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  • Rafa Benitez shows again he’s the master

    Europa League Final: Rafa Benitez shows again he’s the master of the half-time pep talk




    He took over a squad mid-season, recovered from Champions League exit and put up with hatred of fans - and then showed the nous that produced the miracle of Istanbul



    Kevin Garside


    Kevin Garside

    Sports writer for The Independent

    More articles from this journalist
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    Wednesday 15 May 2013

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    <LI class=first>Benfica 1 Chelsea 2 match report: Chelsea find a way to end their chaotic season with Europa League glory Suggested Topics A year from now, Rafa Benitez can look forward to his unveiling at Santiago Bernabeu as the replacement for Carlo Ancelotti. The Real Madrid job is the reward for former Champions League-winning managers discarded by Chelsea. Absurd? Well, no more so than judging on the basis of one game a Stamford Bridge posting that began only in November.

    Yes, that was the hand dealt Benitez at the Amsterdam Arena, par for the course in an epoch that permits minute-by-minute revisions of reputations. The testimony of present and former players attesting to the stuff that should matter, his coaching credentials, carried no weight. It was all or nothing, win and he would be a success, lose and a duffer.

    Were David Luiz in power, Benitez would be going nowhere next week. The flamboyant Brazilian, caught somewhere between centre-half and playmaker in former regimes, has stabilised impressively under Benitez. Fernando Torres, a lost cause before Rafa turned up, is a more productive force since his arrival, and didn’t he show that, with a goal redolent of his Liverpool best.

    Former pupils like Craig Bellamy are quick to credit Benitez when asked to volunteer a name that helped them most. On the negative side of the ledger Xabi Alonso might not have been in such a rush to move to Real Madrid had his relationship with Benitez been more productive. You can’t please everybody.

    Benitez assumed control of a team that finished last season sixth in the Premier League. The previous incumbent, Roberto Di Matteo, was dumped with Chelsea on the brink of Champions League elimination, presumably over concerns that they might fail to qualify for next season’s competition. Benitez did his job on that score, managing a testing run-in while progressing to the final against Benfica.

    There were aberrations. The surrender of two goals in a mad minute at Reading in January looked like it might be rewarded with a downturned thumb from Roman. Defeat to 10-man Swansea in the semi-final of the Capital One Cup was also troubling. But there have been highlights, too, like the wins against Manchester United in the league at Old Trafford and in the FA Cup.

    Here is a coach who twice rammed a wedge between Barcelona and Real Madrid with two La Liga titles plus a Uefa Cup victory; who took Liverpool to two Champions League finals, one successfully; and came within a point of denying a dominant United the championship before the American ownership model of Tom Hicks and George Gillett sucked the life out of the club after acquiring it in 2006.

    Given the difficulty involved in taking over a squad on temporary terms in mid-season; in managing the fallout after the inevitable Champions League exit and lifting morale; in dealing with the irrational hatred and personal insults issuing daily from supporters and the unfavourable working environment it created, lesser figures might have crumbled.

    When his tolerance did give way after the FA Cup win at Middlesbrough in February, his attack on the critics and the Chelsea hierarchy had a measured, strategic feel about it which brought a degree of calm and even grudging respect. From that moment Benitez wrenched back some control and was managing more in his terms.

    The result has been greater consistency, which has all but secured Champions League football next season and earned a place in a second successive European final. His less rabid detractors in the bars around Amsterdam yesterday were at least prepared to acknowledge that.

    The loss of his best defender, John Terry, and his most dynamic midfielder, Eden Hazard, set Benitez a puzzle. The coaching response was to counter-attack, deploying Ramires in an advanced position and to couple Luiz and Frank Lampard in front of the back four.

    The tactic meant Benfica saw a lot of the ball in the opening half, causing discomfort at times, panic once or twice but without creating a clear-cut chance. The best chance of the first half fell to Lampard, who found space on the edge of the box and hit a waspish drive that swerved late to bring an impressive save from Artur.

    Relief would have been the dominant sentiment at half-time. Benfica were clearly the better side, but Benitez had been here before, persuading Liverpool that a Champions League miracle was possible in Istanbul eight years ago when his team came in 3-0 down to Milan at the interval.

    And it was not as if chasing shadows was a losing phenomenon last year when Chelsea were run ragged by Barcelona and Bayern Munich before finding a way to win the European Cup for the first time. What might have been a pasting on each occasion was re-interpreted as a courageous defensive display on which success was eventually built.

    Whatever he said during the break worked. Chelsea appeared a yard quicker, closing down space in the middle of the park and striking with more purpose. This is surely the mark of a good coach, to make a difference when it matters. There weren’t many complaints as Torres held off Luisao, rounded Artur and ripped the back of the net with a raking strike.

    The lead lasted eight minutes, Cesar Azpilicueta foolishly handling in the box to concede a penalty. The fault of Benitez for picking him, of course. And then up pops Branislav Ivanovic to land the old interim one-two.
    Last edited by Karl; May 15, 2013, 10:49 PM.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    Chelsea's Rafa Benitez: Booed, Unwanted, Hated, Europa League Winner




    BY SAM TIGHE
    (TACTICAL ANALYST)
    ON MAY 15, 2013


    3,067 reads
    16



    Use your ← → (arrow) keys to browse more storiesNext

    Michael Steele/Getty Images
    Rafa Benitez crowned off a very good interim period in charge of Chelsea with aUEFA Europa League winners' medal.
    He took the club to the semifinals of the FA Cup only to lose to fellow powerhouseManchester City, then completed his minimum league goal of achieving Champions League football for next season.
    The Blues' still have a semi-meaningless game on the schedule against Everton on Sunday, but Wednesday night's triumph in Amsterdam is how the public will remember Benitez rounding off his time at Stamford Bridge.
    When the Spaniard leaves his post next week, he will sit back in his comfy armchair, sip on a glass of red wine and smile to himself: He did a fantastic job in the face of true adversity.
    Rafa's smiles out on the pitch of the Amsterdam ArenA were in stark contrast to the facial features on display for his first game in charge back on 25 November.
    Boos rang around Stamford Bridge, fans prepared signs of disdain printed in the finest coloured ink, and anti-Benitez chants were absorbed by every corner of the stadium.
    His first few games were unimpressive—two 0-0 draws preceded a 3-1 loss to West Ham, and "negative tactics" were talk of the table.

    Julian Finney/Getty Images

    He won himself zero fans inside the first month, and one goal from his first three games was hardly the antidote required to smooth over his complicated past with the fans.
    But an 8-0 thrashing of Aston Villaat home put smiles on their faces, and from there the Blues began to stride forward in fearsome fashion.
    He stuck to his 4-2-3-1 formation, eased Oscar back into the side and unlocked the very, very best in Juan Mata.
    Eden Hazard recovered from his dip in form to put consistently scintillating performances, and Rafa somehow managed to juggle four competitions and continued to win—even though one of them had his team traipsing through Romania, Czech Republic, Russia, Switzerland and, finally, the Netherlands.
    On occasion Chelsea looked limp and lifeless on the pitch. In particular, against Europa League opposition, off-the-ball movement was nonexistent and some of the players looked disinterested.
    But Rafa coaxed the best out of Fernando Torres on the continental stage, and the Spaniard finished the season with nine UEL strikes alone.
    In the final, he deployed Ramires on the right side of his 4-2-3-1 to take advantage of the space left by the marauding Lorenzo Melgarejo. It was another strong tactical stroke that saw his Brazilian dynamo cause Benfica all sorts of problems.
    Had he displayed offside awareness, Chelsea could have scored two more through his intelligent runs.

    Clive Rose/Getty Images

    As disgruntled as Blues fans have been, Benitez's season has been full of minor victories: He's on course for a better winning percentage than Claudio Ranieri, Roberto Di Matteo and Andre Villas-Boas, while he's also pushed Torres to a total haul of 22 goals.
    Chelsea fans will never like Benitez. He had the chance to apologise for his comment regarding "plastic flags" in 2007 but never did so, and that nonaction only fueled the hatred.
    But Rafa earned the respect of the footballing world outside of West London on Wednesday, even if Chelsea fans will (rightly) never forgive him.
    He walked in a lion's den—an unbearable, unattractive job. He emerges slightly scathed, but with a trophy win firmly under his belt. His C.V. is intact, and the Spaniard will walk into another high-profile job with his head held high.
    In the meantime, Chelsea fans can thank Rafa for guiding them through aridiculously tough schedule that clocked up more air miles in one year than many do in a lifetime.


    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

    Comment


    • #3
      Rafa Benitez deserves Chelsea’s thanks and praise

      By Eurosport | Early Doors – Wed, May 15, 2013 00:50 BST




      [FONT=Georgia, Times, 'Times New Roman', serif][/font]
      If Chelsea win the Europa League tonight, Rafa Benitez will not bask in the adulation of the fans as Roberto Di Matteo did a year ago.[/font]
      ]Grateful players will not toss him joyously around like Pep Guardiola or Jupp Heynckes.[/font]
      The best he can hope for is to be ignored while everyone else celebrates a success devised by him.[/font]
      Even outside Chelsea, there is not much sympathy for Benitez, but Early Doors reckons he has taken on an impossible job and performed remarkably well.[/font]
      Don't believe ED? Let's do what the man himself would, and examine the facts:[/font]
      FACT: Rafa Benitez’s record as Chelsea manager: P46, W26, D10, L10, Win 56%.[/font]
      FACT: Roberto Di Matteo’s record as Chelsea manager: P42, W24, D9, L9, Win 57%.[/font]
      FACT: Benitez took over a team with two wins in eight games. A team with massive defensive problems. A team all but out of the Champions League and at risk not just of missing the top four but plummeting out of the Premier League’s leading six.[/font]
      FACT: Benitez has guided them to relatively comfortable Champions League qualification and a European final.[/font]
      FACT: A manager derided for his dry, defensive football has got Chelsea playing arguably the most thrilling, technical football anywhere in England. Yes he has superb players, but he has let them express themselves. More than you can say about Jose Mourinho with Joe Cole or Arjen Robben.[/font]
      FACT: He juggled a hellish fixture list that included runs in the Club World Cup, League Cup, FA Cup and Europa League. And yes, it's true he has won none of them, but that could well change tonight.[/font]
      FACT: He has got playing Fernando Torres playing more like his old self. Not quite back to his best, but certainly better than any time since 2009/10 when his manager was... oh! Rafa Benitez![/font]
      FACT: At a time when the club - not Benitez, the club - staunchly refused to offer Frank Lampard a new contract, Benitez coaxed enough fine performances from the old stager to make him the club's all-time top scorer. Imagine the adulation Mourinho would get for this.[/font]
      FACT: He did what no ngland manager has done and eased John Terry out of his first XI in a quiet, fuss-free manner - very definitely relegating his captain but giving him just enough matches to avoid uproar. Quite a feat.[/font]
      FACT: He did all of this saddled with a ludicrous 'interim' tag devised by a club bold enough to appoint him but too timid to offer full-throated backing.[/font]
      FACT: Despite his title pulling the rug from underneath him, Benitez has lasted - in terms of matches - longer than Luiz Felipe Scolari, Guus Hiddink, Andre Villa-Boas and Di Matteo. In Chelsea terms, two-thirds of a season is positively Fergie-esque.[/font]
      FACT: He received little public backing from the players, who have been happy to speculate openly about Mourinho’s return in recent weeks,.[/font]
      ]FACT: The fans never accepted him.[/font]
      ]FACT: Scratch that. They hated him. Still do. A visceral, personal loathing cascading from the stands from his first game.[/font]
      FACT: The A4 ‘Rafa Out!’ banners might have gone but the ill will remains. Every match features a chorus of ‘F*** off Benitez, you’re not wanted here.’[/font]
      FACT: Benitez suffered a 'meltdown' in February when he criticised the board andthe fans. Unwise, perhaps, but it takes some restraint to restrict yourself to one rant when your own fans tell you to f*** off every three days.[/font]
      FACT: There’s no doubting the fervour of the fans’ feelings, but it's hard to understand exactly why they despise him so. It’s true, for a spell during the mid-noughties he was the anti-Mourinho in a series of fractious Liverpool-Chelsea battles. But ultimately his crimes boil down to a remark about plastic flags and another quote widely attributed to him but actually made up by a Czech kid on Twitter.[/font]
      ]FACT: Even yesterday, in his press conference before a major European final, he was asked if his time at Chelsea might have been different if he had apologised. Apologise? For what? For defending Liverpool as Liverpool manager? He was supposed to bow down to the people telling him to f*** off and let them know how very sorry he was for making a solitary comment about flags when in charge of a rival club?[/font]
      FACT: Rafa Benitez took a team in danger of spiralling out of control and put them back on the straight and narrow. He may not have been the man for the long term, but as a quick fix he was ideal. Much as he should never have been labelled as such, he actually fulfilled the brief of an interim manager to perfection.[/font]
      FACT: Win or lose tonight, Rafa Benitez deserves thanks and praise from everyone connected to Chelsea Football Club.[/font]
      QUOTE OF THE DAY: "We are stronger than ever." Roberto Martinez takes the positives from Wigan's relegation.[/font]
      FOREIGN VIEW: In the wake of the abuse that caused the suspension of Milan's game against Roma, James Horncastle analyses the complex issue of racism in Italian football.[/font]
      It's a long read, but a good one - click here.[/font]
      COMING UP: You can't move for Europa League coverage today. We've got the wise words of Arsene Wenger, Jim White and Reda Maher, who will be chatting live from Amsterdam from 2pm. And of course we've got the whole shebang live - Benfica v Chelsea, kick-off 19:45 UK time.[/font]
      [FONT=Georgia, Times, 'Times New Roman', serif]Alex Chick - @alexchick81[/font]
      [FONT=Georgia, Times, 'Times New Roman', serif][/font]
      Last edited by Sir X; May 15, 2013, 10:10 PM.
      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment


      • #4
        Unwanted at the Bridge but Benitez will still depart a winner

        Spaniard will take heart from having enhanced his own reputation

        Chelsea’s manager Rafael Benitez will walk away a winner. Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters

        Dominic Fifield




        Wed, May 15, 2013, 23:37
        First published:Wed, May 15, 2013, 23:19







        The longest season has its tangible reward. Chelsea’s campaign has taken in 68 matches in 11 different countries and eight competitions, a schedule overseen by two managers and, when Branislav Ivanovic nodded in a stoppage-time winner here, has finally yielded a trophy. Rafael Benitez, hands sunk into his pockets before the final whistle brought an outpouring of joy as he hugged his coaching staff, has his reward.
        After all the near-misses this season the Londoners have joined Ajax, Juventus, Barcelona and Bayern Munich as a club whose honours board boasts all three major Uefa trophies.
        Benitez will find himself at another crossroads in a few weeks’ time. Any aspirations he had of earning a longer-term deal when accepting the interim position back in November were effectively kiboshed by the scorching reception afforded him in those opening weeks by the Londoners’ support. The antipathy has subsided to mere grumbling mutiny, if only because those in the stands have been resigned to the Spaniard seeing out his contract ever since the club had a knee-jerk reaction to the manager’s infamous outburst at Middlesbrough back in February.
        The Spaniard has pointed to the imbalanced squad he had inherited from his predecessor which was very much in mid-transition. Chelsea had overloaded on creative midfielders, all mouth-watering talents but each set upon scuttling runs up-field with little regard for the acres they left unguarded at the back. They had only Torres up front, a player whose form had been so flimsy but whose goal just before the hour-mark in Amsterdam reflected a recent recovery, certainly in this competition.
        Benitez wanted to add more than just Demba Ba to the ranks in January. He had craved a central midfielder, too. Yet he ploughed on regardless as the schedule became ever more cluttered.

        Exposed limitations
        Benfica exposed the limitations within the set-up with their fluid, attacking movement here. They mustered almost twice as many passes in the first half as the Premier League team, with Nicolas Gaitan, Rodrigo, Enzo Perez and Eduardo Salvio gliding beyond blue-shirted markers far too easily at times. Chelsea can labour in central midfield when the ball buzzes around them at pace, and at the back when slippery opponents strike an upbeat rhythm.
        Benitez ha said on the eve of this fixture: “We have done a good job here in difficult circumstances, a team in transition and not the deepest squad, so you have to give credit to the staff and players.”

        Cold-hearted professional
        They will still never show proper gratitude, but the cold-hearted professional in Benitez probably no longer expects them to. He will take heart, instead, from having enhanced his own reputation within the game from this team’s recovery.
        A top three finish – victory over Everton on Sunday will guarantee that – represents real progress on last term’s sixth place, as well as the accomplishment of his principal mission. The sceptics will point to the fact Chelsea were third and only four points from the top when he took over, but that overlooks the trajectory the team were on at the time.
        Roberto Di Matteo may have won a European Cup six months earlier but his team had shipped 21 goals in nine matches, had failed to win in four league games, and the management were showing no signs of restoring on-field discipline. Benitez did at least achieve that. He has claimed credit for the progression of Victor Moses and Cesar Azpilicueta in their respective national sides and this side have progressed under his stewardship and they clearly retain that dogged refusal to wilt.
        “We have improved a lot as a team,” Ivanovic had said. “It is not easy taking over at a club like Chelsea mid-season . . . Win this trophy and you have to say he has done a good job.”
        His towering header from Juan Mata’s corner has ensured just that. Benitez will depart a winner.
        Guardian Service
        Last edited by Sir X; May 15, 2013, 10:12 PM.
        THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

        "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


        "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

        Comment


        • #5
          The prostitute, the spender, the fat spanish waiter, the deadwood buyer,the fraud.

          The winner , The Master of Europe !......RAFA !..unuuh luck di matteo frig up di CL .
          THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

          "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


          "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

          Comment

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