Didier Drogba relishes Chelsea's FA Cup triumph
Didier Drogba admitted his historic strike in Chelsea's 2-1 FA Cup final win over Liverpool was exactly the kind of memorable moment that makes life with the Blues so special.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: May 06, 2012 10:29 am IST
Didier Drogba admitted his historic strike in Chelsea's 2-1 FA Cup final win over Liverpool was exactly the kind of memorable moment that makes life with the Blues so special.
Drogba became the first player to score in four FA Cup finals when he drove a fine low strike past Liverpool goalkeeper Jose Reina early in the second half at Wembley on Saturday.
The Ivory Coast striker has now scored eight goals in eight appearances at the rebuilt English national stadium and the victory against Liverpool was his fourth FA Cup triumph with the west London club.
It is a remarkable record and former Marseille star Drogba, who could be set to leave Chelsea when his contract expires at the end of the season, was delighted to make a major impact on the big occasion one more time.
"That's the reason why I came here, to win trophies and to make history with the club. It's a great feeling," Drogba said.
"I'm always surprised to score here. As I always said, my last goal is the most beautiful one and this one is the most beautiful because the feeling is... I don't know how to explain. I just appreciate the cup and cheering with the fans."
While Drogba has proved adept at stealing the spotlight on the game's grandest stages, he was quick to give plenty of credit to his team-mates, especially Frank Lampard, who not for the first time provided a perfect pass for the goal.
"I'm very proud. I'm very proud of it, but I have to give credit to all my team-mates," Drogba said.
"During the last six years, I've been playing here all the finals, I'm really happy and I really want to thank them because they always put me in the best conditions to score goals.
"We made history, not only me. The result is great for us, for the fans, for the club.
"Our fourth FA Cup final, fourth win, fourth trophy, so I'm happy. That's why we play football, to play finals."
Drogba's strike, which put Chelsea 2-0 up, proved the difference after Ramires opened the scoring for the Blues before Andy Carroll reduced the deficit for Liverpool.
The previous FA Cup triumphs against Manchester United, Everton and Portsmouth all remain sweet memories for Drogba, but this was especially rewarding after such a difficult campaign.
Drogba was one of those who looked set to be eased out before Roberto Di Matteo replaced sacked manager Andre Villas-Boas two months ago.
"Yeah, we had a few difficult times," he said.
"Roberto has been talking to the players a lot, trying to bring the confidence back. We help him as well because it's not easy for him.
"He was a good friend with Andre, so it was also difficult for him.
"I think all together we made this. And, if we are here, it's because everybody did a little bit more than what we did in the first part of the season."
With one piece of silverware safely tucked away in the Stamford Bridge trophy cabinet, Drogba and company can turn a troubled campaign into arguably the best in the club's history with a victory in the Champions League final against Bayern Munich on May 19.
"We have another final coming, so we're going to celebrate tonight all together and then focus on the other final. One to go," Drogba said.
Meanwhile, Lampard believes Di Matteo deserves the largest share of the credit for Chelsea's revival.
The Blues interim boss took over in a most unpromising situation, with talk of player unrest threatening to ruin the season, but he has steadied the ship impressively and could yet be rewarded with the job on a permanent basis.
"Roberto deserves every accolade you can possibly give him for what he has done," Lampard said.
"He has turned it around from a very difficult situation in three months and got the big players playing and got confidence running through the team.
"It's the club's decision in the summer but I don't think Robbie is a loser whatever happens."