Paolo Bandini wrestle with the questions that matter: where should Blackburn’s protest march begin and end? Is Edinson Cavani hunky enough to ‘turn’ a straight man? Can Sid Lowe avoid ending up on the cutting room floor?

Also in the pod: your comments, the occasional rant, a preview of this weekend’s matches in the Premier League and our annual mention of the SPL.

Jimbo’s off to compete in present the World’s Strongest Man in the USA next week, but hapless Soccer AM gibbon Max Rushden will be deputising for him on Monday. In the interim, leave us your feedback on the blog below …

James RichardsonSean IngleBarry GlendenningPaolo BandiniSid Lowe

Keeping Branislav Ivanovic is key for Chelsea after beating Blackburn

• Goalscoring centre-half in talks over contract extension
• ‘We go step by step and fight for every result,’ says Serb

The rehabilitation of Chelsea’s league season is under way at last, though recent toils dictate even comfortable success is greeted with caution these days. “It’s too early to say we’ve turned the corner,” said Didier Drogba. “This was a vital three points but let’s win four or five consecutive games and then we can speak about the title again.”

The recovery is in its infancy but this was a return of sorts to the old routine. It was not the swashbuckling form that had seen the champions run up cricket scores against all-comers for a giddy period either side of last summer but the relentless, grinding Chelsea built on solid defensive foundations that had been their trademark. Blackburn were softened up by Chelsea’s first‑half battering, with a pair of late goals from set pieces chiselling out a deserved victory.

Maintaining momentum at Bolton next Monday will be imperative if the title defence is not to fizzle out. By then the champions will hope to have added to their options in the transfer window and made progress in securing their goalscoring centre-half Branislav Ivanovic to new terms at the club. The Serb scuffed in the opener on Saturday, then supplied Nicolas Anelka with his first Premier League reward since they won at Ewood Park in October. The centre-back’s strength has been a constant in an inconsistent campaign, with the club’s desire to extend his stay beyond the final 18 months of his contract understandable.

“I want to stay and I hope it will be sorted out soon,” Ivanovic said. “We are talking about my new contract but we will see in the next couple of weeks. Things are going the right way. This is all I can say. Carlo has been great for me and has changed my career. I will always be grateful to him, so I hope he will be here for a long time. But we have our focus back now and will be better still in the future.

“We have changed our character. Everyone has been a little bit angry about the things that have happened and we want to show our real power. This is going to count in the games coming up. The players were starting to get angry. We were losing but that’s in the past and now we have to carry on. We must try to win every game and wait for others to drop points. We go step by step and fight for every result.”

Blackburn will do the same as they seek to distance themselves from the condemned at the foot. Steve Kean flew to Mumbai yesterday to meet Rovers’ owners, the VH Group, and discuss potential purchases before the end of the month. The USA international midfielder Jermaine Jones will complete his loan move from Schalke today, with other arrivals expected.

“The meeting will be a chance for me to give them a progress report and see what we can do in the last part of the window,” Kean said. “They are going to back the signings and that can only be good for the club.”

They already look equipped to avoid trouble. Roque Santa Cruz will be more of a threat once he has regained match sharpness and the defence stood admirably firm until concentration wavered near the hour. They ended trampled by Chelsea’s first step on the road to recovery.

Premier LeagueChelseaBlackburn RoversDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk

Neymar signs new five-year contract with Santos in wake of Chelsea bid

• Santos president praises Neymar’s ‘courageous decision’
• Pelé and Mano Menezes had urged player to stay in Brazil

Santos have tied down Neymar to a new five-year contract following interest in the striker from clubs in Europe.

Premier League champions Chelsea had reportedly made a substantial bid for the 18-year-old, who scored on his Brazil debut against USA last month. Neymar’s potential move had caused a stir in Brazil with Pelé and new national team coach Mano Menezes publicly urging him to remain in his homeland.

“The final decision always rests with the player,” Neymar told reporters. “My father always will want what is best for me. I talked to him and decided to stay. Money alone does not bring happiness. I’m happy here and I want to continue being so.

“It was a complicated decision, very difficult. But God gave us the wisdom and power to make the best decision. Now it’s time to only think about Santos and winning more titles.”

Santos’s president Luis Alvaro lauded Neymar’s for his “courageous decision” to stay in Brazil and believes other young players should follow suit and spurn the interest of European clubs.

“We’ve built a different possibility,” Alvaro said. “We no longer accept the idea that we’re an underdeveloped nation always at the mercy of the powerful European clubs.”

SantosChelseaTransfer windowguardian.co.uk