Jose Mourinho claimed the 21st trophy of his career as Chelsea
overcame Tottenham with a clinical 2-0 victory in the Capital One Cup
final at Wembley.
John Terry's deflected close-range effort beat
Hugo Lloris to put Chelsea ahead at the end of the first half and Kyle
Walker turned Diego Costa's low drive into his own net after the break
to give Mourinho victory in the pouring rain.
Both goals were slightly fortuitous -- but few would argue the Chelsea boss was lucky to win the trophy on Sunday.
Blues captain John Terry gave his side a first-half lead when
Willian's free-kick dropped loose inside the box and he fired home via a
deflection.
Tottenham had already hit the crossbar through
Christian Eriksen, but Chelsea doubled their lead just after the break
when Diego Costa's shot was turned in by the leg of Kyle Walker.
Spurs
pushed hard to find a way back in late on but Chelsea closed out the
match to gain revenge for the 2008 final defeat to their London rivals
and clinch a first trophy for manager Jose Mourinho since his return to
Stamford Bridge.
With Nemanja Matic suspended, Mourinho made a
surprising team selection that included Gary Cahill – one of four
changes – alongside John Terry in defence, with Kurt Zouma moving into
midfield.
However, it appeared to put the Blues out of sorts in the opening half and Tottenham looked capable of breaking the deadlock.
Spurs,
complete with seven changes to the side knocked out of the Europa
League by Fiorentina on Thursday, had their best chance after 10 minutes
when Harry Kane's trickery won a free-kick in a dangerous area and
Eriksen rattled the woodwork from the set piece.
Both Nacer Chadli
and Ryan Mason should have done better with wayward attempts
off-target, and Eriksen also forced Petr Cech to save at a tight angle,
but Terry – the seasoned finalist – put his side ahead on 45 minutes.
A
mistake by Chadli, giving away a needless free-kick on the right-hand
side, allowed Willian to swing in a dangerous set-piece that dropped for
Terry to poke home beyond Hugo Lloris.
Chelsea stepped up their
intensity in the second half and threatened early after the break when
Cesc Fabregas forced Lloris to parry with a skillful bicycle kick inside
the box.
And it was Fabregas who set up his side's second, his
incisive pass finding the run of Costa, and the Spaniard's effort beat
Lloris inside his near post after a deflection off Walker.
Chelsea looked impenetrable at the back, with Terry especially looking back to his brilliant best.
Eden
Hazard almost made it three with a superb curler from the edge of the
box but, with Lloris beaten, the ball flew just past the post.
Spurs
threatened through Kane and substitutes Mousa Dembele and Erik Lamela
late on, but it was not enough to prevent Mourinho becoming the most
successful foreign manager in Capital One Cup history – clinching his
third League Cup and his seventh piece of silverware in England.
Credit:Football365
It is a well fought victory for the Blues.
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