Chelsea march on, Arsenal lose

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January 16, 2005 11:50 IST

Chelsea look destined to become English champions for the first time in 50 years after a 2-0 win at Tottenham Hotspur left them 10 points clear at the top of the Premier League on Saturday.

Two Frank Lampard goals and a shock 1-0 defeat for reigning champions Arsenal in the late game at Bolton Wanderers means only a sudden collapse can deny Chelsea, quoted as 1-9 hot favourites by bookmakers, an historic end to their Centenary season.

Chelsea, who also became the first club to win six consecutive Premier League games without conceding a goal, did just what their title hopes needed after 10-man Manchester United won 1-0 at Liverpool in the day's early kickoff.

They are now top with 58 points, with Arsenal on 48 and United third on 47, pressing Arsene Wenger's side for the second automatic slot in next season's Champions League.

Elsewhere, Newcastle United skipper Alan Shearer returned from a 12-match injury lay-off to convert a penalty in a 2-1 win over Southampton, Aston Villa were 3-0 winners over Norwich City and Manchester City beat Crystal Palace 3-1.

Blackburn Rovers won 1-0 win at nine-man Portsmouth, who had striker Lomana LuaLua and midfielder Amdy Faye dismissed in the second half, while Charlton Athletic beat Birmingham City 3-1.

The 2005 title could well have been decided, though, by the games at White Hart Lane and Bolton's Reebok stadium.

Chelsea, beaten only once in the league this season, had to work hard, but never looked like losing against a Spurs side who were unbeaten in eight previous league games.

Lampard broke the deadlock with a 39th-minute penalty after Russian midfielder Alexei Smertin was caught by Spurs skipper and central defender Ledley King.

LAMPARD STRIKES

Spurs kept probing English football's best defence but the points were sealed in the 90th minute, when Icelandic striker Eidur Gudjohnsen got behind their rearguard and pulled the ball back for the inrushing Lampard to rifle home.

Though Chelsea had to grind out their win, assistant manager Steve Clarke told Sky Sports News: "We've had to show that side of our game quite often this season.

"When you go away from home in the Premier League it's always difficult, you know you have to work hard for anything you get. And we've got a squad of players that are prepared to do that."

Spurs boss Martin Jol disagreed with Chelsea's penalty, but was pleased with his team's commitment.

"The only disappointing thing was that in the last part of the pitch we didn't have the power to be decisive," Jol said.

Arsenal were no more decisive at the Reebok, the same venue where a 2-2 draw in April 2003 virtually killed off their title hopes in that season.

"Chelsea are in a fantastic position now," said a downcast Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger. "They can only lose the title now because they have already won it."

Greek midfielder Stelios Giannakopoulos headed Bolton's winner four minutes before the break, after Arsenal's Spanish keeper Manuel Almunia could only flap at a cross from El-Hadji Diouf.

Arsenal had plenty of possession but Robin van Persie and Robert Pires both missed chances in the second half and striker Thierry Henry lacked his usual cutting edge.

Ragged at times in the middle and suspect in defence, Arsenal's defeat was their third of the league season and will have delighted old rivals United.

ROONEY WINNER

Teenage England striker Wayne Rooney scored United's winner at Anfield in the 21st minute, helped by poor goalkeeping by Jerzy Dudek. They held on for a deserved victory despite a 65th-minute red card for defender Wes Brown.

United's seventh consecutive clean sheet also stretched their unbeaten league run to 12 matches and had manager Alex Ferguson purring.

"It was a great performance, and a fantastic game," he told Sky Sports News.

Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez, who gave a debut to new Spanish signing Fernando Morientes, could only rue their failure to make the extra man count and Dudek's blunder.

"Sometimes in massive games with big teams, if you make a mistake you must pay for it," Benitez said. "And we paid."

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