Willian Proved His Worth for Chelsea but He Leaves at the Right Time

Willian scores a penalty for Chelsea against West Ham on 1 July. Photograph: Michael Regan/NMC/EPA
Willian scores a penalty for Chelsea against West Ham on 1 July. Photograph: Michael Regan/NMC/EPA
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Willian Proved His Worth for Chelsea but He Leaves at the Right Time

Willian scores a penalty for Chelsea against West Ham on 1 July. Photograph: Michael Regan/NMC/EPA
Willian scores a penalty for Chelsea against West Ham on 1 July. Photograph: Michael Regan/NMC/EPA

Seven years have passed since José Mourinho struggled to keep the smirk off his face as he held court in Chelsea’s press room, reveling in the chicanery of scuppering Tottenham’s bid to sign Willian. The late twist came out of the blue and Mourinho was at his mischievous best, suggesting Tottenham had paid the price for not doing Willian’s medical in secret.

Tottenham were livid. They had fought to beat Liverpool to the Brazilian’s signature and raged when it emerged the winger was heading for another part of London. After all did Chelsea even need him? They already had Eden Hazard, Juan Mata, Oscar, Andre Schürrle, and Kevin De Bruyne to fill the creative roles. Why spend £32m on another attacking midfielder?

The answer soon materialized. Chelsea might have acted out of opportunism, sensing a chance to upstage their neighbors, but they did not sign Willian from Anzhi Makhachkala for the sake of it. He quickly became an important player for Mourinho and, although his inconsistency and disappointing set-piece delivery frustrated supporters at times, he helped Chelsea to win two Premier League titles, one FA Cup, one League Cup, and the Europa League during his time in west London.

In the end the only disappointment is that Willian, who is close to joining Arsenal on a three-year deal, had to say goodbye in an Instagram post on Sunday afternoon. An achilles injury meant he missed Chelsea’s win against Wolves in their final league game, their defeat by Arsenal in the FA Cup final and their hammering by Bayern Munich in the last 16 of the Champions League on Saturday night, after which he became a free agent.

This has been coming, though. While Frank Lampard wanted Willian to stay, the 32-year-old could not convince the Chelsea hierarchy to offer him more than a two-year extension. Arsenal were prepared to offer him a three-year contract and, despite misgivings over the former Shakhtar Donetsk player’s age, they are securing a solid professional who rarely lets his managers down.

Willian is a coach’s player. While he has made vital contributions – a dramatic winner against Everton when Chelsea were closing in on the title in 2015 comes to mind – he is not flashy. He was part of the support act when Hazard was at Chelsea and has not always been a mandatory pick, especially when Antonio Conte was in charge from 2016 to 2018. Willian, who scored 63 goals in 339 appearances for Chelsea, was not at his happiest during Conte’s two years in charge and almost ended up joining Mourinho at Manchester United.

Yet Mourinho valued Willian’s tactical discipline and he has played a key role during Lampard’s first season as Chelsea’s manager. Lampard, who was teammates with him during the Brazil international’s first year in London, valued his workrate and the protection he offers his full-back.

Not that Willian, who was one of the few players to shine when it all went wrong under Mourinho in the 2015-16 season, has solely been a workhorse for Lampard. There have been some excellent individual displays, particularly when he scored twice in the 2-0 win against Tottenham in December, while 11 goals in all competitions is a decent return. Chelsea would not have qualified for the Champions League without him. “When I came in and we had a lot of issues in terms of younger players, Willian was one you relied on,” Lampard said last week.

Willian is a good trainer and his manager has urged young wingers such as Callum Hudson-Odoi and Christian Pulisic to learn from him. “He is not really vocal,” the Chelsea center-back Antonio Rüdiger says. “But on the pitch he does his stuff. After training he is always shooting, trying to improve. As a young kid, it is an honor to train with someone like him.”

Yet while Lampard will hope that Hudson-Odoi and Pulisic were paying attention, perhaps now is the right time for Willian to leave. Although his ability to accelerate away from a defender will be missed, he was as culpable as anyone on the occasions when Chelsea ran out of ideas against deep defenses this season. Fresh faces are required in attack and it is telling that Chelsea, sore after being dumped out of the last 16 of the Champions League by Bayern, did not want to go above and beyond to keep him.

The veteran wingers were absent against Bayern. Pedro, who has departed on a free transfer, was out with a shoulder injury and Willian was back in London. Regeneration is Chelsea’s task now. They have signed Hakim Ziyech and Timo Werner, and are closing in on Bayer Leverkusen’s Kai Havertz. Willian belongs to the past, even if it was worth snatching him from Tottenham all those years ago.

(The Guardian)



Ronaldo Puts Al-Nassr on Brink of Asian CL Playoffs while Toney Advances Al-Ahli

Soccer Football - Asian Champions League - Group B - Al Gharafa v Al Nassr - Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor, Qatar - November 25, 2024 Al Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Ibraheem Al Omari
Soccer Football - Asian Champions League - Group B - Al Gharafa v Al Nassr - Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor, Qatar - November 25, 2024 Al Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Ibraheem Al Omari
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Ronaldo Puts Al-Nassr on Brink of Asian CL Playoffs while Toney Advances Al-Ahli

Soccer Football - Asian Champions League - Group B - Al Gharafa v Al Nassr - Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor, Qatar - November 25, 2024 Al Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Ibraheem Al Omari
Soccer Football - Asian Champions League - Group B - Al Gharafa v Al Nassr - Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor, Qatar - November 25, 2024 Al Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Ibraheem Al Omari

Cristiano Ronaldo scored twice as Al-Nassr of Saudi Arabia defeated Al-Gharafa of Qatar 3-1 in the AFC Champions League Elite group stage on Monday.
Al-Nassr is virtually assured of a place in the knockout stages, The Associated Press reported.
Ronaldo had two early shots well saved by goalkeeper Sergio Ricom, and half an hour in he placed the ball on the penalty spot. Sadio Mane went down in the area under a challenge from Matias Nani and the referee awarded a penalty. But the VAR overturned the decision.
Ronaldo then missed the best opportunity of the first 45 minutes, heading a free kick just wide from close range.
He made amends in the new half, heading home powerfully from an Angelo cross. Angelo then went around the goalkeeper for 2-0 in the 58th.
Ronaldo sealed the victory six minutes later, shooting home from inside the area.
Former Real Madrid striker Joselu pulled a goal back for Al-Gharafa.
Earlier, Ivan Toney scored twice as Al-Ahli of Saudi Arabia won at defending champion Al-Ain of the United Arab Emirates 2-1 to become the first team to book a place in the knockout stages with three group games to spare.
The England striker, who arrived in Jeddah from English Premier League team Brentford in August, came off the bench in the second half and scored twice in four minutes.
Both came from Riyad Mahrez crosses; Toney headed home the first and stretched to guide in the second.
“Coach (Matthias) Jaissle told me to come on and make a difference,” Toney said. “It was challenging because I've missed many games, but I stepped in and delivered a good performance.”
It was a fifth win in five by Al-Ahli, which moved into first place in its 12-team group. The tournament is divided into two groups, with the top eight from each progressing to a round of 16.