By PA Sport
Jose Mourinho may have gone but he was far from forgotten as Chelsea marked the end of an era with a 3-1 win over Sunderland.
Guus Hiddink was in the stands having been confirmed as new interim
boss but it was Mourinho, axed 48 hours earlier, who still managed to
cast his shadow over Stamford Bridge as goals from Branislav Ivanovic,
Pedro and Oscar secured a routine victory for the fallen champions.
Mourinho had chosen the morning of the match to reveal he is already
looking for his next job, and the home crowd sung the former manager's
name before kick-off, as well as after all three goals.
Instead it was certain players who bore the brunt of the fans' anger.
One held a banner accusing "The Three Rats" -- Cesc Fabregas, Diego
Costa and Eden Hazard, for getting Mourinho sacked while another read
"you let Jose down."
Skipper John Terry had claimed player power had not played a part in
Thursday's decision, but Fabregas' and Costa's names were booed when
they were read out before kick-off -- Hazard only escaping the ire as he
was absent through injury.
Both players also received hostile reactions when they were substituted during the second half.
Meanwhile, Hiddink watched on alongside owner Roman Abramovich and
former striker Didier Drogba, after his return to the club he led to FA
Cup success in 2009 was rubber-stamped shortly before the game.
If Chelsea are to finally kick-start their nightmare season then they
could probably not asked for more accommodating opposition than
Sunderland, who were so abject they even looked surprised themselves
when they pulled a goal back through sub Fabio Borini.
Mourinho's name was still ringing round the ground when Chelsea
opened the scoring through another player under the spotlight for some
poor performances this season -- Ivanovic was left totally unmarked when
he rose to meet Willian's fifth-minute corner and nodded the ball high
into the net.
Seven minutes later Pedro made it two thanks to some more calamitous
defending, this time Sebastien Coates failing to deal with Ivanovic's
cross and allowing the Spaniard to sweep the ball home.
Oscar should have made it three when he strolled through the
Sunderland defence as if they were not there, only to hammer his shot
straight at Costel Pantilimon, before Costa stabbed over from close
range and headed another chance wide.
But three minutes after the break Chelsea had their third, Willian
chasing Pedro's ball into the box before being tripped by Pantilimon,
with Oscar slotting in the penalty.
Any thoughts that Chelsea's defensive failings have disappeared overnight were dispelled six minutes later, however.
Younes Kaboul had far too much time and space to head Adam Johnson's
free-kick toward goals and when Thibaut Courtois parried the ball out,
it hit Borini who bundled over the line.
Hiddink would have been given further food for thought had Jermain
Defoe hit the target rather than the side-netting, and then seen a late
effort kept out by a fine reflex save from Courtois.
After a win which was comfortable rather than comprehensive, the hard work of salvaging Chelsea's season starts now for Hiddink.
Saturday, 19 December 2015
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