Chelsea in Wednesday's Europa League final in Amsterdam, where they
will meet a Benfica team reeling from a devastating domestic defeat by
arch rivals Porto
.
The premature end to Chelsea's Champions League defence had threatened to leave a cloud over their entire campaign.
Roberto
Di Matteo's dismissal as manager created a negative atmosphere that
only got worse when the unpopular Rafael Benitez was appointed as his
interim successor, but now, salvation is in sight.
Saturday's 2-1
win at Aston Villa essentially secured the club's place in next
season's Champions League, and victory over Benfica would turn an
unhappy campaign into one etched in Chelsea folklore.
The
all-German Champions League final between Bayern Munich and Borussia
Dortmund on May 25 means Chelsea's fans will not be able to crow that
they are the champions of Europe for much longer.
But if they overcome Benfica, they will become the first club to hold both European titles at the same time.
They
are also bidding to become only the fourth team to have won the
Champions League, the Europa League and the now-defunct Cup Winners' Cup -- which they won in 1971 and 1998 -- after Bayern, Juventus and Ajax.
Chelsea
beat Benfica in the quarter-finals en route to last season's Champions
League triumph, but Spanish midfielder Juan Mata remains wary of Jorge
Jesus's side.
"We're playing against Benfica, a historic team in
Europe that will be very tough to beat, as we saw last season in the
Champions League," he wrote on his personal blog on Monday.
Amsterdam
was the scene of Benfica's second European Cup triumph, in 1962, but it
remains the last venue where they have tasted success in a European
final.
There have been six painful defeats since then, although
the most recent was 23 years ago, when they lost 1-0 to AC Milan in the
final of the 1990 European Cup.
There was fresh heartache on
Saturday, when a stoppage-time goal gave Porto a 2-1 win over their
closest rivals that took them to the brink of the Primeira Liga title.
Benfica
coach Jesus fell to his knees in disbelief as a low shot by Porto
substitute Kelvin crept in at Estadio do Dragao, and he admitted it
would be a challenge to rouse his players.
"It's a difficult moment for us, because on Wednesday we've got a final and this loss has knocked us back," he said.
Nonetheless, with 51 years having now passed since Benfica's last continental title, there is no shortage of motivation.
"Benfica
are always under pressure when they play and we know that in every
competition we take part in, the aim is to get to the final and win," he
told uefa.com.
"I was born in '54, but I know the history of the
club because I have read about it and it is illustrated in photos at
the training ground."
At Chelsea, the three-year tenure of former coach Jose Mourinho left a strong Portuguese connection.
The
two Portuguese players in the current squad -- Paulo Ferreira and
Henrique Hilario -- are unlikely to feature in Amsterdam, but Brazilians
Ramires and David Luiz both joined the club from Benfica.
Mourinho's
shadow looms large over Benitez, amid reports he is poised to return to
the club from Real Madrid, but the Spaniard has history of his own to
pursue.
Having won the competition with Valencia in 2004, he
could become only the second coach -- after Giovanni Trapattoni -- to
win the Europa League with two different clubs.
Benitez has concerns over captain John Terry and Eden Hazard, both of whom sustained injuries at Villa Park.
Terry
sat out last season's Champions League coronation due to suspension and
fellow Chelsea stalwart Frank Lampard says it would be a bitter blow
for him to miss another major chapter in the club's history.
"I'm
gutted for him because I know what it meant to him to miss last
season's final, even though he turned up and supported the team
brilliantly," Lampard said.
"Whatever we do, it's as a club, and as long as John's here, he's part of it."
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Tuesday, 14 May 2013
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