Title-chasing Chelsea fight back to beat Spurs
Salomon Kalou kept Chelsea's Premier League title defense alive with a late goal clinching a 2-1 victory over Tottenham on Saturday after the champions were gifted an equalizer by goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes.
- Associated Press
- Updated: May 01, 2011 12:47 am IST
Salomon Kalou kept Chelsea's Premier League title defense alive with a late goal clinching a 2-1 victory over Tottenham on Saturday after the champions were gifted an equalizer by goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes.
Didier Drogba fed Kalou at the far post to poke it into the unguarded net in the 89th minute.
After Sandro's first goal for Tottenham, Chelsea was given a route back into the game on the stroke of halftime, when Frank Lampard's fierce, dipping 30-meter (yard) strike squirmed through Gomes' arms and legs.
As Gomes desperately stretched back, he managed to just stop the ball creeping completely over the line, but referee Andre Marriner and assistant Mike Cairns ruled the goal should stand.
Chelsea is three points behind Manchester United, which is still to play at Arsenal on Sunday before hosting Carlo Ancelotti's second-place side a week later.
Lampard said he felt he deserved such a favorable decision after being denied a clear goal for England at the 2010 World Cup, when the ball from his shot clearly crossed the line in the last-16 match that Germany went on to win.
The embarrassment at FIFA led to president Sepp Blatter reviving investigations into goalline technology, although football's lawmaking body is yet to find a high-tech aid that rules on disputed goals with perfect accuracy and speed.
Tottenham's failure to win at Stamford Bridge for the first time since 1990 is a blow to the north London club's hopes of qualifying for the Champions League for a second successive season.
Harry Redknapp's side is four points behind Manchester City in the fourth and final Champions League spot having played an extra game, although the two sides must still meet.
Before the latest botched piece of goalkeeping from Gomes, the erratic Brazilian had been frustrating Chelsea with a series of fine saves.
A powerful, swerving free kick from Drogba look destined for the top corner before the slightest of touches from Gomes' right hand pushed over.
A low save kept out Florent Malouda's effort and Michael Essien's header was tipped over, but all that fine work was underdone on the stroke of halftime.
After weathering early pressure, Tottenham took a surprise 19th-minute lead when Rafael van der Vaart flicked a throw-in over to Sandro to blast home his first goal for the club in his debut season.
Tottenham, though, couldn't build on the goal as Chelsea's luck turned, with the rejuvenated side winning for the eighth time in its last nine matches.
The transformation has been despite - rather than due to - the 50 million-pound (then $81 million) arrival of Fernando Torres in January.
Some of the pressure on the Spain striker was relieved by his first Chelsea goal in last Saturday's win over West Ham United.
The reward was a starting spot against Tottenham, but the closest he came to finding the net was the sidenetting after 10 minutes, and he was hauled off in the 62nd.
His best contribution was being replaced by Kalou, who went on to deliver the three points.