With confidence sky-high after their thrilling Champions League victory over Arsenal on Tuesday, Chelsea resume their quest to derail the domestic title charge of Arsene Wenger's team this weekend.
Chelsea, who trail their London rivals by four points having played a game more, host Middlesbrough at Stamford Bridge today and they have not yet given up hope of a first English title since their sole 1955 triumph.
The 2-1 victory over Arsenal on Tuesday not only secured Chelsea a place in the last four of the Champions League for the first time, it also extended their unbeaten run to nine matches in all competitions.
While that may not compare with Arsenal's record 30-match unbeaten streak in the league, it does indicate that they are hitting form just at the right time to take advantage if Wenger's side slip up again.
"The confidence has been growing in us all season and we are starting to look really good," midfielder Joe Cole said after the win at Highbury.
"We are in great form and want to keep that going. Everyone is as high as a kite. We are still in [the title race] and we are fighting on the European front."
If media speculation can be believed, Middlesbrough boss Steve McClaren would have been Chelsea coach under Sven-Goran Eriksson next season, had the England manager succumbed to the temptations offered by the big-spending club.
The Swede, though, was cornered into signing a contract extension with England and it now looks like Claudio Ranieri may still be at the helm in west London beyond the end of the season.
The Italian may again tinker with his line-up for today's match at Stamford Bridge after leaving it unchanged for only the second time this season on Tuesday.
Chelsea also play at Aston Villa on Monday and Ranieri may decide to rest some of the players that have served him so well, most notably England midfielder Frank Lampard whose next match will be his 50th of the season for the club.
Romanian Adrian Mutu and Argentine Hernan Crespo, who scored in Chelsea's 2-1 victory at the Riverside earlier this season, could also get a start up front in place of Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink or Eidur Gudjohnsen.
Middlesbrough, 11th in the league, have had a decent enough run themselves of late but will be without winger Boudewijn Zenden, who is unavailable under the terms of his loan from Chelsea.
They will also be without England central defender Gareth Southgate, who was ruled out for the rest of the season after damaging knee ligaments in training.
Bologna on Thursday advanced past Empoli to reach their first Coppa Italia final in more than half a century. Thijs Dallinga’s 87th-minute header earned Bologna a 2-1 win and his side advanced 5-1 on aggregate. Giovanni Fabbian opened the scoring for Bologna with a header seven minutes in. Then Viktor Kovalenko equalized for Empoli in the 30th minute by turning in a rebound to finish off a counterattack. Bologna won the first leg 3-0. In the May 14 final in Rome, Bologna are to face AC Milan, who eliminated city rivals Inter 4-1 on aggregate following a 3-0 win on Wednesday. Bologna last reached the
If the Wild finally break through and win their first playoff series in a decade, Minnesota’s top line likely will be the reason. They were all over the Golden Knights through the first two games of their NHL Western Conference quarter-finals series, which was 1-1 going back to Minnesota for Game 3 today. The Wild tied the series with a 5-2 win on Tuesday. Matt Boldy had three goals and an assist in the first two games, while Kirill Kaprizov produced two goals and three assists. Joel Eriksson Ek, who centers the line, has yet to get on the scoresheet. “I think the biggest
The Minnesota Timberwolves, with so many promising performances spoiled by late mistakes fresh in their memory bank, sure timed this strong finish well. Jaden McDaniels scored a career playoff-high 30 points and spearheaded Minnesota’s stifling defense on an ailing Luka Doncic, and the Timberwolves beat the Los Angeles Lakers 116-104 to take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Western Conference first-round series in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Friday night. “Jaden never looks tired. He looks like he could play 48 minutes,” said teammate Anthony Edwards, who had 29 points, eight rebounds and eight assists. Julius Randle added 22 points for the Wolves, who outscored
From a commemorative jersey to a stadium in his name, Argentine soccer organizers are planning a slew of tributes to their late “Captain” Pope Francis, eulogized as the ultimate team player. Tributes to the Argentine pontiff, a lifelong lover of the game, who died on Monday at the age of 88, have been peppered with soccer metaphors in his homeland. “Francisco. What a player,” the Argentine Football Federation (AFA) said, describing the first pope from Latin America and the southern hemisphere as a generational talent who “never hogged the ball” and who showed the world “the importance of having an Argentine captain,