Saturday, 3 May 2014

Can Mourinho ever deliver the Chelsea that Abramovich wants?

Can Mourinho ever deliver the Chelsea that Abramovich wants?
The Blues were knocked out of the Champions League at the semi-final stage on Wednesday night following a 3-1 second-leg defeat to Atletico Madrid at Stamford Bridge
COMMENT
By Greg Stobart at Stamford Bridge

As Roman Abramovich watched on from his luxury private box in the west stand, he was presented with the kind of vibrant attacking football he has always craved at Stamford Bridge.

Unfortunately, it was the team in red and white stripes playing with the speed, authority and skill that would have reminded the Russian billionaire why he once dreamed of appointing Pep Guardiola as the Chelsea manager.

In the second half, Chelsea surrendered meekly. Jose Mourinho has so often conquered rivals in big matches away from home, but Atletico Madrid beat him at his own game to book a place in the Champions League final on May 24, where they will face Real Madrid.

Mourinho claimed the game turned on an “impossible save” from Thibaut Courtois to deny John Terry, followed moments later by a clumsy foul from Samuel Eto’o which allowed Diego Costa to put the visitors ahead from the penalty spot.

Such moments may come to define some games, but Atletico’s win here was founded on more than a slice of luck.

The intensity of their play was startling, the cohesion of their attacking movement too much for the Blues to handle. They played with a passion that mirrored that of their coach, Diego Simeone, on the touchline.

Mourinho could find no answer, not this time. 

Not so special anymore? This was Mourinho’s fourth Champions League semi-final defeat in a row, his sixth overall in 10 attempts to reach the final of Europe’s most prestigious competition.

The Portuguese had tried to repeat the formula that worked so well in Sunday’s win at Anfield, starting with six recognised defenders in his side, looking to keep the game tight and exploit any chink in Atletico’s armour.

Eyebrows were raised but the game was going perfectly to Mourinho’s gameplan when Fernando Torres fired Chelsea ahead via a deflection in the 36th minute.

Match Stats — Team Stats

ChelseaV.Atlético de Madrid
But the Liga leaders hit back. Adrian equalised just before half time and Simeone’s men took control after the break. Diego Costa put the visitors ahead from the penalty spot and then Arda Turan sealed the win.

Atletico are the perfect example of a team that is coached to become far more than the sum of its parts. 

Mourinho, a year in to the four-year deal he signed to return to Chelsea last year, is still working on uniting the group of individuals assembled for him by Abramovich at great expense.

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Having already conceded the Premier League title (publicly, at least) Mourinho’s attention almost immediately turned towards next season.

"Next season will be better than this season - that's our objective - the objective of everybody," he said in his post-match interview.

In ‘everybody’, he includes Abramovich.

Mourinho believes a top class striker will solve most of his problems. Having particularly struggled when asked to break down weaker teams this season, the Portuguese has lamented the lack of attacking firepower in the Blues squad. 

Torres, Eto’o and Demba Ba are not good enough for this elite level. The anticipated arrival of Costa - what a shame it would be to see him leave the Spanish capital - would provide the quality Chelsea have needed in the final third.

Tottenham midfielder Paulinho has also been strongly linked with a move to the Blues recently, a typical Mourinho all-action midfielder. 

But are these the acquisitions to deliver both the winning results and beautiful football that Abramovich wants? 

Probably not. And he sacked Roberto Di Matteo for Chelsea’s defensive-minded style of play just months after the Italian delivered him the Champions League in 2012.

Mourinho has said this season that he accepts the owner’s wishes and understands the style of football Abramovich wants to see having signed small, quick and technical players such as Eden Hazard, Oscar and Willian.

Just as Atletico play in Simeone’s image, so do Chelsea with Mourinho. They are organised defensively, know their tactical roles to the last detail and work hard on set-pieces and counter-attacks.

Yet Mourinho is unlikely to ever change his ways, to risk results for aesthetics. 

Too often, he relies on a moment of individual quality. "Often, I'm asked to do it all by myself and it's not easy,” reflected Hazard after Wednesday’s defeat.

With the Belgian struggling for fitness, Oscar out of form and no top class striker; Chelsea have come unstuck in recent weeks against teams towards the lower end of the table that set out to frustrate them.

He would never admit it, but Mourinho may reflect he should have kept Juan Mata in January rather than sell the Spaniard to Manchester United.

Abramovich sacked Mourinho the first time around because he was not happy with the defensive style of football and there have been few signs that it will be any different in the 51-year-old’s second spell.

The trophies will no doubt come if Mourinho stays for the next three seasons on his £10 million per year contract. But can he ever deliver the Chelsea that Abramovich really wants?

Simeone 'happy' with Costa interest

The Argentine says the fact top clubs are being linked with his star striker is testament to just how well his side have played this season
Atletico Madrid boss Diego Simeone says he is "happy" with speculation suggesting Diego Costa could move to Chelsea this summer.
The La Liga leaders have lost Sergio Aguero and Radamel Falcao in previous summers, with reports now linking their top goalscorer with the Blues.
The latest round of rumours come after the striker helped fire Atletico to the Champions League final on Wednesday, as he scored a penalty in a 3-1 win over Chelsea at Stamford Bridge to set up an all-Madrid final against fierce rivals Real.
Simeone said: "It’s important that the powerful teams want players from your own, because it shows you’re doing things right. It makes me happy when this happens because it speaks well of our team.”
Atletico travel to Levante on Sunday knowing that victory will leave them needing just one more win the league title for the first time since 1994 and Simeone says there is no chance his side will be distracted by their European success in midweek.
He added: "We haven’t won anything yet. We’re facing an important situation towards the future to play a final. But reality brings us back to what we always cared about, which is La Liga.
"For us La Liga is our day-to-day and therefore we’ll keep on this match-by-match strategy we’ve devised

Chelsea's season has been s*** - Luiz

Chelsea's season has been s*** - Luiz
Jose Mourinho's side crashed out of the Champions League at the semi-final stage on Wednesday night to leave the Premier League as their only hope for silverware this term
David Luiz believes that Chelsea's season will be a "s***" one if they do not win the Premier League.

Wednesday night's 3-1 loss to Atletico Madrid saw Jose Mourinho's side crash out of the Champions League at the semi-final stage, with earlier exits in the FA Cup and Capital One Cup leaving just the league title to claim.

Chelsea are outsiders to win a fifth top-flight crown following recent losses to Sunderland and Crystal Palace but Luiz feels that a trophy is a must if the season is not to be deemed a failure.

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"You can say it is a s*** season if you don't have trophies in a season at a big club. That is true," Luiz told reporters.

"We are a big club and we want to win trophies. We keep fighting in the league. We cannot win automatically. It will be difficult.

"We have many fantastic players and everyone wants to win trophies. It is normal when you sit at home and watch television to see Chelsea fighting for trophies.

"We need to be men and it is not always possible to win. The season we won [the Champions League] was a s*** season until the end and then we won two titles at the end."

Fernando Torres gave Chelsea the lead on Wednesday night before goals from Adrian Lopez, Diego Costa and Arda Turan saw the Primera Division leaders progress to the final.

Captain John Terry was seen in tears at the final whistle, an expression of emotion that Luiz admires as it shows a player's "personality" and "fight".

He continued: "Everyone is crying. Nobody likes to lose a Champions League semi-final - not just John.

"We have to remember we are lucky people who have the best job in the world. We have to respect that people at home do not have the same life as us.

"The most important thing is the personalities for me. We need to fight in many situations. This is sport, this is football. Everyone speaks about results but, in the end, you need to remember everyone here is human. Everyone gave their best all season. Everyone can make mistakes – that is normal - but you cannot hide yourself from any situations.

"I do my job every day. I gave everything. If there were many s*** games, when you didn't run, then fine but we gave our best in many, many games but sometimes it's possible to win, sometimes not."

Thursday, 1 May 2014

Al-Qaeda weakened in Pakistan: US report

Al-Qaeda weakened in Pakistan: US report
WASHINGTON: The world-wide terror threat is evolving as Al-Qaeda linked groups and other militants become increasingly violent and a new generation of global terrorists is spawned in Syria, said the State Department s 2013 Country Reports on Terrorism.
US counter-terrorism efforts focused on Al-Qaeda have “degraded” the core leadership, but “subsequently 2013 saw the rise of increasingly aggressive and autonomous AQ affiliates and like-minded groups in the Middle East and Africa.Al-Qaeda, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, Punjabi Taliban and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi carried out terrorist activities in Pakistan.
The report said that the activities were carried out by planting locally made bombs in bicycles, motorcycles, rickshaws and other vehicles.The report pointed that al-Qaeda has weakened in Pakistan as communications between the leadership and militants were cut.The report, however, said that al-Qaeda and Haqqani Network posed a great risk to US interests in 2013.

Decades later, hostage crisis still haunts US-Iranian relations

Decades later, hostage crisis still haunts US-Iranian relations

Responding to a groundswell of domestic pressure, the Obama administration has denied a visa to Iran's new UN ambassador, Hamid Aboutalebi. The White House decision goes against normal diplomatic protocol, raising questions about Washington's ability to unilaterally veto another country's choice of representation at the world body.
Aboutalebi was a member of the Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line. The student group seized the US embassy and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days during the 1979 Islamic revolution, which ousted the US-backed Shah dictatorship and brought Ayatollah Khomeini's theocratic regime to power. Aboutalebi says he worked for the student group only as a translator and negotiator.
'Given his role in the events of 1979, which clearly matter profoundly to the American people, it would be unacceptable for the United States to grant this visa,' State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters in Washington last Tuesday.
Although Tehran's decision to choose Aboutalebi may not have been politically wise in hindsight, the Islamic Republic did not intend to provoke the US by selecting him as UN ambassador, according to Ellie Geranmayeh, an Iran expert with the European Council on Foreign Relations.
'They had sent this person to the European Union before; he had served as an ambassador in other countries,' Geranmayeh told DW. 'His previous background has never been an issue in the same way that it has come up in the US context.'
'I do think that there was genuinely never an intention on the Iranian side to provoke, because if they really wanted to do that there were other applicants that have probably more difficult backgrounds to sell to the US than Hamid's one,' she said.
Domestic pressure in the US
The White House's decision came after Congress passed a bill - by unanimous consent - that would deny admission to the US for any UN representative who engages in espionage, terrorism, or poses a threat to US national security. The legislation was aimed at preventing Aboutalebi from taking his seat at the UN.
'We, as a country, can send an unequivocal message to rogue nations, like Iran, that the United States will not tolerate this kind of provocative and hostile behavior,' Senator Ted Cruz, a sponsor of the bill, stated in a press release.
So far, President Barack Obama has not indicated whether or not he will sign the bill into law. But White House spokesman Jay Carney said the president does 'share the intent of the bill passed by Congress.'
According to Iran expert Gary Sick, the domestic politics of both Iran and the United States are often more important than their foreign policies. And in Washington, the legacy of the hostage crisis remains a salient factor in US politics.
'In the United States, it became a political football, and I think the administration is simply not willing to put a lot of political capital into fighting for an ambassador under these circumstances,' Sick, who served as the White House's principal Iran aide during the hostage crisis, told DW.
Aboutalebi actually falls within the moderate circles in Iran, according to Geranmayeh. She believes that this episode could spell out who exactly Washington is willing to hold accountable for the hostage crisis.
'Whether or not Hamid was a translator, another issue that really needs to be addressed by the US is actually defining who is going to be held accountable from now on, and hopefully, this incident can set a precedent for that to happen.'
Iran refuses to back down
Tehran, for its part, has refused to select someone other than Aboutalebi as its UN ambassador. The Islamic Republic has filed a complaint with the Committee on Relations with the Host Country, the body that oversees the UN's relationship with the US.
'This decision of the US government has indeed negative implications for multilateral diplomacy and will create a dangerous precedent and affect adversely the work of intergovernmental organizations and activities of their member states,' Iran's Deputy UN Ambassador Hossein Dehghani wrote in a letter to the committee.
According to Iran's foreign ministry, Aboutalebi received a visa once before in the 1990s to visit the UN in New York.
'Now that this whole problem has arisen, it's pretty clear that he would have a very hard time doing his job as ambassasdor here, so in that sense the game is over,' said Sick, who teaches international affairs at Columbia University.
'My guess is Iran will see the handwriting on the wall and decide he probably couldn't conduct his operations as ambassador under these circumstances and chalk it up to a mistake on all sides,' he added.
Greater interests at stake
The diplomatic dispute at the UN between Iran and the US comes at a delicate time, as the five permanent members of the Security Council plus Germany seek to hammer out a final deal on the Islamic Republic's nuclear program.
Last November, they reached an interim agreement that eased economic sanctions in exchange for Iran freezing its uranium enrichment activities.
According to Sir Richard Dalton, Britain's former ambassador to Iran, both the Islamic Republic and the US have a major interest in seeing the nuclear negotiations succeed.
'They will make efforts to insulate the negotiations from adverse developments over other matters,' Dalton wrote to DW in an email. 'They are fundamentally opposed to each other on more significant issues, such as Syria, and have not let that stop an ever more intense set of bilateral and multi-lateral exchanges on the nuclear question in the last year. This [Aboutalebi dispute] is unfortunate in that it reinforces negative stereotypes on both sides rather than damaging prospects for an agreement.

Ukraine to get IMF bailout in return for economic reforms

Ukraine to get IMF bailout in return for economic reforms
Financial help is on its way to Ukraine with the International Monetary Fund agreeing on a $17bn (12.2bn euros) bailout. The money will be released over two years with the first installment of $3bn (2.1bn euros)to be made available immediately.
IMF chief Christine Lagarde admitted it was a gamble relying on the country’s government being able to carry out unpopular measures to get its finances in order.
'It’s a programme that has implementation risks. It’s one where we are trying to mitigate the risks as much as we can. We have had prior actions which have been addressed satisfactorily,' she said.
One of those risks concerns the unity or otherwise of Ukraine. Interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has threatened a cabinet reshuffle if order isn’t restored in the east.
He has also called for a national poll on 'territorial integrity' ( national unity) to be held at the same time as the May 25 election.
Outside the cabinet office there was a small protest by demonstrators complaining about the government’s infighting and ineffectiveness in dealing with the country’s beleaguered economy.




Crimea annexation celebrated at Red Square marches

Crimea annexation celebrated at Red Square marches
There was plenty of patriotism on show for May Day in Moscow.
The International Labour Day celebrations returned to Red Square for the first time since the break up of the Communist Soviet Union in 1991.
Coming just weeks after Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, the event was an opportunity for supporters of President Vladimir Putin to demonstrate their approval .
Signs and banners proclaimed 'Patriots support their president!', 'Trust Putin' and 'Putin is right!'. The march took place with Putin’s approval ratings at their highest level since 2010.
Andrei Isaev, a lawmaker from the president’s party addressed the crowd, hammering home the point: 'This year Russia was joined by two new members of the Federation – Crimea and Sevastopol. We welcome them!'
Moscow police said more than 100,000 people took part in the Red Square marches. Nationwide an estimated two million people were on the streets in Labour Day rallies.
Away from the cameras of state TV opposition and human rights groups also held demonstrations in Russian cities.